* that.
It is evident that the apostle considered his extraordinary
conversion as a most complete demonstration of the truth of
Christianity; and when all the particulars of his education,
his previous religious principles, his zeal, his enmity
against Christians, and his prospects of secular honours and
preferments by persecuting them, are compared with the
subsequent part of his life, and the sudden transition from a
furious persecutor to a zealous preacher of the gospel, in
which he laboured and suffered to the end of his life, and for
which he died a martyr, it must convince every candid and
impartial person that no rational account can be given of this
change, except what he himself assigns; and consequently, if
that be true, that Christianity is Divine.
* that.
9:3-5 26:12
* Damascus.
Ge 14:15 15:2 2Sa 8:6
* about.
26:13 Isa 24:23 Mt 17:2 Re 1:16
|