Paul is
dropped to his knees, is blinded, and is told to go to Damascus and wait for
more instructions. And, like anyone who would have been through that
experience, he gets up and obeys. Meanwhile, Ananias receives a vision from God
to go and find Saul and his first reaction is fear and a desire not to go. He
had heard all about who this Saul guy was and wants nothing to do with him. God
urges him to go, tells him about a vision He was giving to Saul as well, and
then makes a very big statement. “I will show him how much he must suffer for
My name!” God knows how much Saul has persecuted His disciples, and now He is
going to use suffering to transform Saul into Paul and use the Holy Spirit to
write books and letters through Paul that would transform the world. All
through the book of Acts we see the Holy Spirit playing an essential role in
the lives of believers, and now in the last few chapters all the way through
the rest of the book we will see how suffering is also very closely tied to the
maturation of the believer. Suffering is not an option for the unfortunate;
it’s a requisite of the believer. I like it, but also hate it at the same time,
when common themes stick out in my reading of scripture. It typically means it
is an area of weakness that I’m about to be strengthened in, and that process
of strengthening is never fun.
Ananias
faced a command from God that many have, and that was to do something that
didn’t make sense; in fact it seemed like something that was a pretty bad idea.
But, Ananias was faithful, like I hope to be every time He puts a similar
challenge in front of me, and he responded with obedience. Ananias walks right
in with the confidence that can only come from his Redeemer, lays his hands on
Saul and prays for him. Paul regains his eyesight, gets baptized, and then gets
to work. He spends some days with the believers there in Damascus and then
begins proclaiming the message of the Messiah in the synagogues. And, as people
typically are and as I am sure I would have been, those hearing his message
were skeptical. Why am I so skeptical? It goes back to the discussion in
chapter 2 about people or churches not fitting into the box that I’ve created,
something I desperately need to change. At first the Jews were skeptical, and
then they just got mad. They realized that one of their best players just
switched teams, and they knew how smart he was and how faithful and obedient he
had been in their religion, and feared what his zeal for the Lord would do for
this new movement of God. Again, I can’t help but think that the leaders of the
Jewish people were scared for their “church” and their “members” and for their
sources of income, and that fear motivated them to try to kill Saul. What
motivates me when I am skeptical, why do I go down those roads?
Father forgive me for the times in the past
when I’ve been skeptical, when I haven’t really believed you could change
someone’s heart. Lord help me right now with those around me that I doubt and I
question whether or not they are really yours, or whether or not they are really
living out what they profess with their mouth. I need your truth to shine
through. I need to realize that you are the judge and I am not. I need to
realize that whether it is real or not, it’s up to you to deal with and not my
issue. Help me to hold a brother in Christ accountable for sin, but not to
assume sin and deception based on my sinful attitude.
We see it
again when he arrives in Jerusalem, which is actually 3 years later, with the
disciples. They were skeptical, they were cautious, and they were careful. And
yet through all that skepticism you don’t see Saul getting upset or angry or
offended. I think about the times when someone has not believed me or trusted
me immediately, it hurts and it is offensive. How could someone not believe me,
I am so honest and trustworthy and upright, how dare they! Saul knew his past,
he knew that he had wronged many people, and he knew that he was far from
perfect. Who was he to get offended or be hurt, he was the self-identified
worst sinner of them all? Who am I to get offended or be hurt, I’m the worst sinner of them all?
Saul
continued to teach and preach the name and message of Jesus, everywhere he
went, and the text says that he spoke boldly. Speaking boldly is something I’ve
never done well. Sure, when I am preaching from the stage, I find it fairly
easy to preach boldly because that’s what’s expected of me, and everyone in the
room is expecting “God” conversations. But, in a conversation with a
nonbeliever, or even another believer, I struggle much more to speak boldly,
and it is humbling and even embarrassing when I get down to the real reason
why. When I am talking finance and accounting lingo, especially in an area of
accounting or taxes that I am very proficient and knowledgeable in, I talk with
boldness. When someone asks a question I will quickly answer and will be
confident in my answer because I know it’s the truth. I’m not worried about
what the person will think of the answer because I know it is the truth and
what they think will not change whether or not the statement is truth or not.
We all do that in our various areas of expertise. Yet, why don’t I do that with
the Bible? Why don’t I do that with the promises that God has given to me, why
don’t I step up with boldness and speak with confidence when I’m talking about
my relationship with God? What it all comes down to, sadly, is my lack of
assurance that what I am saying is truth and my far-too-high of a concern with
what that person will think. I’m not saying that I am unsure that the Bible is
truth; I am 100% confident in that. What I am hesitant about is my knowledge
and understanding of the Scriptures and my ability to accurately and adequately
convey those thoughts and that Scripture to others. And, unfortunately, I
typically go about trying to ease those feelings of hesitancy in the wrong way,
by knowing the Word better, by memorizing more scripture and by studying it
more. Those, in and of themselves are great things, but the piece I think I
leave out far too often is asking the Holy Spirit to guide those conversations
when I am unsure about sharing what God’s word says about a situation. I might
have the entire Bible memorized but if I leave it up to myself to think of the
scripture that applies in the certain situation, I’ll fail most of the time. If
I can live every moment by the Spirit, having filled my mind and heart with the
words of God from the Bible, I’ll be far more successful at speaking boldly
when boldness is needed. The second part of my struggle, and I think many
others share in this with me, is my concern over what the other person in the
conversation will think. I don’t sense that Paul ever had those concerns. He
was so incredibly confident that what he was speaking was truth that he told it
to anyone and everyone and I need to live the same way. When the Spirit says
go, I need to go. When the Spirit says speak, I need to speak, with boldness!
The last two
sections of Acts chapter 9 gives descriptions of some healings that took place,
and as I read these stories all I can think about is how awesome our God is. To
give the gift of the use of his body back to Aeneas and to give the gift of
life to Tabitha and her family, what a glorious act and work of God and of
nobody else. Peter was able to be a part of that event, and that must have been
incredible to be the medium by which God gave those gifts. I want to be the
medium for God as well, in whatever way He chooses. Whether it is healing
people, praying with someone as they are processing what God’s story means to
them, or if it is scooping the sidewalks off so people can get to church, it
doesn’t matter. I want to be used by Him in whatever way He chooses, just as
long as I get to be a part of the incredible move of God that is happening all
around me. That’s my prayer!
AMEN!!!
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