- Video recording, Sun, Feb 12, 2023: The greatest, most famous and perhaps most radical conversion in history.
- ** What is your conversion story? This is my magical mystical supernatural conversion of meeting God for the first time in 1980.
- Contact (Ac 9:3), confrontation (Ac 9:4a), conviction (Ac 9:4b; 2 Cor 3:18; 4:6; 1 Jn 1:5; Jn 1:4-5; 15:25).
- Command (Ac 9:6; Mt 28:19).
- Communion (Ac 9:9), conversation (Isa 1:18), connection, contemplation (Phil 4:8), confession (Ac 22:4; 26:10; 1 Cor 15:9; Gal 1:13).
- Call (Jn 15:16; 1 Pet 2:9) and commission [through Ananias] (Ac 9:15-16); from God (Ac 26:16; 1:8; Mt 28:19).
- Conversion (Ac 9:3, 17; 22:8; 1 Ti 1:15; Phil 3:7-10; 1 Cor 15:3-4).
- Cost (Ac 9:16; I Cor 15:31) and contentment (Phil 4:11-12; 1 Tim 6:6).
- Saul goes from persecutor of Christians (Ac 8:3; 9:1) to preaching Christ (Ac 9:20) and proving that Jesus is the Messiah (Ac 9:22), to being persecuted (Ac 9:23, 29) and needing protection (Ac 9:25, 30).
- Saul was on his back repenting (Ac 9:4-5), on his knees praying (Ac 9:11) and now on his feet preaching (Ac 9:20, 22, 28).
- When Saul was converted he had a new Master (Ac 9:6) and a new mission (Ac 9:15). With a new master comes new commands (Ac 9:6), a new life (2 Cor 5:17), a new mission (Ac 9:15), a new family (Ac 9:19, 28a), a new message (Ac 9:20, 22, 28b), a new power (Ac 1:8) and then a new enemy (Ac 9:23, 29). What is new in your life?
With a new enemy the hunter becomes the hunted; the one who came to kill becomes the one they want to kill.
With a new master (Ac 9:6) comes a new mission (Ac 9:15). Who is the master of your life? You? Someone else? Or God?
- the reorientation of the soul of an individual,
- his deliberate turning from indifference or an earlier form of piety to another,
- a turning which implies a consciousness that a great change is involved,
- that the old was wrong and the new is right.
- Is the conversion of Saul intended to be a model of Christian conversion today? Yes, but only if we distinguish between the dramatic outward accompaniments and the essential inward experience.
- There are many Sauls in the world, people richly endowed with gifts of intellect and character, stubborn, even fanatical in their rejection of Christ. Can they, like Saul, be converted and transformed?
- * Why would Saul/Paul seem most unlikely to be converted? Read Ac 7:58; 8:1, 3; 9:1-2; 22:4; 26:10; 1 Cor 15:9; Gal 1:13. Why did he go beyond Jerusalem to Damascus [136 miles, a week's journey]? Read Gal 1:14; Phil 3:5-6; Ac 8:1. How far away is that?
- * What is this "light from heaven"? Read Ac 9:3; 26:13; 7:55-56; 1 Cor 9:1; 15:8; 2 Cor 3:18; 4:6; Exo 3:2; 13:21-22; 24:16; 40:34-35; 1 Tim 6:16; 1 Jn 1:5; Mt 17:2; Mk 9:3; Lk 9:29.
- What happened to Saul and why? Read Ac 9:4a; Ezek 1:28; 3:23; Dan 8:17; Rev 1:27. Why the repetition of Saul' name? Read Ac 9:4b; Gen 22:11; Exo 3:4; Lk 10:41; Mt 23:37. Why does Jesus say "persecute me"? Read Ac 9:5; Eph 1:22; 4:12; Col 1:18, 24.
- Read Ac 9:6. What does this order say about who is now in charge? How did this affect Saul's companions? Read Ac 9:7; 26:14. How did this affect Saul? Read Ac 9:8-9. What might Saul have done during those 3 days?
- How might Ananias have become a disciple? Ac 9:10; 2:41? Why were his instructions very hard to obey? Read Ac 9:11-14, 1-2; 8:1-3.
- * Read Ac 9:15; 22:14-15; 26:16. Why does God choose people? Read 1 Pet 2:9; Jn 15:16. Are you chosen? What was God's purpose for Saul's life? For your life? Why suffering? Read Ac 9:16, 22-23, 29; Lk 21:12; Jn 3:19. What is your suffering as a Christian?
- Read Ac 17-18. What was the result of Ananias meeting Saul?
- Experience a personal encounter with Christ.
- Surrender to him in penitence and faith.
- Receive his summons to service.
- Divine contact (Ac 9:3). As with the Ethiopian salvation is always the sovereign will of God that comes about by God's power, purpose and determination. God answered Stephen's prayer. God sovereignly makes contact with the sinner who is the object of his divine grace and sovereign regenerating power–not always this dramatically, but always this sovereignly. Anyone and everyone's salvation is always initiated by God.
