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FREE chapter from my NEW book --- The Road to the North: Our Doctrine through the Eyes of Paul


The Journey That Redefined Everything

What does it take to carry a message that the world is desperate to silence? In "The Road to the North," you aren't just reading a history; you are experiencing it through the eyes of the Apostle Paul himself. This first-person narrative takes you into the raw reality of his mission to help you connect with his doctrine in a profound new way. By walking in his sandals through every riot, miracle, and narrow escape, you will begin to understand the why and how behind the truths he eventually wrote to the Body of Christ. This is an invitation to witness the birth of the Mystery of Grace, forged in the heat of real-world struggle. By understanding Paul’s life and experiences, the deep theology of his epistles becomes a relatable reality rather than a distant study. Experience the beginning of the mission that opened the "Door of Faith" to us all.

If you find this chapter compelling and wish to continue the journey, you can secure your copy of "The Road to the North" for your own library, as a training aid for a Bible Study group, or as a thoughtful gift for a friend. This book is designed to help readers bridge the gap between the words of the epistles and the heart of the man who wrote them, making it a perfect resource for anyone looking to deepen their understanding of the Gospel of Grace. You can find the book available through the following links:

 

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Chapter 1: The Encounter

Acts 9:1-9

The memory of my life before the "Damascus Light" is a tapestry of shadows and rigid lines, woven with a zeal that I once mistook for righteousness. I was a man of the Law, a Hebrew of the Hebrews; as touching the law, a Pharisee; concerning zeal, persecuting the church. My world was defined by the marble of the temple and the meticulous scrolls of the Sanhedrin. I had sat at the feet of Gamaliel, the master of our traditions, learning to dissect the Torah with a precision that left no room for the scandalous claims of a Galilean carpenter. My roots were deep in the soil of the tribe of Benjamin, and my faith was a fortress I defended with a violent, holy hunger.

I recall how the incense filled the temple courts with a fragrance that seemed to carry the presence of the divine, and how it contrasted with the stench of what I then called heresy. This sect, "The Way," was a blight upon our nation’s prophetic hope. They spoke of a Messiah who had hung accursed upon a tree, a notion that offended every fibre of my Pharisaic training. I was convinced that if Israel were to see the restoration of the kingdom, the land had to be purged of those who subverted our ancient customs.

My hatred was not a cold thing; it was a white-hot furnace. I was the one who stood by, keeping the raiment of them that slew Stephen, consenting unto his death. I can still hear the dull thud of the stones and see the unnatural peace on his face—a peace that I sought to crush in every synagogue I entered. I made havoc of the church, entering into every house, and hailing men and women committed them to prison. I was the arm of the Sanhedrin, the enforcer of the Law, and I relished the weight of the authority I carried.

But Jerusalem was not enough. The contagion was spreading. Word reached us that the followers of the Nazarene had fled to the north, finding refuge in the ancient trade hubs of the diaspora. I went to the high priest, my sandals echoing on the polished stone of the palace, and desired of him letters to Damascus to the synagogues. I wanted the legal right to hunt them across borders, to bring them bound unto Jerusalem, whether they were men or women. I felt the parchment of those warrants against my side—crisp, authoritative, and lethal.

We departed Jerusalem through the northern gates, a small, grim procession of temple guards and attendants. I looked back once at the city of David, the golden dome of the temple catching the morning sun, and felt a surge of pride. I was the guardian of the Prophetic Program. I was the one who would ensure that the promises made to our fathers remained untainted by the madness of the cross.

The journey was a slow, rhythmic progression through a landscape that mirrored my own internal rigidity. We travelled along the ancient routes, the Via Maris stretching out before us like a dusty ribbon. The Judean hills gave way to the fertile plains, but I saw nothing of the beauty of the land. My mind was a battlefield, rehearsing the indictments I would deliver in Damascus. I breathed out threatening's and slaughter with every step. The grit of the road settled into my woollen robes, and the heat began to rise from the parched earth, but I welcomed the discomfort. It was a small price to pay for the preservation of the Law.

