The Self-Drawn Portrait of the Apostle Paul. (3)

May 27, 2014
by Charles H. Welch



#3. His Impetuosity.


“Here we see . . . . . that impetuosity which breaks out in his apostrophe to the ‘foolish Galatians’.” (Conybeare and Howson).

The reader may at first look askance at the subject to be considered in this article. Impetuosity is a trait not usually put forward for emulation, especially in spiritual things. It must, however, be remembered that we are endeavouring to reconstruct the Apostle’s self-drawn portrait. It is recorded that in reply to the artist’s suggestion that a facial blemish should be omitted from his portrait, Oliver Cromwell said that he wanted his portrait painted “wart and all”. It is far too easy to slip into the idea that the saints of the Bible were not as other men. On the contrary, they were only too conscious that in themselves they were but earthen vessels. It may be that if Paul’s impetuosity appears at times to outrun discretion; on the other hand the sluggishness and indifference of others bear a great deal of responsibility.

The case in point in this article is the attitude of the Apostle as expressed in the Epistle to the Galatians when he heard of their defection from the truth. Speaking after the manner of men, we should never have seen the Epistle to the Galatians, had Paul not been so moved that, without ceremony and without pause, he wrote out of a burning heart this interesting, personal, Epistle.

“I marvel that ye are so soon removed . . . . . though an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel . . . . . let him be accursed . . . . . Do I now persuade men?” (Gal. i. 6-10).
“I would they were even cut off which trouble you” (Gal. v. 12).

Can we imagine Paul quietly allowing the judaizers from Jerusalem to come down to Galatia and put shackles and fetters upon those who had been set free by his own ministry, and not be roused? “Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is offended, and I burn not?” (II Cor. xi. 29), said the Apostle. And if the word translated “offended” means “made to stumble”, is it not a thing to be thankful for, that Paul could burn at the action of these legalisers? In this same chapter of Corinthians we sense that he himself felt that he had been too impetuous in speaking of his sufferings as compared with the other apostles.

“Ye suffer fools gladly . . . . . ye suffer, if a man bring you into bondage, if a man devour you, if a man take of you, if a man exalt himself, if a man smite you on the face” (II Cor. xi. 19, 20).

These are burning, impetuous words, but who would wish them unwritten and unpublished? Can a man be white-hot for the truth and no one be singed? However, we see the same characteristic coming out that we saw in Phil. iv. (see pages 141-143), where, after a long list of unprecedented hardships for Christ’s sake, he suddenly swings away from all this talk about himself and says that if he must needs glory he will glory of the things which concern his infirmities, and proceeds to speak of one of the most humiliating of his experiences, his ignominious exit from Damascus.

“Through a window in a basket was I let down by the wall, and escaped his hands. It is not expedient for me doubtless to glory” (II Cor. xi. 33, xii. 1).

Yet, who would have a different Paul? That there was ample room for growth in grace, he, of all men, knew best, but would we exchange the burning zeal of the apostle of grace, for the cold reasoning of the doctrinaire? His churches were his children; his doctrine more than life; he “gladly spent himself”; and if this impetuosity sometimes overran discretion—be it so! The Apostle himself has drawn a distinction between “the righteous man” and “the good man” (Rom. v. 7), using the terms after the manner of men. Who can imagine Paul “faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null”, as Tennyson expresses it. Before his conversion he described himself as being “an exceeding zealot” (Gal. i. 14), and Luke speaks of him in those days as “breathing out threatenings and slaughter” (Acts ix. 1).

Salvation does not rob a man of his individuality, but enables him with the self-same members that once served sin, now to serve the Lord. Paul would have ceased to be the same individual had he not burned with zeal in whatever cause he undertook. We are not in the slightest sense attempting to justify the Apostle in all his ways; we are endeavouring to look at his self-drawn portrait, the portrait of a man of flesh and blood like ourselves, a man who, like ourselves, knew what internal conflict was; a man who is beloved, not by reason of some ideal qualities, but for what he was by the grace of God.

What a marked contrast there was between the Apostle and his Lord when they stood before their judges. He, the Lamb of God, opened not his mouth, but Paul flashed out: “God shall smite thee, thou whited wall!” only to follow it immediately by the repentant words, “I wist not brethren, that he was the high priest” (Acts xxiii. 2-5). Can we not hear that impetuous spirit when he said:

“None of these things move me, neither count I my life dear unto myself, so that I might finish my course with joy” (Acts xx. 24).
“I am ready not to be bound only, but also to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus” (Acts xxi. 13).

No wonder we read, that when they heard this, the disciples ceased, saying, “The will of the Lord be done”.

With such an example, who would not be encouraged to endure? See how, had the disciples not restrained him, Paul would have entered into the theatre at Ephesus, where the populace were crying out for about two hours, “Great is Diana of the Ephesians!” (Acts xix. 30). While, therefore, we can easily see that there was great impetuosity in Paul’s character that needed the curb, after all, how much better is this fire and force than the lethargy of so many who profess to follow his steps.

We are not told in the Scriptures to follow Paul’s example blindly. Where he followed his Lord, he becomes an example for us to follow; where he was sometimes carried away by an excess of zeal, he becomes a corrective, but in most cases our lamps burn so feebly, and are so easily dowsed, that we have to confess that a little of the spirit of this ardent Apostle would make for clearer and fuller testimony on the part of us all.

