salvation

The Kingdom Within: Jesus’ Inward Reign vs. Paul’s Doctrine of Salvation by Blood

What if the heart of the gospel is quieter, more intimate, and more demanding than many of us were taught? In Luke 17:21, Jesus looks the Pharisees in the eye and says, “The kingdom of God is within you.” Not a future political takeover. Not a visible throne replacing Caesar. Not even a new religion. An inward reality, the living God taking up residence in the secret place of the devotional conscience, creating cleanness where there was shame, renewing a spirit that was once fractured. This is the ancient prayer of Psalm 51:10 made flesh: “Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me.”

I believe it is well for us to hold this inward kingdom beside the gospel Paul later proclaimed and to notice, with clear-eyed honesty, how strikingly different the emphases are.

Rebecca Lalhmangaihzuali (n.d.) places Paul firmly in the shadow of the Roman Empire. Paul’s “kingdom of God” functions as resistance language — righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit (Rom 14:17) set against empire’s “peace through victory.” Yet even in this political reading, the kingdom remains something experienced now by believers (1 Cor 4:20), a present spiritual reality.

Pamela Eisenbaum, through David Matthew’s (2009) synopsis, insists Paul never left Judaism. He was called, not converted. His letters are Jewish sectarian literature; the word “Christian” did not yet exist. Paul’s mission was never to replace Torah with a new system but to open Israel’s covenant blessings to Gentiles as Gentiles.

Bruce R. Booker (2009) presses the contrast further. Jesus declares in Matthew 5:17-19 that he came not to abolish the Torah but to fulfill it, even down to the smallest yod. Anyone who annuls even the least commandment and teaches others to do so will be called “least in the kingdom of heaven.” Booker reminds us that Jesus himself gave the law at Sinai (Exod 24). The fulfillment Jesus offers is inward obedience and heart renewal, precisely the clean heart and renewed spirit of Psalm 51:10.

Here the difference becomes most visible, and also most historically telling. Jesus never once blatantly confessed or taught that salvation comes through faith in his own blood. He never presented his death as the mechanism by which sins are atoned for through believing in a substitutionary sacrifice. His message was the kingdom of God — repent, the kingdom is at hand (Mark 1:15); do the will of the Father; let the reign of God transform you from within. And if you are mindful of the bread (body) and wine (blood) ritual presented in the gospels at passover, this is indeed something copied from Paul and pasted into those narratives by the gospel authors; as opposed to Paul’s mythical pagan Jesus, the real Hebrew man would not have made such a clearly pagan statement.

Paul, however, makes faith in his Christ’s blood the central saving reality. He writes of being “justified by his blood” (Rom 5:9), of redemption “through his blood” (Eph 1:7), and of God putting Christ forward as a propitiation by his blood, to be received by faith (Rom 3:25). He insists we are justified not by works of the law but through faith in “Jesus Christ” (Gal 2:16). This is a distinctly Pauline sentiment.

Kyle C. Dunham (2006) describes the present “kingdom of the Son” (Col 1:13) as a hidden, mustard-seed reality already sprouting in the hearts of believers (Matt 13). Yet even here, Paul interprets the kingdom through the lens of his Christ’s sacrificial death and resurrection in ways Jesus’ own preaching never did.

Now layer in the evident historical reality of the gospels and of Paul’s voice: Paul wrote first — from the late 40s AD to the late 60s AD. The Gospels came later. Mark, the earliest Gospel, was composed around 70 AD — ten to twenty years or more after Paul’s active ministry and likely after his death. Nowhere in any of Paul’s surviving epistles does he cite or describe a Galilean preacher who performed miracles, taught in parables, or was born of a virgin. Paul’s letters contain no reference to the empty tomb stories, the Sermon on the Mount, the Lord’s Prayer, or any specific earthly details that fill the Gospel narratives. Paul’s epistles do not sincerely confirm anything within the Gospels.

Instead, the Gospels appear to rework Paul’s theological sentiments; his cross-centered atonement, his faith-apart-from-law emphasis; into the form of a historical biography, writing as if documenting an actual person who walked in Galilee.

Jesus taught the kingdom of God as an inward dispensation; a transformative reign breaking into the human heart here and now. Paul taught salvation through faith in the blood of a Jesus who, in the writings we have from Paul himself, bears little resemblance to the Gospel portrait, because the Gospels had not yet been invented while Paul was alive.

The difference stands. One vision calls us into inwardly embracing the quiet, demanding presence of the living God’s words; the other centers rescue on faith in a blood sacrifice of a Christ whose earthly life and teachings Paul never once quotes or alludes to in detail. What does that divergence ask of us today?

 References

Booker, B. R. (2009). The Problem with Paul. Chicago

Dunham, K. C. (2006). THE KINGDOM OF CHRIST AND OF GOD: A TRADITIONAL.

Eisenbaum, P. (2011). Paul was not a Christian. HarperOne.

Lalhmangaihzuali, R. EKKLESIA: A NEW PARADIGM IN PAULINE CONCEPT KINGDOM OF GOD.