We moved past the Sea of Galilee, the air thick and humid, the smell of brackish water and drying nets clinging to the breeze. My companions spoke in low tones, wary of my intensity. I was a man possessed by a singular purpose. I was not looking for a new revelation; I was defending the old one with a ferocity that bordered on madness. I believed, with a conviction that reached into the very marrow of my bones, that I was doing God a service.

As we ascended toward the Golan, the terrain became more rugged, the limestone paths narrowing between jagged outcrops. The sun was a relentless eye, watching our progress as we moved further from the safety of Jerusalem. I touched the high priest’s letters again, ensuring they were secure. I was Saul of Tarsus, a man of power and prestige, certain of my path and confident in my God. I did not know that I was marching toward my own execution. I did not know that the Law I served was about to be eclipsed by a Grace I could not yet name. Every mile brought me closer to the end of the man I had spent my life becoming, and the beginning of a Mystery that would turn the world upside down.

The ascent toward the plateau of Damascus offered no reprieve from the relentless Syrian sun, but my inner fire outpaced the heat of the day. I was nearly there. I could almost taste the dust of the city gates and feel the weight of the heretics in my grip. My mind was a meticulously ordered library of legal precedents and ancestral traditions, each one a weapon I intended to wield against the followers of the Nazarene. I felt the sweat trickling down my spine, a salt-sting that only served to sharpen my focus. I was the champion of the Sanhedrin, the spear-tip of the Prophetic Program, certain that my violence was the purest form of worship.

Then, my world ended.

At midday, as the world stood still under the vertical sun, a sudden light from heaven, exceeding the brightness of any earthly radiance, shined round about me and them which journeyed with me. It was not a flash, but a violent intrusion of glory—a brilliance so absolute that the physical world simply ceased to exist. The rocky path, the shimmering heat of the desert, and the distant white walls of Damascus were swallowed by a whiteness so pure it felt like a weight. I was struck to the earth, the impact jarring my very soul as I fell face-first into the hot, biting limestone.

In that blinding void, the silence of my terror was shattered by a voice. It did not come from the air around me, but seemed to vibrate through my marrow, speaking in the sacred Hebrew tongue of my fathers:

"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?"

The words were not a query for information; they were a thunderclap of indictment. The repetition of my name—Saul, Saul—stripped away every layer of my Pharisaic pride. I had spent my life defending the honour of the God of Abraham, yet here was the Shekinah itself, accusing me of war against the heavens. I felt the grit of the road in my mouth, the taste of my own humiliation. My breath was a ragged, panicked gasp as I managed to stammer the only question that remained:

"Who art thou, Lord?"

The answer was the death of everything I had spent thirty years building.

"I am Jesus whom thou persecutest: it is hard for thee to kick against the pricks".

The name "Jesus" hit me with the force of a physical blow. The one I had labelled a deceiver, the one whose memory I had sought to bury under a mountain of stones and warrants, was alive. He was not a dead pretender; He was the Lord of Glory. In an instant, the horrifying reality of my "zeal" was laid bare. Every lash I had commanded, every prison door I had locked, and every breath of "threatening and slaughter" had been directed at the face of the Living God. I had been "kicking against the pricks"—the sharp, iron-tipped goads used to drive stubborn oxen—fighting against the inevitable purpose of God with a ferocity that had only served to pierce my own soul.

I lay there, trembling and astonished, the foundations of my world crumbling into the dust of the road. The Law—my shield, my sword, and my identity—was suddenly silent. It could not save me from the presence of the one it had condemned. I was a murderer standing before the one I had slain. I was a rebel discovered in the court of the King. Yet, in that moment of absolute exposure, there was no bolt of lightning to consume me. There was only the weight of an authority that demanded total surrender.

"Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?"

"Arise, and go into the city, and it shall be told thee what thou must do," the Lord commanded.