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(From The Berean Expositor, vol. 31, page 156).

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The Self-Drawn Portrait of the Apostle Paul. (2)

May 26, 2014
by Charles H. Welch



#2. His Independence.


“Here we see that fearless independence with which he ‘withstood Peter to the face’.” (Conybeare and Howson).

The first feature sketched in by Conybeare and Howson is the Apostle’s independence, the particular passage quoted being Gal. ii. Like many other things, the quality of independence can be a very fine or a very ugly feature. The kind of independence that sets aside the fear of man, and originates in a consciousness of the sovereignty of...

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Occasional Meditations. (8) - by Charles H. Welch

May 25, 2014



#8. The Ark of the Tabernacle (Exod. xxv. 10-22).


Israel, delivered from Egypt by the blood of the Passover, separated by the waters of the Red Sea, and alone with God in the desert, are to be taught the nature of God’s holiness, man’s sin, and God’s salvation. Already they have failed, the tables of stone having been broken. The ark therefore is made, wherein the law, unbroken, may be placed. The Lord does not come a second time to Israel with the law, for one sin places a man irrevocab...
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The Self-Drawn Portrait of the Apostle Paul. (1)

May 25, 2014
by Charles H. Welch



#1. The Portrait as a Whole.


Most students of Scripture have at some time or other used Conybeare and Howson’s “Life and Epistles of St. Paul”. In the introduction to Vol. I there occurs one of the longest sentences to be met with in ordinary literature—a sentence containing more than 500 words.

The introduction opens as follows:

“The purpose of this work is to give a living picture of St. Paul himself, and of the circumstances by which he was surrounded.”

Later on ...

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Occasional Meditations. (7) - by Charles H. Welch

May 24, 2014



#7. The Passover.---Exodus xii. 1-20 and 29-33.


Divine inspiration has sealed the blessed promise that to every saved sinner Christ is the Passover Sacrifice, and the argument in I Cor. v. 8 is that those who are saved are to seek to be free from the leaven of sin and worldliness. Egypt is a picture of the world, and the Lord’s people, though locally in it, are spiritually redeemed out of it, see Gal. i. 4. In Exod. xii. 2 we have an important but often forgotten truth, which is that redempt...
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Occasional Meditations. (6) - by Charles H. Welch

May 23, 2014



#6. Psalm li.


The heading of this Psalm gives a true introduction to its “feeling”: “A Psalm of David” (the name, David, means “the Beloved One”) “when Nathan the prophet” (whose name means “a Gift”) “came unto him”. In type, we have here a beloved child of God, convicted of sin by the Given One, Christ, and the spirit and gift of repentance. His only plea is for mercy. Mercy speaks of pure grace and this alone is the sinner’s plea (see Luke xviii. 13).

There is a wond...

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Occasional Meditations. (5) - by Charles H. Welch

May 22, 2014



#5. Isaiah’s transforming Vision (Isa. vi.).


The historical setting of this vision is full of teaching. In II Chron. xxvi. 16-21 we get the sad story of King Uzziah—the story of a presumptuous man who dared to unite the offices of King and Priest. The uniting of these two offices will be the culminating sin of the Antichrist (II Thess. ii. 4), for the true Priest-King is the Messiah Himself (Psa. cx. 4). In the same year that King Uzziah died, Isaiah saw his vision of the One Who was right...
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Occasional Meditations. (4) - by Charles H. Welch

May 21, 2014



#4. The offering of Isaac.
Genesis xxii.



We may consider this chapter from two different points of view:

(1) As a record of the testing of Abraham’s faith.

(2) As typical of the work of Christ.

Let us consider each of these aspects in turn.

Abraham had been declared by the Lord to be righteous as far back as Gen. xv. 6, and Paul uses this passage in Rom. iv. as an argument for justification by faith. The apostle James, however, after alluding to the blessedness of enduring temptation or testing (...

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The Bearing of the Context on Well-Known Passages. (2)

May 21, 2014
by Charles H. Welch



#2. “Light affliction” and the “Weight of glory”.


“For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory” (II Cor. iv. 17).

A deal of harm may be done if we lift this passage out of its context and press its teaching upon souls unprepared by truth to receive it. It is not true that “affliction”, considered in itself, is “light”. Paul had confessed earlier in this same epistle that he had been ...

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Occasional Meditations. (3) - by Charles H. Welch

May 20, 2014



#3. The redemption of Christ.
Isaiah liii.



“Then Philip opened his mouth, and began at the same scripture, and preached unto him—Jesus” (Acts viii. 35). May this be the Divine key-note of all our meditations, and particularly so in connection with this chapter of Isaiah. The word “arm” in verse 1 means “that which sows” or “the seed corn”—so that the passage could be translated, if the N.T. did not settle it for us, “the seed corn of the Lord”. In John xii. 38 we read: ...
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About Me


Marvin Pagkanlungan I am a 66-year-old former political activist who became a Christian in 1991. I did not write these articles ( I am not academically qualified to be a writer or bible teacher ), I just gathered them from various sources and re-posted them here "to enlighten all as to what is the stewardship (committed to the Apostle Paul) of the mystery that hath been hidden from the ages in God" - Ephesians 3:9.

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