Saul to Paul: Psychotic Break,
Psychological Delusion or Divine Plan of Grace? Part 3
Acts 9
We live in interesting times; especially the last two weeks since
the attack on the American embassy in
It is insane what is being said by this administration and what is
not being done and what isn't being said. We need to pay more attention
to what isn't said, especially when we look to the Scriptures. There we
see the emphasis that God puts on
This is such a crucial time in history. I believe we have not seen
a time like this to this degree in history, with
The only thing that's going to give us survival and strength in the days
to come is knowing that God has a plan as we're teetering on the edge, if God
allows it to happen, and many times it could have happened in history but it
didn't. We could see true chaos. Chaos which we haven't seen since
the worst and darkest days of the Second World War. I've heard from hard evidence
about the many Hezbollah who have made their way into the
It's quite inspiring to hear the Jewish cantors sing about 'God, our
rock and our redeemer.” We have a strong sense of that in Christ because
we know He is our Rock and He is our Redeemer. He is the only one who
controls history. We can rest in Him and trust in Him, no matter how
chaotic or dark things are here. If you're not in touch with what's going
on in the world today, things are very, very dark. Now that the Muslim
Brotherhood controls most of
We are continuing in Acts. Acts tells of the spread of the
gospel. We started with Acts 1:8, and, if you remember, in Acts 1:8,
Jesus Christ told the disciples, the eleven at that time, that they were to be
his witnesses. That's a critical word, not just in application to them,
but for us. We are the future generations that Jesus was talking to
through the disciples, to be witnesses of God's grace, witnesses of God's grace
through the Messiah. As the rest of Scripture teaches, we are witnesses before
the angels because they learn of God's grace and God's judgment from us in ways
that they never personally experienced within the history of the angelic
revolt. They see things demonstrated in us and so we're witnesses to the
angels and we're witnesses to one another.
This term 'witnesses' is one that carries all the way through
Acts. In the early chapters, we've seen the witnesses of the apostles,
and the seven that were chosen in Acts 6. We've seen the witness,
especially of Steven. When he is witnessing, standing there and stoned by
the Sanhedrin, it was this young, radical man, hostile to Christ, named Saul of
Tarsus, who is looking on with approval and watching over the outer garments
and the robes of the people of the Sanhedrin who are stoning Steven. He
saw Steven's death as a martyr, because the Greek word, martureo [matruew] comes over into
English as martyr. The ultimate witness is when one gives their life for
Jesus Christ as Steven did.
That is a witness, one way in which the truth was witnessed to, to Saul
of Tarsus. And there were many others who gave testimony to Saul, later
known as Paul as he dragged dozens, if not hundreds of believers to the
Sanhedrin, hauled them in chains, put them in places where they would be executed.
So for the last two weeks and this week we're studying Paul's conversion.
Scholars can get into all kinds of weird little debates over things. They
ask if this is a conversion or not. It is a conversion we know as
believers in Jesus Christ, because we know Paul turned, and conversion means to
turn. He turns from a rejection of Jesus as Messiah to accepting Jesus as
Christ.
In another sense, and I don't know the answer to, is to ask if Saul, as
Saul, coming to Jerusalem to study rabbinic law under Gamaliel and becoming one
of the greatest, if not the greatest, student of Hebrew student of his
generation, came to Jerusalem before Jesus began his ministry. Was he an
Old Testament believer? Now there's a question. Nothing would
indicate that. There's this generation of Jews in
Others were not; yet many came to believe Jesus was the Messiah.
Where Paul was personally in relation to the Old Testament, he may have been
like many of the Pharisees, like Nicodemus was, who came to Jesus in John
3. Someone who knew the Law; Nicodemus is probably not his name but a
title meaning a ruler of the people. There was a legend among the Jews
that he was one of the most well-known experts in the Torah when Jesus
came. But his personal name isn't given. Many of these rabbis were
given special titles in honor of their position so he is known in the Bible as
Nicodemus.