I pushed myself up from the hot, dusty ground. My muscles felt like water, my joints aching from the fall. I opened my eyes, expecting to see the terrified faces of the temple guards or the shimmering horizon of the Syrian desert. But there was only a thick, impenetrable blackness. The glory of that heavenly light had seared the world from my vision; when my eyes were opened, I saw no man.

A thick, velvet blackness had descended over my vision. I looked toward where I knew the sun should be, but there was only a void. I turned my head frantically, searching for a shadow, a shape, a glimmer of the road.

"Help me," I cried out, my voice breaking. "I cannot see!"

I reached out into the empty air, my fingers groping for a hand, a sleeve, anything to anchor me. I was the great Saul of Tarsus, the scholar, the leader, the zealot—and I was reduced to a helpless child, terrified of a world I could no longer perceive. My companions, who had stood speechless, hearing a sound but seeing no man, looked at me—the once-mighty Saul—now stumbling and sightless. They took me by the hand, the humiliation was absolute; I, who had come to Damascus to lead the "guilty" in chains to Jerusalem, was now being led like a captive myself through the gates of the city.

I was brought to the house of a man named Judas, on the street called Straight—a massive, colonnaded Roman thoroughfare that felt like a tunnel of echoes to my sightless senses. I wasn't just physically blind; the darkness was a mirror of my spiritual state. I had thought I saw everything so clearly. I thought I was acting according to the truth. But I had been stumbling in a pitch-black cave of my own making, and the very first glimpse of True Light had burned my eyes out.

For three days, I sat in the house of Judas on the street called Straight. I sat in a silence so heavy it felt like stone. I would not eat. I could not drink. Every time I tried to swallow, I tasted the blood of the saints.

My thoughts were like a chaotic storm, leaving nothing but debris behind. In the blackness, I revisited every scroll I had ever memorised. I saw the face of Stephen again—not as a victim, but as a witness. I realised that while I had been master of the Law’s letter, I had been an enemy of its Spirit. I had been a "blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious," yet I was still breathing. Why? Why had the Lord of Glory stopped for me on a dusty road instead of striking me down?

I felt like my life was turned upside down, and I was left grappling with a reality I couldn't make sense of. My old self—the person around whom I’d built my identity—was dead, left behind on the Damascus Road. The possibility of something new was there, but it was buried beneath layers of uncertainty and confusion. I was a man suspended between two worlds, a persecutor who had met his Victim and found Him to be his Lord. For the first time, I was painfully aware of what I had done, unable to hide from the consequences of my actions. The tension between regret and hope was overwhelming. I realized I had to let go of everything I thought I knew and accept that change wouldn’t come quickly or easily.

The darkness around me was uncomfortable, even frightening. I searched my soul, wading past the pride and tradition until there was nothing left but a raw, bleeding heart. I was waiting. I was broken. I was blind. But I was finally ready to face the truth, wherever it might lead.

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Lessons from the Narrative

This section unearths the immediate spiritual truths embedded within the grit and glory of Saul’s encounter on the Damascus road. By looking past the historical event, we discover the fundamental ways in which God interacts with a soul that is dead in religious pride.

The Sovereignty of the Divine Arrest: Salvation is not a cooperative effort initiated by man’s seeking, but moments of God's intrusion of mercy into one's life. Saul was not in a state of quiet meditation or spiritual hunger; he was in a state of active rebellion, breathing out threatening's and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord. This lesson teaches us that the Grace of God does not wait for an invitation but pursues the enemy. It shatters the notion that our sincerity is the engine of our redemption, showing instead that we are apprehended by Christ before we ever think to reach for Him.

The Blindness of Human Religion: The more one is enlightened by the letter of the Law and religious tradition, the more profound their spiritual darkness becomes. Saul possessed the highest education available under Gamaliel, yet he was functionally blind to the very Messiah his scriptures predicted. His physical blindness for three days served as a pure reflection of his internal state, proving that human intellect and religious zeal are actually barriers to seeing the Truth. To truly see the Mystery of Christ, we must first be stripped of our own vision and brought to a place of total, helpless darkness where only the Light of Glory remains.