The Mystery Cult Influence on Paul's Salvation Doctrine

Paul’s doctrine of salvation, as seen in his epistles, presents a profound transformation of the individual—akin to an initiation into a higher spiritual reality. This process bears striking similarities to the initiation rites of Greco-Roman mystery religions, which promised their adherents a form of spiritual rebirth and access to “divine” knowledge. However, Paul’s view of salvation also diverges sharply from the Bible’s concept of salvation, which is mainly inward and experience-based.

Paul’s Doctrine and Initiation Into Salvation

Paul’s doctrine of salvation demonstrates notable parallels with the mystery religions' initiatory frameworks of his day, but is also marked by certain philosophical divergences.

1. Baptism as Initiation into Salvation:
In Paul's theory, baptism serves as the gateway to salvation, mirroring the initiatory rites of the mystery cults. In Romans 6:3-5, Paul presents baptism as a participation in his Christ’s death and resurrection—a spiritual death to the old self and rebirth into new life. This language echoes the death-rebirth motifs in cults like Mithraism and Dionysian rites, where initiates symbolically die and are reborn​.

Despite employing the very same rite of baptism from within mystery religions, Paul’s baptism carries a different theoretical significance. It is not merely a symbolic act, but an assumed ontological transformation, uniting the believer with his Christ in a relational, rather than mystical, sense. Unlike mystery cult initiations, which often blurred individual identity in “divine” absorption, Paul yet emphasizes personal identity and agency. The believer remains distinct yet in communion with his Christ—a “life hidden with Christ in God” (Colossians 3:3)​. He took the rite of baptism and re-worked it.

2. The Eucharist and Mystical Communion:
The Eucharist in Paul’s writings mirrors the sacred meals of the mystery religions, particularly the communal feasts in Mithraism and Dionysian rites. In 1 Corinthians 11:23-26, Paul presents the bread and wine as the body and blood of his Christ, fostering unity among believers and communion with his Christ. However, while the mystery cults’ sacred meals often symbolized the literal consumption of the deity (theophagy), Paul’s Eucharist, while nevertheless maintaining a yet literal stance of mystical union, serves as a supposed symbolic memorial and proclamation of his Christ’s death​.

3. Faith-Mysticism vs. Ritualistic Mysticism:
Paul’s theology introduces a unique form of faith-mysticism, distinct from the ritualistic mysticism of the mystery cults. For Paul, faith—not ritual—is the primary means of accessing “divine grace.” This is evident in his doctrine of justification by faith (Romans 3:28), where salvation is a “divine gift,” received through trust in his Christ rather than through elaborate rites​.

This diverges from the mystery cults, where elaborate initiation rituals were the primary means of salvation. While mystery cults emphasized emotional ecstasy and sensory experiences to foster divine union, Paul focuses on an internal, ethical transformation initiated by faith and sustained by the “Holy Spirit​.” Oddly enough, Christianity would move away from Paul’s stoic approach to a mystery religion and embody the spirit of former Greco-Roman cults.

4. Divergence in the Concept of Salvation:
While both Paul’s version of the Christian religion and the mystery religions are redemptive, their conceptions of salvation differ fundamentally. Mystery cults promised a form of mystical immortality—often tied to the natural cycles of death and rebirth—as in the myths of Osiris or Attis. Paul’s soteriology, however, emphasizes salvation from both the guilt and power of sin, achieved yet through his Christ’s atoning death and resurrection​.

Moreover, Paul introduces a forensic dimension to his theory salvation, absent in mystery cults. Justification in Paul’s theology is not about mystical transformation alone, but also about being legally declared righteous before “God”—a judicial act grounded in “divine grace” rather than ritual efficacy​. Again, as time would pass, the Christian church would find herself embracing a religious lifestyle that Paul sought the philosophically reform.

From the Bible’s Inward Transformation to Paul’s Theological Supernaturalism

Paul’s theology represents a significant divergence from the Bible’s focus on an inner, personal relationship with the living God, emphasizing instead a supernatural framework where salvation is externalized and anchored in the redemptive act of his Christ. While passages like Psalm 51:10 (“Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me”) and Job 22:21-22 (“Acquaint now thyself with him, and be at peace: thereby good shall come unto thee”) emphasize internal renewal and a personal encounter with the Bible’s words, Paul introduces a theoretical theological model grounded in a supernatural act of grace, often externalized in sacramental forms.

1. Inward Salvation by Wisdom vs. Paul’s Theological Supernaturalism

The Bible frequently highlights the inner dimensions of salvation—the heart, wisdom, and spiritual renewal. In Proverbs 9:10, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom,” salvation begins with reverence, leading to a deeper understanding of truths found within the pages of the Bible. Ecclesiastes 7:12 echoes this sentiment, stating that “wisdom giveth life to them that have it,” emphasizing an internal acquisition of knowledge as a path to life.