- Divine conviction (Ac 9:4; Jn 15:25). Repetition implies a rebuke: Martha, Martha; Jerusalem, Jerusalem; Simon, Simon; Saul, Saul.
- Divine conversion (Ac 9:5; 22:8; 1 Ti 1:15; Phil 3:7-10). The 1st evidence of true conversion is submission (Ac 22:8), compliance, obedience.
- Divine communion (Ac 9:9). For 3 days he communed with his Lord. It's the blindness not of darkness but of the light. But he is stunned, helpless, friendless. He has friends who are now enemies, and enemies who don't know they are to be friends. This is a magnificent picture of salvation in all it's beauty and glory. It is sudden, unexpected, explosive, a miracle in a moment, but it must embody [1] that sovereign work, [2] that conviction of rejecting Christ as the great sin, [3] that conversion of submitting and saying, "Lord, what will you have me do?" And [4] the contemplation and communion that thinks deeply about this miracle.
- Divine commission (Ac 9:15-16) from God through Ananias.
- by birth, he was a Jew,
- by conviction, a Pharisee,
- by citizenship, a Roman,
- by education, a Greek, and then
- by grace, a Christian.
- missionary,
- theologian,
- evangelist,
- church planter,
- pastor,
- teacher,
- preacher,
- leader,
- thinker,
- statesman,
- fighter,
- an organizer / administrator, and
- lover all at the same time.
- Osborne, Grant. Acts. Verse by Verse. 2019. Saul's Conversion and Peter's Mission (Ac 9:1-43).
- Witherington III, Ben. The Acts of the Apostles. A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary. 1998. Saul as the Salient Jewish Convert (Ac 9:1-31).
- Stott, John. The Message of Acts. 1990. Through the Bible through the year, Daily reflections from Genesis to Revelation. 2006.
- Saul himself: his pre-conversion state in Jerusalem (9:1-2).
- Saul and Jesus: his conversion on the Damascus Road (9:3-9).
- Saul and Ananias: his welcome into the church in Damascus (9:10-25).
- Saul and Barnabas: his introduction to the apostles in Jerusalem (9:26-31).
- Peterson, David G. The Acts of the Apostles. The Pillar NT commentary. 2009. Saul's Conversion and Commissioning (9:1-19a).
- Meeting the ascended Lord (9:1-9).
- Accepted into fellowship of the persecuted church (9:10-19a).
- Marshall, I. Howard. Acts. Tyndale NT commentaries (TNTC). 1980. The conversion and call of Paul (9:1-19a).
- Wright, N.T. Acts for Everyone, Part 1. Chapters 1-12. 2008.
- Fernando, Ajith. The Message of Jesus in Action. 2010.
Saul's Conversion by Chat GPT (1/25/23):
Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, As we read in Acts 9, we see the incredible story of Saul's conversion to Christianity. Saul, also known as Paul, was a devout Jew and a fierce persecutor of the early Christian church. He was on his way to Damascus to arrest and bring back to Jerusalem any followers of Jesus he found there, when he was struck by a bright light from heaven and heard the voice of Jesus asking him, "Why do you persecute me?" In that moment, Saul's life was forever changed. He was blinded by the light and had to be led into Damascus by his companions. There, he met with a disciple named Ananias, who laid his hands on Saul and prayed for him. Saul's sight was restored, and he was filled with the Holy Spirit. Saul, now Paul, became one of the greatest Christian missionaries and leaders of all time. He preached the gospel throughout the Roman Empire, establishing churches and spreading the word of Jesus Christ to all who would listen.This powerful story of conversion reminds us that no matter how far we may have strayed from the path of righteousness, there is always hope for redemption and forgiveness. Just as Saul, who was once an enemy of the church, became one of its greatest advocates, so too can we be transformed by the power of God's love and grace. Let us remember the words of Paul himself, who wrote in Romans 5:8, "But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us." Through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, we are offered the gift of salvation and the opportunity to live a new life in him. Let us all strive to follow in Paul's footsteps, spreading the good news of the gospel to all we meet and living our lives as true followers of Jesus Christ. May God bless us all in our journey of faith. Amen.
- 6:1-9:31. The Church begins to Expand.
- 9:1-31. Saul as the Salient [main, principal, major, chief, important] Jewish Convert. Augustine said, "We owe the conversion of Paul to the prayer of Stephen."
- 9:1-19a. The Assaulting of Paul. Saul's conversion and commissioning.
- 9:19b-31. Saul's Early Efforts.
- 9:32-11:18. The Petrine Passages. The conversion of Cornelius.
- Peter heals Aeneas and raises Tabitha (9:32-43).
- Peter is sent for by Cornelius (10:1-8).
- Peter receives a vision (10:9-23).
- Peter preaches to Cornelius' household (10:23b-48).
- Peter justifies his actions (11:1-18).
- 11:19-15:35. The Antioch Chronicles.
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