Jesus says the law stands — every iota, every tittle — until heaven and earth pass away. Not one letter disappears. Breaking even the least commandment disqualifies you from the kingdom. Paul says Christ is the end of the law. If Christ is the end of the law, the law has stopped.
One says the law stands. One says Christ ended it. Both cannot be true simultaneously about the same law, in the same scripture, within a generation of each other.
Jesus tells the rich young ruler: keep the commandments. If you want eternal life, keep them. The test is behavioral — what you do. Paul tells the Ephesians: saved by grace through faith, not of works.
One is performance. One is faith. The gap between them is the entire Protestant Reformation — and every theological argument in between.
Jesus: doing the will of the Father is the entry criterion. Words alone — even the word "Lord" — are insufficient. The test is obedience. Paul: confessing Jesus as Lord and believing in the resurrection is the entry criterion.
Jesus gives an ethical test. Paul gives a doctrinal test. These are not the same thing.
Jesus makes forgiveness explicitly conditional on your willingness to forgive others. The equation is precise: forgive as God forgives you, or your own forgiveness is withheld. Paul removes all conditions from justification. God justifies the ungodly.
In Jesus's formulation, your standing before God depends partly on you. In Paul's, the ungodly are declared righteous without any behavioral prerequisite.
Jesus: call no man father. The reason is unambiguous — one Father, in heaven. The command is categorical. Paul: in Christ Jesus I have begotten you. He calls himself their father. Not metaphorically — he says he has begotten them, the word used for biological fatherhood.
Paul either does not know about Matthew 23:9, or he considers his apostolic authority sufficient to override the categorical prohibition Jesus gave. If the prohibition was absolute, Paul violates it.
The young man in Mark asks: what must I do? Jesus answers with a list of moral commandments. The inheritance comes through obedience. Paul answers the same question by dismissing the law as a mechanism for righteousness entirely.
These are not the same answer. They are not compatible answers. Paul gives his answer by explicitly contradicting the logic Jesus used.
Jesus: love your enemies. No qualifications. No carve-out for hostile governments. Love the people actively working against you. Paul: submit to the governing authorities. They carry the sword — the legitimate instrument of state violence. Resistance to the state is resistance to God's ordained order.
One is the most radical ethical teaching in history. The other is a conventional defense of state power — with God as the authority behind it.
Jesus: the Son of Man comes to reward every man according to his works. The measurement is behavioral. Paul: a man is justified by faith, without the works of the law. Works play no role in justification.
If your final judgment is by works (Jesus) but your justification is by faith without works (Paul), you face two incompatible systems in the same canon. That harmonization is a theological choice, not a scriptural conclusion.
Jesus: if you love him, you keep his commandments. Love is demonstrated by obedience. The commandments are the test. Paul: if you are led by the Spirit, you are not under the law. The law is a constraint the Spirit frees you from.
One says: demonstrate your love by keeping the rules. The other says: if the Spirit is leading you, the rules no longer apply. In the same scripture, these two statements coexist — and they are not compatible.
In the sheep and goats judgment, the basis is exclusively behavioral. Feed the hungry. Give drink to the thirsty. Shelter the stranger. No confession of faith. No theological proposition. No apostolic authorization. Just what you did for the least of these.
In Paul's formulation, works play no role. Justification is by faith alone. The mechanism Paul describes for justification produces a different result than the mechanism Jesus describes for the final judgment.
Jesus: the only legitimate grounds for divorce is sexual immorality. Any other remarriage after divorce is adultery. Paul: if an unbelieving spouse leaves, let them go. The believer is "not under bondage" — the marriage bond is dissolved by the unbeliever's departure, no grounds required.
Paul grants broader grounds for dissolution than Jesus describes. That is a direct contradiction on the same subject in the same canon.
Jesus: to be his disciple, you must hate your family. The cost of discipleship is radical familial rupture. Paul: if you do not provide for your own family, you have denied the faith and are worse than an unbeliever. "Denied the faith" is the harshest language Paul uses for apostasy.
One says: your loyalty to family must be subordinated to follow Christ. The other says: not providing for your family is apostasy. These are opposite imperatives for the same domain. The tension here is not theoretical.