Christians and Christianity say they follow Yeshua Jesus.
But what if much of Christians and Christianity doctrine comes not from His words - but from later interpretations of Pawlos Paul?
In Christians and Christianity: Misunderstandings of Pawlos Paul's Epistles and Letters, Godfred Amponsah presents a bold and carefully argued re-examination of Pauline theology through a Hebrew lens.
For centuries, Pawlos's Paul's writings in Romans and Galatians have been used to teach that:
- The Law (Torah) is abolished
- Grace replaces obedience
- Faith stands apart from covenant responsibility
- The early Assembly/Church broke from its Jewish foundation
But is that what Pawlos Paul actually taught?
Drawing directly from:
- The Hebrew Scriptures
- The teachings of Yeshua Ha'Mashiach
- Acts 15 and the Yerusalem/Jerusalem Council
- The lived practices of the Twelve Apostles
- And the 1611 King James Version
This book challenges inherited assumptions and returns Pawlos Paul to his historical, Jewish context.
Inside this book, you will discover:
What Pawlos Paul meant by "under the law"
Whether Romans truly abolishes Torah
Why Galatians has been widely misinterpreted
How Peter (Kepha) and James (Ya'aqob) actually lived
The difference between covenant obedience and legalism
Why 2 Peter warns that Pawlos Paul is difficult to understand
This is not an attack on Scripture.
It is a call to read it carefully.
Whether you are:
- A pastor wrestling with Pauline theology
- A believer questioning the law-grace divide
- A student of the Hebrew roots of Christianity
- Or someone seeking to reconcile Pawlos Paul with the teachings of Yeshua Jesus.
This work invites you to examine the foundation of your faith.
The central question:
Did Christianity misunderstand Pawlos Paul - or has Pawlos Paul been read outside of his Hebrew world?
If you are serious about Scripture, covenant faithfulness, and the original message of the early Assembly/Church, this book will challenge you - and sharpen you.