Joseph of Aramathia is Joseph's real name and he was known as a secret
disciple. But before John 3 and Nicodemus' conversation with Jesus, with
all of his knowledge of the Torah and the Old Testament, Nicodemus was someone
who understood faith in the promise of the Messiah as the foundation for his
righteousness. He was still seeking righteousness on his own. That
was Paul's testimony in Philippians 3. Another passage we see that he
believed it was the righteousness that came from the Law that would give him
standing before God so we can answer the question that Saul was not an Old
Testament believer though he wanted to know God. As I pointed out last
time, he was positive to God. He wanted to know God but that was covered
up by layers and layers and callouses of ongoing practice of suppressing the
truth in unrighteousness and it took a remarkable act of Jesus Christ to appear
to him.
I think many people say that was necessary for him to become a believer
but that's not the purpose that Jesus appears to Saul on the road to
So we've seen in the past, as we've looked at the different accounts,
that Paul has gotten a letter from the Sanhedrin in
So Luke started in
In Acts, chapter 9, we see a break in that action as we focus on Saul
and his conversion. Saul is called as an apostle to the gentiles.
This is his commission. As I pointed out in dealing with the chronology
here and the chronology I gave you in the beginning in the handout related to
the chronology of Acts, Jesus was crucified at the Passover in A.D. 33.
Paul, at the latest, was converted in A.D. 35. There are those who think
less than a year took place and that's the shortest time it could have been but
somewhere between a year and three years of the crucifixion of Christ, we see
the conversion of the Apostle Paul.
It was probably the summer of A.D. 35 when this event takes place.
Approximately two or three years take place between this time and the time when
Paul will leave
In Galatians
Then in verses 13 and 14 he describes his previous life in Judaism, how
he persecuted the
I want to do an overview here of the next three verses and then we'll
come back here later. He says he didn't immediately confer with flesh and
blood which indicates he got his information from Jesus Christ. He didn't
go sit in a conference and sit in Bible study. Instead he says he went to
It's not until after three years that he goes to
((CHART)) Here's a map showing the different regions in the area
of
Luke begins this account reminding us of Saul in Acts 9:1-2 “Then Saul,
still breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the Lord went to
the high priest and asked letters from him to the synagogues of
Paul is going to
That wasn't the whole Jewish community there. We don't know how
many that represented there but it clearly shows that there was an extremely
large Jewish community in
Here in
In verses 3 - 4 it says, “And as he journeyed he came near
Jesus says, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?” The
identification of Jesus with his believers means that those who persecute
believers are persecuting Jesus. There isn't really a doctrine or
emphasis here on the body of Christ but it is certainly something we understand
from later revelation that we, as members of the body of Christ, are the
physical bodily representation of Jesus upon the earth today as He is absent in
heaven. We are the body of Christ. That's more than simply a
metaphor or a descriptive term. There's this close identity we have with
Jesus so to persecute Christians is to persecute Jesus.
Then Paul says, “Who are you lord?” He's asking this question
because he's not sure who this is. He hasn't comprehended that this is
Jesus of Nazareth or the one whose followers he's persecuting that is appearing
to him. He's not using the term 'lord' here with a theological connotation.
The word 'lord', kurios in the Greek, “adonai” in the Hebrew was
a term that was used as a term of respect for a superior, a male superior, as
we would use the word 'sir'. Adonai was also a term that was used
as a synonym for yahweh. Yahweh was with a lower case
'lord'. And then you have 'lord' where it's just a standard capital 'l'
and that indicates the original adonai. It has a connotation
because if you say that someone is lord you're saying they are yahwe, that
they are deity.
So that was also a meaning. It's just a standard term that anyone
would use to someone in high office, as well. So there's no indication
here in the text that Paul is recognizing the deity of this person at all; he's
merely recognizing a superior person. The Lord then identifies himself to
Paul, saying, “I am Jesus whom you are persecuting.” Again, that
identification with the body. In a New King James or a King James
version, we have the statement, “it is hard to kick against the goads.”