The Identification of the Body: When the Lord asked, "Why persecutest thou me?", He revealed a revolutionary truth that had been hidden in ages past. Saul thought he was merely arresting physical men and women in Damascus, but the Lord’s response identified the believers as being one with Himself; bone of His bone and flesh of His flesh (Eph.5:30). This is the seed of the Mystery doctrine: the Body of Christ. It teaches us that the believer's identity is no longer found in their earthly heritage or religious standing, but in their spiritual union with the ascended and glorified Head in heaven.

The Hardness of Kicking Against Truth: The mention of "kicking against the pricks" highlights the internal struggle of a man trying to maintain a system that God has already moved past. Saul was like a stubborn ox resisting the goad, suffering unnecessary pain because he refused to submit to the new direction of God's dealings. This illustrates the agony of legalism, trying to please God through a program of works when He has already provided everything through Grace. It warns us that resisting the revelation of the Mystery only leads to spiritual exhaustion and a heart hardened by religious "duty."

Connections to Paul’s Letters

The trauma and transformation Saul experienced on the road to Damascus were not merely personal milestones; they became the skeletal structure of the Mystery doctrine he would later deliver to the Body of Christ. These connections bridge the story with the unique Grace instructions found in his epistles.

The Divine Origin of the Gospel: Paul frequently reminded his readers that his message was not a refined version of the Kingdom gospel preached in Jerusalem, but a direct celestial hand-off. The suddenness of the Damascus encounter—where no man taught him, and no apostle briefed him—is the historical proof of this claim. He asserts that the Grace he preaches is a distinct revelation meant specifically for the Body of Christ. This validates the authority of his letters as the primary instructions for the believer today, separate from the earthly ministry of the Twelve.

"But I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was preached of me is not after man. For I neither received it of man, neither was I taught it, but by the revelation of Jesus Christ." (Gal.1:11-12)

The Pattern of Long-suffering: Paul viewed his own arrest on the road as the ultimate "case study" for God’s grace. If the Lord would stop for a man who was actively murdering His followers, then no sinner is beyond the reach of the Cross. This experience formed his teaching on the "chief of sinners," proving that salvation is entirely based on God’s mercy rather than human merit. It serves as a pattern for all who would hereafter believe, demonstrating that God’s grace is most magnified when it rescues His greatest enemies.

"This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief. Howbeit for this cause I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all longsuffering, for a pattern to them which should hereafter believe on him to life everlasting." (1Tim.1:15-16)

The New Sight of the Mystery: The physical light that blinded Saul's natural eyes was the catalyst for the spiritual "enlightening" he describes in his letters. He teaches that until the "vail" of the Law is taken away through Christ, the heart remains in the same darkness Saul experienced in the house of Judas. His experience became our doctrine: that the God who commanded light to shine out of darkness has now shined in our hearts. We no longer see Christ according to the flesh or the Kingdom, but as the glorified Lord of the Mystery.

"For God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ." (2Cor.4:6)

The Dispensational Lens

To understand the significance of Saul’s transformation, we must distinguish between the Prophetic Program God was fulfilling with Israel and the Mystery Program He began with Paul. Blending these two distinct operations of God leads to a confused faith that lacks the power of the finished work of Christ.

In the Kingdom Doctrine, as seen in the early chapters of Acts, the focus was on Israel’s national repentance and the earthly reign of the Messiah. The message preached by the Twelve required water baptism for the remission of sins and was confirmed by signs and wonders meant for the Jews. Saul himself was the primary opponent of this program, believing he was protecting the Law from a false King. This program was grounded in prophecy—what God had spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began (Act.3:21).

In the Grace Doctrine, revealed specifically to Paul progressively after his encounter, the focus shifts to the Body of Christ—a new agency where there is no distinction between Jew and Gentile. Unlike the Kingdom program, Grace is not based on national identity or ritual performance, but on the finished work of the Cross. On the Damascus road, Jesus did not call Saul to join the Twelve in their earthly mission; He appeared from heaven to start something "kept secret since the world began (Rom.16:25-26)."

