Chapter 24—Paul Commences His Ministry
      
      
        Paul was baptized by Ananias in the river of Damascus. He was
      
      
        then strengthened by food, and immediately began to preach Jesus
      
      
        to the believers in the city, the very ones whom he had set out from
      
      
        Jerusalem with the purpose of destroying. He also taught in the syna-
      
      
        gogues that Jesus who had been to death was indeed the Son of God.
      
      
        His arguments from prophecy were so conclusive, and his efforts were
      
      
        so attended by the power of God, that the opposing Jews were con-
      
      
        founded and unable to answer him. Paul’s Rabbinical and Pharisaic
      
      
        education was now to be used to good account in preaching the gospel,
      
      
        and in sustaining the cause he had once used every effort to destroy.
      
      
        The Jews were thoroughly surprised and confounded by the conver-
      
      
        sion of Paul. They were aware of his position at Jerusalem, and knew
      
      
        what was his principal errand to Damascus, and that he was armed
      
      
        with a commission from the high priest that authorized him to take the
      
      
        believers in Jesus, and to send them as prisoners to Jerusalem; yet now
      
      
        they beheld him preaching the gospel of Jesus, strengthening those
      
      
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        who were already its disciples, and continually making new converts
      
      
        to the faith he had once so zealously opposed. Paul demonstrated to
      
      
        all who heard him that his change of faith was not from impulse nor
      
      
        fanaticism, but was brought about by overwhelming evidence.
      
      
        As he labored in the synagogues his faith grew stronger; his zeal in
      
      
        maintaining that Jesus was the Son of God increased, in the face of the
      
      
        fierce opposition of the Jews. He could not remain long in Damascus,
      
      
        for after the Jews had recovered from their surprise at his wonderful
      
      
        conversion, and subsequent labors, they turned resolutely from the
      
      
        overwhelming evidence thus brought to bear in favor of the doctrine
      
      
        of Christ. Their astonishment at the conversion of Paul was changed
      
      
        into an intense hatred of him like unto that which they had manifested
      
      
        against Jesus.
      
      
        Paul’s life was in peril, and he received a commission from God
      
      
        to leave Damascus for a time. He went into Arabia; and there, in
      
      
        comparative solitude, he had ample opportunity for communion with
      
      
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