Paul, however, shifts this internal focus to a supernatural model of salvation, where the redemptive act is initiated not by inner spiritual awakening but by “God's” external intervention. According to Paul, salvation is not ultimately an organic growth of self through inward wisdom, but a “new creation” that results from the resurrection of his Christ—a supernatural event applied to believers through faith​.

2. From Justification through Understanding to Justification by Faith

A pivotal divergence is Paul’s doctrine of justification by faith. In contrast to the Bible’s emphasis on cultivating a pure heart (Psalm 51:10) and growing in wisdom and knowledge of the Bible’s devotional character (Proverbs 9:10), Paul introduces a forensic element where the believer is declared righteous by “God,” irrespective of their inner moral state. This legal declaration stems from his Christ's atoning sacrifice, shifting the focus from inward transformation to legal acquittal​, which clearly defies the saying, “…through knowledge shall the just be delivered,” Proverbs 11:9.

While passages like Job 22:21-22 advocate for a personal, experiential knowledge of the living God—“Receive, I pray thee, the law from his mouth, and lay up his words in thine heart”—Paul proposes that the wisdom given directly from investigating the scriptures cannot truly bring about righteousness, even if the scriptures clarify that such an experience leads into the intended righteousness. Instead, faith in his Christ, despite whatever mental exercises one embraces, becomes the sole means of salvation. This theological shift moves away from the Bible’s relational approach to the living God and centers on a faith-based, supernatural justification​.

3. Wisdom and the Spirit: Pauline Mysticism vs. Bible

Paul's letters, especially 1 Corinthians, present wisdom not as something attained through fear of the living God (as in Proverbs 9:10), but as a mystery revealed through the “Spirit” to those “mature” in “faith.” This “hidden wisdom” is accessible only through “divine revelation,” contrasting with the Bible’s more democratic view of wisdom as accessible to all who fear​, which is why it says in Isaiah 66:2, “...to this man will I look, even to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word.”

Paul’s understanding of the “indwelling Spirit” greatly diverges from the Hebrew Scriptures. In the Bible, the outpouring of the living God’s spirit means the manifestation of understanding, even like as it says in Proverbs 1:23, “...I will pour out my spirit unto you, I will make known my words unto you.” Paul changes and radicalizes this by claiming that his Christ himself dwells within the believer, existing in the form of a personal indwelling rather than an abstract influence. This indwelling shifts the focus from the cultivation of the devotional character by wisdom and understanding to the mystical presence of a “Christ” within.

4. The Experience of Salvation: Internal Awakening vs. Supernatural Act

The Bible emphasizes salvation as an inward journey—a process of the devotional character becoming acquainted with the Bible’s devotional character, developing wisdom, and cultivating a renewed heart. Paul, on the other hand, frames salvation as a supernatural event enacted by “God,” independent of human effort. Salvation, according to Paul, is “not an affair of the human will,” but the result of “God’s sovereign act” through the resurrection of his Christ​.

This theological stance minimizes the role of personal spiritual development in favor of an externalized, supernatural imposition of “grace.” While Psalm 51:10 focuses on the heart’s cleansing through repentance and creation, Paul emphasizes a “new creation” brought about by “God,” bypassing the gradual inner transformation highlighted in the Bible.

A Shift from Inner Wisdom to Supernatural Redemption

Paul’s doctrine of salvation stands at the crossroads of Jewish and Hellenistic religious thought. It absorbs the transformational motifs of Greco-Roman mystery cults—death, rebirth, and mystical union—while simultaneously breaking with the concept of salvation within the Hebrew Scriptures. In Paul’s vision, salvation is an initiation into his Christ’s death and resurrection, a mystical participation in the “divine life” that surpasses genuine inward personal devotional growth and development. Whether consciously or unconsciously, Paul employs the language and structure of mystery religions to articulate a faith that is both deeply mystical and radically inclusive.

Paul’s theology represents a radical departure from the inner-focused, wisdom-based salvation found in the Bible’s philosophy. Where Psalm 51:10, Proverbs 9:10, Ecclesiastes 7:12, and Job 22:21-22 highlight the transformative power of the Bible’s wisdom, fear of the living God, and internal spiritual renewal, Paul centers salvation on a supernatural act—the resurrection of his Christ—applied to believers through faith.

This shift moves the emphasis from an internal experience of growing into the Bible’s wisdom and character to an externalized, legal declaration of righteousness, thereby altering the Bible’s philosophy of salvation as an inward journey into a supernatural act of “divine grace,” an act that, in and of itself, is nothing less than a wielded religious law, something that Paul oddly protested, and yet subtly magnified through his Christ.

 

 references

Angus, S. (1921). The Mystery Religions and Christianity. Review & Expositor18(3), 317-341.

Fraser, C. G. (1998). The Jewish and Hellenistic influences on Paul: A case study of" mysterion".

Machen, J. G. (1925). The origin of Paul's religion. Eerdmans.

Moyer, E. W. (1932). The mystery-religions and their influence upon Paul's conception of Christian belief (Doctoral dissertation, Boston University).