A prominent misconception illuminated by this chapter is the failure to distinguish between the Prophetic Program God fulfilled with Israel and the unique Mystery Program revealed to Paul. The narrative emphasizes that many readers mistakenly combine the practices and doctrines of the Twelve—such as national repentance and the expectation of earthly signs and wonders—with the instructions given to Paul for the Body of Christ. This blending leads to confusion, obscuring the clarity and power of the revelation received by Paul on the Damascus Road. The chapter insists that proper understanding comes from ‘rightly dividing’ these two operations: recognizing that Grace and the Body of Christ are not continuations of Israel’s prophetic promises, but a new revelation initiated by the ascended Lord. The dangers of merging these approaches are made clear, warning that such confusion can result in a faith rooted in tradition rather than in the distinct truths entrusted to Paul.

The Faith Check

As you stand in the dust of the Damascus road with Saul, you are forced to confront the reality that your own religious efforts may be the very thing keeping you from the Light. This narrative demands that you move from a historical understanding of Saul's blindness to a direct confrontation with your own spiritual standing.

How are you currently interpreting this passage? Are you still relying on your own "zeal" or "sincerity" as a measure of your standing with God, much like Saul did before he was struck down? Are you "kicking against the pricks" of Grace by trying to add your own works to the finished work of Christ?

"Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt. But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness." (Rom.4:4-5); Rom.11:6; Gal.2:16; Tit.3:5

Do your beliefs measure up to the correct interpretation of Pauline doctrine? Have you allowed the traditions of men to "blend" the programs of God, leaving you blind to the unique revelation of the Mystery? Is your faith anchored in what you do for God, or in what the glorified Christ has already done for you?

"For I bear them record that they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge. For they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God." (Rom.10:2-3); Phil.3:9; 2Cor.5:16; Eph.3:1-3

Motivation and Inspiration

The story of Saul’s encounter is the ultimate proof that no soul is too far gone, and no heart is too hard for the reach of God’s Grace. If the chief persecutor can be turned into the chief apostle in a single moment of glory, there is no limit to what God can do with a life that finally surrenders its own self-righteousness. This narrative invites you to step out of the shadows of religious performance and into the brilliant light of your identity in Christ.

  • You are not defined by the "threatening's and slaughter" of your past, but by the mercy of the Lord who stopped for you.
  • The darkness you may feel today is often the precursor to the greatest revelation of Light your soul has ever known.
  • Stop fighting to prove your worth and start resting in the worthiness of the One who appeared to Saul.
  • ·         Your life is no longer a search for a Kingdom on earth, but a hidden reality in the Body of Christ in heavenly places.

Advance today in the absolute confidence that the Lord who apprehended Saul is the same Lord who has sealed you with His Spirit when you believed in the Grace gospel. Let the scales of tradition fall from your eyes, and walk forward as a captive of Grace, ready to serve the One who loved you and gave Himself for you.


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Whether you are looking to enrich your own personal study, searching for a unique Bible Study training aid for your group, or wanting to gift a meaningful resource to a friend, "The Road to the North" is a valuable tool for anyone desiring to grasp the life of Paul and the profound doctrine he penned. By moving beyond the page and into the heart of his mission, you will find the scriptures opening up with new clarity and purpose. 

I hope you enjoyed this FREE chapter directly from the book. You can secure your copy through the links provided at the top of this post. 

God bless.

NOTE:
It is important to note that, while every effort has been made to ensure historical, geographical, cultural, and biblical accuracy throughout the narrative, certain aspects have been artistically embellished to enhance immersion and convey the emotional depth of Paul's journey. The story is crafted to place you directly within his experiences, yet the narration should not be regarded as a fully factual account in its finer details. Readers are encouraged to approach the story with discernment, appreciating its intention to bring doctrine to life rather than provide a strictly literal retelling.



