Acts 22:1-21
We often misunderstand what happened to Paul on the road to Damascus. We talk about Paul’s conversion on the way to Damascus, but that has more to do with our lazy reading of Scripture than with what Scripture actually says. What happened on the road to Damascus was not a conversion but a conversation. There are three interesting points that we need to notice in this passage.
First, the Lord is highly committed to the ministry of His saints. On the road, Jesus introduces himself and then essentially tells Paul to go talk to a disciple. Why didn’t the Lord directly tell Paul what to do? Because it is the Lord’s designed plan to have disciples make other disciples. Jesus will not take from us, nor will He alleviate our responsibility to make disciples. No doubt Jesus could have done everything Ananias did and done it better, but He would not.
Notice also that Paul’s introduction to Jesus includes an expectation of service. We treat conversion as if it is signing up for a benefits program. Biblically, the occasion of conversion is also the occasion where we are called to service. Perhaps the reason the church is so weak today is that we have divorced the call to conversion from the call to service. They must not, indeed, they cannot be separated.
Third, we need to look at when Paul was converted. Apparently Paul was still in sin, still stained by his sin when he arrived in Damascus because Ananias told him to submit to baptism so that his sins could be washed away. Clearly the work begun on the road was not yet complete. If we are to say Paul was converted on the road to Damascus, then we must say he was carrying his sins with him and he was un-forgiven after his conversion. It seems more reasonable to say that the removal of sin by washing of regeneration occurred at the same time as his conversion. At that moment he was calling on the name of Christ for his salvation and not any works of legal righteousness.
Never let us miss the high call of ministry for every disciple and the marriage of salvation and service and the marvelous change that occurs when our sins are washed away.
“Forgive me, Lord, for trying to separate my salvation from my surrendering to serve You. AMEN”
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