Speaking of his salvation, the Apostle Paul said,
βHowbeit for this cause I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forthΒ all longsuffering,Β for a pattern to them which should hereafter believe on Him to life everlastingβ (I TimothyΒ 1:16).
But if the word βlongsufferingβ meansΒ to suffer long with someone, how can Paul say that Christ showed forth βallΒ longsufferingβ to him? As Saul of Tarsus, he didnβt join the rebellion against God until ActsΒ 7:58, less than a year before he was saved. God certainly hadnβt suffered with Paul for very long!
But in saving Saul, the Lord didnβt just show longsufferingΒ to him alone, He showed itΒ to all mankind.Β In the past, βthe longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noahβ (I PeterΒ 3:20), but it only waited 120 years (Gen. 6:3). After God judged mankind with the flood, He started all over again with Noah, the father of all nations (Gen. 10:1-32). God endured those nations for 200 years, showingΒ moreΒ longsuffering. But when they built a tower in rebellion against Him, He saved Abraham, and made his seed HisΒ favoredΒ nation, putting up withΒ themΒ for 1500 years.Β Even moreΒ longsuffering!
After God sent His only begotten Son to His favored nation and they crucified Him and stoned His prophet, you would think that Godβs longsuffering would have been exhausted. You would think God would have given up on mankind and judged us with the worst judgment the world had ever seen,Β the Great TribulationΒ (Mt. 24:21). Instead He saved Saul of Tarsus, the leader of the worldβs rebellion against God, to show forthΒ allΒ longsuffering. Paulβs salvation wasΒ the culmination of all the longsuffering God had shown in all human history.
But God did not show forth this longsuffering merely as the culmination of all His longsuffering in the past. He also showed it forth βfor a pattern to them which shouldΒ hereafterΒ believe on Him to life everlastingβ in the future, and the longsuffering the Lord showed Paul is the same longsuffering He has shown to mankind ever since.
βFor we ourselves also were sometimes foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving divers lusts and pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful, and hating one another.Β But after thatβ¦βΒ (Titus 3:3,4).
After that, what? After that youβd think the wrath of God would fall on us, just as you would have thought it would have fallen on the world when they stoned Stephen. Instead we read, βafter thatΒ the kindness and love of God our Saviour toward man appearedβΒ (Titus 3:4)βand itβsΒ stillΒ appearing some 2,000 years later!
HaveΒ youΒ believed on Him to life everlasting? The Lord Jesus died to pay for your sins and rose again (I Corinthians 15:3,4), and all He asks is that youΒ believeΒ He died to pay for your sins. Why not βbelieve on the Lord Jesus ChristβΒ right nowΒ βand thou shalt be savedβ (ActsΒ 16:31). source