Explaining Peter's Dissimulation in Antioch

The Antioch Incident: When Programs Collide

It is one of the most striking scenes in the New Testament. In Galatians 2, we find Paul, the Apostle of the Gentiles, standing toe-to-toe with Peter, the lead Apostle of the Circumcision. Paul "withstood him to the face" because Peter was "to be blamed."

To the casual reader, this looks like a simple personality clash or a minor disagreement on church etiquette. However, through the lens of Right Division, we see a profound doctrinal crisis. This confrontation was not about Peter’s personal salvation; it was about protecting the integrity of a specific program God was revealing through Paul.

Understanding Peter’s Standing

To interpret this conflict correctly, we must first recognize Peter’s position. Peter was saved under the Gospel of the Kingdom. He had walked with the Lord during His earthly ministry, and his commission was focused on the nation of Israel and the fulfillment of prophetic promises (Mat.10:5-7).

Peter was not a "Grace believer" in the Pauline sense. He was a Kingdom saint who had been given a specific revelation regarding the Gentiles (Acts 10) to prepare him for the transition period. When Peter arrived in Antioch, he wasn't there as a convert to Paul’s ministry; he was a guest representative of the Jerusalem leadership.

Concepts in Thessalonians that might confuse people regarding the Grace Doctrine

Concepts in Thessalonians that might confuse people regarding the Grace Doctrine

Why did Paul mention things like Jesus as King, the Day of the Lord, signs of the End Times, and the Antichrist in the Thessalonian letters? Are these things part of our Grace doctrine? How do we understand these things in the context of the Thessalonian epistles? 

These are valid questions, which in turn have valid answers.

1 Thess.5:1-2: “But of the times and the seasons, brethren, ye have no need that I write unto you. For yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh as a thief in the night.”

Paul’s stay in Thessalonica was brief—about three to four weeks (Acts 17:2). He reasoned in the synagogue, proving from Scripture that Jesus was the Christ who suffered and rose again. His message was met with both faith and fierce opposition. Some Jews believed, many Gentiles turned from idols, but others stirred riots, accusing Paul of treason for proclaiming “another king, one Jesus” (Acts 17:7). The Thessalonian believers were young in the faith, surrounded by pagan idolatry, political suspicion, and persecution. Paul’s urgency was to ground them in the essentials: Christ crucified and risen, salvation by faith, holy living, and hope in His return. Yet because of rumours, false letters, and external pressures, he also had to clarify matters that touched on kingdom language—Jesus as King, the Day of the Lord, and signs of the end. These were not the core of his mystery gospel, but necessary clarifications to protect them from confusion.

The Arabian Gap: Solving the Three-Year Mystery of Paul’s Early Ministry

The Arabian Gap: Solving the Three-Year Mystery of Paul’s Early Ministry

The timeline of Paul’s life immediately following his conversion is often treated as a sudden burst of activity, moving instantly from the Damascus road to the Jerusalem council. However, the scriptures reveal a deliberate and vital season of hiddenness that defined Paul’s unique apostleship. To truly grasp the origins of the Mystery doctrine, one must look closely at the "three-year gap" that occurred before Paul ever set foot in Jerusalem as a believer.

A common misinterpretation suggests that Paul spent those first three years entirely within the city of Damascus, refining his debating skills in the synagogues. Many readers look at the "many days" mentioned in the book of Acts and assume this refers to a single, continuous stay in the city, concluding that Paul immediately sought out the Twelve Apostles for instruction. This blending of accounts causes significant confusion, as it makes it appear that Paul’s gospel was merely a hand-me-down from the Jerusalem leadership rather than a direct revelation from the ascended Christ.

To correctly understand this timing, we must reconcile the historical narrative of Acts with the chronological autobiography provided in the first chapter of Galatians. The breakdown of these three years begins "straightway" after Saul received meat and was strengthened following his encounter with Ananias. While he initially preached in the Damascus synagogues, proving that Jesus is the Son of God, he did not remain there to build a local ministry. Paul explicitly states that he "conferred not with flesh and blood" and did not go up to Jerusalem. Instead, he departed into Arabia.

