Now when it delights God, Who severs me from my mothers womb and calls me through His grace, to unveil His Son in me that I may be evangelizing Him among the nations, I did not immediately submit it to flesh and blood, neither came I up to Jerusalem to those who were apostles before me, but I came away into Arabia, and I return again to Damascus. Thereupon, after three years, I came up to Jerusalem to relate my story to Cephas, and I stay with him fifteen days
Paul to the Galatians 1: 15-18, Concordant New Testament
Many Christians would agree that one of the most prominent voices preaching the evangel of Christ has been that of the apostle Paul. In fact, it is through the evangel of Paul that we learn much of the truth of our life in Christ Jesus. Yet Paul wasn't trained through following Jesus. Nor was he found to be mingling among His disciples. For before his come to Jesus moment on that road to Damascus Paul was the man Saul, raised in the traditions of the Jewish faith. From the time he was young, Saul spent years within the Jewish synagogues learning from the same Pharisees who would later criticize him for the teaching of his radical evangel of Jesus {Paul to the Galatians 1:14}. Why does this even matter? Well, the traditional line of thinking among Christians is that Paul walked right into his ministry after his conversion. This simply wasn't the case, and Paul himself admits it. Upon his own come to Jesus moment, we're told that Paul "Heralded Jesus, that He is the Son of God" {Acts of the Apostles 9:20}. Yet how was this man, raised among the traditions of the Jewish faith, able to proclaim the truths of the evangel of Christ so quickly? In the words of Paul, "But I came away into Arabia, and I return again to Damacus" {Paul to the Galatians 1:17}. For it was during his time spent in the desert of Arabia that Paul had to unpack all which he had learned from his time in the Jewish faith. This radical evangel which Paul would soon proclaim to the world was totally different from the traditional message spoken by the Jewish Pharisees in their synagogues. Instead of a message based upon separation and tradition, Paul would speak of an evangel of our unity with God. It should not surprise anyone that the message preached by the Jewish Pharisees is similar to that preached from the pulpits by many in the mainstream church of today.
For I am making known to you, brethren, as to the evangel which is being brought by me, that it is not in accord with man. For neither did I accept it from a man, nor was I taught it, but it came through a revelation of Jesus Christ
Paul to the Galatians 1: 11-12, Concordant New Testament
In his own words, Paul speaks to his evangel as not being taught to him by man, but by the revelation of Christ Jesus {Paul to the Galatians 1:12}. I submit that it was during his own time in seclusion in the deserts of Arabia that Paul received this revelation of his radical new evangel of Christ from the very One he was preaching of. Paul relates that, "After three years, I came up to Jerusalem to relate my story to Cephas" {Paul to the Galatians 1:18}. Therefore, we can assume that his time spent in the deserts of Arabia was somewhere around three years. It was here, upon his return to Jerusalem, that Paul began to proclaim his evangel of the risen Christ. One can only imagine what difficulties he faced during his time in the desert as he struggled to unpack all of the Pharisee school knowledge which he had come to know and accept as truth. I can relate to Paul in the fact that my own struggle to come to know the truth of my life in Christ is contrary to that which I was taught by so many in the mainstream church. For I was taught that it was my sin which has separated me from God. That the free gift of salvation given to me was absolutely conditional upon my behavior. The separation theology of todays mainstream church comes straight from the halls of the Jewish synagogues that instructed the man Saul. Tradition over the truth of our union life in Jesus. Paul speaks to his own life in Jesus in Galatians {Paul to the Galatians 2:20}. Imagine the struggle Paul had unpacking this truth. It's the same struggle I once faced as I was first introduced to the evangel spoken by Paul by a dear friend of mine. How could I, a sinner, be in Jesus? Again, the evangel spoken by Paul reveals the truth unto us. For Paul proclaims of Jesus, "He died to sin once for all time" {Paul to the Romans 6:10}. The truth spoken by Paul is not that our sin has separated us from God, but that Jesus has died to sin that our life should be lived in Him.
~Scott~