Jesus said that but we only learn of that in Paul's account of it later on in
Acts 26. It wasn't in this chapter. It's only in a few manuscripts
called the textus receptus which was a collection of between six and ten
Greek manuscripts that Erasmus used and collated together to form the
foundation for the first critical edition of the Greek text in the early part
of the 16th century. Over a period of 15 or 20 years, Erasmus
found additional manuscripts and added those in to his critical apparatus in
the textus receptus. That's why I say between six and ten
manuscripts because it changed over time. He was constantly improving his
edition. These were not very old manuscripts. We know which
manuscripts they were and they were not of the highest quality.
Now our Greek texts are based on thousands of fragments, thousands of
large collections that we have found that are both older and better than the textus
receptus. It isn't identical to the Byzantine text or the majority
text but it is similar. It's part of that same family. Even the
majority text edition leaves this out and does not include this as part of
Acts, chapter 9. So what we see here, compared to Acts 22 and Acts 26
first person accounts of the apostle Paul, is a more truncated, abridged,
abbreviated version. Luke's purpose is not to tell us everything that
happened to Saul on the road to
The key player for that is going to be Saul, who'll be known as Paul,
apostle to the gentiles. Luke sort of hits the high points here because
his focus is on where this is going and the role Saul, Paul, will play in the
advance of the gospel. In verse 6 we read, “So he, trembling and astonished...”
We can just imagine what must have been happening to Paul, beyond our conscious
awareness just to be in the presence of the resurrected, risen Lord in this
kind of event, hearing the voice of God, having this kind of thing happen
that's totally beyond anything you expected and just the opposite of what you
believed would generate in anyone a host of physiological reactions. Your
adrenaline would spike, you would be shaking and trembling and things of that
nature. So he is astonished by that and he is trembling and fearful and
things of that nature. It's amazing he could even talk. He's losing
his eyesight because of the brilliance of the light and he'll be blinded as a
result of that. He says, “Lord, what do you want me to do?” Again,
he is using the term kurios or adonai.
It's not necessarily a recognition of Jesus as deity.
It doesn't mean that somewhere in these moments of time that Saul
doesn't believe that Jesus is Messiah. Somewhere in here he makes that
transition. He understands that Jesus, who is before him, is the Jesus of
Nazareth who is the promised, prophesied Messiah and he trusted Him but Luke
doesn't tell us that. It's obvious to us that this happened so Luke
doesn't need to overstate the obvious so he doesn't. You can't go to a
passage like this and say, “See, he's using the word lord, so that means he's
recognizing the lordship of Jesus and this is key. If you haven't
recognized the lordship of Jesus you're not saved.” That is the basic
interpretation that we hear from people who espouse what is known as the
lordship gospel. By the lordship gospel, it's not just as simple as
saying you have to believe Jesus is lord, but a recognition that you have to be
submitting to the sovereign authority of Jesus, recognizing that He is the
sovereign God and it's not just as simple as believing that He died for your
sins but you are also willing to commit yourself to His authority.
Trouble is we don't have commit language here. 'Commit' is not a
synonym for 'believe'. If you tell me it's raining outside, I can
believe you but I am not committing anything. If you look 'commit' up in
a thesaurus, 'believe' is not a synonym. These are two different words,
two different ideas. In what is called lordship theology, you have the
idea that you must commit yourself to the authority of God at the instant of
salvation or you're not saved. It's just adding something else. All
that we have in Scripture is the command to believe.
In the gospel of John, which many believe is the one gospel so clearly
directed to understanding the message of the gospel, John uses the verb
'believe' over 95 times. He doesn't use words like 'commit', 'invite
Jesus into your life', 'invite Jesus into your heart', 'turn yourself over to
Jesus'. None of that verbiage is there. Again and again and again
it says believe, believe, believe. Jesus said to Martha at the grave of
Lazarus, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me, yet
shall he live.” He doesn't say, 'Martha, do you commit yourself to
this?”, “Martha are you going to let me into your heart?” No, he doesn't
say this. He says, “Martha, do you believe this?” That's the
issue. That's the gospel. Yet we have people today who really muddy that
up.