Words are Spirit: Living and Walking in the Truth

Words are Spirit: Living and Walking in the Truth

The concept of "the Spirit" is often shrouded in mystical confusion, relegated to the realm of inexplicable feelings or unpredictable emotional surges. Yet, if we look to the King James Bible, we find a definition that is both concrete and profoundly transformative. To truly understand the nature of the Spirit, we must anchor ourselves in the direct declaration of Jesus Christ: "It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life" (Jn.6:63). Here, the mystery is solved. The Spirit is not an atmospheric presence or a vague energy; the Spirit is the Word of God in operation.

This scriptural fact establishes that the Word of God is the delivery system for divine life. To "receive the Spirit" is not to be overcome by an outer force, but to receive the holy information, instruction, and doctrine of Christ into the heart. The Bible describes this process not as a human effort, but as the "washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost" (Tit.3:5). This regeneration is the total overhaul of the inner man by the power of the Word. This is the foundation of our spiritual existence—our "position" or standing before God.

However, a critical distinction exists between "living" and "walking," a distinction that Paul emphasized heavily to the churches in Galatia. To "live in the Spirit" refers to our spiritual quickening—having our status changed from an orphan of the world to a son of God. This is a positional reality secured by the internalization of life-giving words. Yet, Paul presents a secondary challenge: "If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit" (Gal.5:25). This command implies a striking possibility: a person can be "alive" by the Spirit—possessing the correct doctrine and having been saved by the Word—and yet fail to "walk" by that same Spirit.

Why Biblical Love Requires Knowledge

Why Biblical Love Requires Knowledge

In a world that often defines love as a fleeting sentiment or a blind acceptance of all things, the Apostle Paul provides a sobering and life-transforming correction. Writing from a Roman prison, his heart's desire for the saints was not merely that they would feel more, but that they would understand more. He writes in Php.1:9 (KJB): “And this I pray, that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all judgment;” This reveals a profound pillar of the Mystery of Christ: true, Godly love is never directionless; it is a disciplined fruit of the Spirit that must be specifically channeled through the lens of truth.

The Vulnerability of Blind Love

We must recognise that love without knowledge is not a virtue, but a spiritual vulnerability. When love is divorced from the "form of sound words" (2Tim.1:13), it becomes prone to the errors of the flesh and the "sleight of men" (Eph.4:14). Paul warns that even a sincere "zeal of God" is unprofitable if it is "not according to knowledge" (Rom.10:2).

To walk safely, our love requires "judgment"—a moral perception that acts as a guardrail, allowing us to distinguish truth from error. In our current dispensation of Grace, we are not led by the "schoolmaster" of the law, but by a renewed mind that seeks to "approve things that are excellent" (Php.1:10). Without this biblical anchor, a believer’s affection for God can easily be hijacked by legalism or worldly philosophy.

The Root of the Mind: A Life Yielded to Glory

The Root of the Mind: A Life Yielded to Glory

The mind of Christ is a distinct spiritual disposition characterised by a total absence of selfish ambition and an instinctive drive toward the well-being of others. It is a state of being where one is perfectly joined together in the same judgment, possessing a love that does not fluctuate based on personal preference (1Cor.1:10; Php.2:2). This mindset is defined by a lowliness that naturally esteems others as better than oneself and looks outward at the needs of the body rather than inward at personal desires (Php.2:3-4). However, it is vital to recognise that this is not our mind; it does not originate within the human heart, nor is it an extension of our natural temperament.

The mind of Christ is entirely foreign to our corrupt nature. It is not a collection of our best thoughts or a refined version of our own desires; it is the very life and thinking of Christ Jesus Himself. We do not produce these thoughts by trying to think more "spiritually" or by exerting our self-will. Instead, these thoughts enter our mind as we read and study the scriptures, internalising the doctrine of grace. As we spend time in the Word, His thoughts begin to fill the spaces where our own used to dwell, renewing our thinking from the inside out (Rom.12:2). The more we occupy ourselves with His truth, the more His perspective becomes the lens through which we view the world.