So at this point, somewhere along this line; we don't know how long all
this took place because when we look at Paul's later descriptions, we know
Jesus said other things, but somewhere along here Saul trusted in Jesus as
Messiah. It's probably before he says, “What do you want me to do?”
The Lord says, “Arise, go into the city and you will be told what you must
do.” Some of us might think [I know that applies to some in the room but
others of you have the patience of Job] but some of us would expect that as
soon as we walk through the gates of
There will be a vision to Paul that tells him someone will come but we
don't know exactly when that happened. So he's told to go into the city;
he'll be told what to do and then in verse 8 we read, “Then Saul arose from the
ground and when his eyes were opened, he saw no one. But they led him by
the hand and brought him into
((CHART)) Now the picture I have up here on the screen is
from a collection of several black and whites on these slides of
They had quite a collection of photographs. Quite a number of
photographers came there who traveled throughout the
Verse 9 tells us he was there for three days without sight and he was
fasting. This is part of Judaism. There are probably a lot of
things at play here emotionally as he is thinking about what has
occurred. He has had an event take place that has changed every belief
system that he had. In verse 10 we read, “Now there was a certain
disciple...” In Acts, the term 'disciple' begins to take on certain
connotations where it is almost equivalent to a believer. “Now there was
a certain disciple at
There are several events in Acts related to visions. There's a
reference to God appearing to Moses in a vision in Stephen's message in Acts
So Ananias is directed by the Lord in verse 11 when he says, “Arise and
go to the street called Straight...[ it still exists in
Now we learn that Saul has had a vision as well, same as we'll see in
Acts 10 where God spoke to both sides, God told Saul that someone named Ananias
is coming and He also told Ananias that he is to go to Saul. In verse 12
Ananias is told that “And in a vision he [Saul] has seen a man named Ananias
coming in and putting his hand on him, so that he might receive his sight.”
Then Ananias answered. How honest Ananias is; he's fearful. He
says, “Lord I'm not sure I want to do this. I've heard about this
guy.” This would be like you're a Jew or rabbi and that you're being told
to go to Heinrich Himler and to heal him of his blindness. This would be taking
your life in your hands. Ananias doesn't want to do it. He says,
“Lord, I have heard from many about this man, how much harm he has done to Your
saints in
Sometimes we need to be that way in our prayers. One of the things
that happens a lot with Christians is that we think “I'm not supposed to be
afraid so I'm not going to tell God I'm afraid.” He knows you're afraid
and worried. Read the Psalms. How many times does David say “I know
what I'm supposed to do but I don't want to do it. I'm afraid.” The
prayers of David are very honest about where he is in his spiritual life.
We need to be that way as well. “But the Lord said to Ananias, 'Go
because he is a chosen vessel of Mine to bear My name before Gentiles, kings
and the children of
Paul was not excluded from giving the gospel to Jews just because he was
appointed to be an apostle to the Gentiles. That's part of the commission
God relates right here. He's not the apostle to the Jews like Peter but
I've heard some dispensationalists criticize Paul because didn't he understand
he was the apostle to the Gentiles. He always took the gospel to the Jew first
and then to the Gentiles. Why was he hanging around in the synagogues all
the time? Why did he go back to
And the Lord says, “I will show him how many things he must suffer for
My name's sake. God said, “Go open up his eyes so he can see how he's
going to suffer for me.” Isn't that a message to warm your heart?
He's going to suffer many things and we think about some of the things Paul
says later on in 2 Corinthians 1 and some of the other passages like 2
Corinthians 10 or 11. He talks about the whippings, the beatings, the
times he's in jail. We only know about one shipwreck but he says it
happened three times. None of this caused him to stop; he didn't get
weary and say “Lord, I just don't want to do this today. I'm just going
to stay in bed.” He understood the mission from the very beginning.
Acts 9:17 says, “Ananais went his way and entered the house and laying
his hand on him he said, 'Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus, who appeared to you on
the road as you came, has sent me that you may receive your sight and be filled
with the Holy Spirit.” Now the word that he uses here for 'filling' is
not the word we find in Ephesians 5:18. That's pleroo. This is a
different word, pletho which often refers to an event, a type of filling
that precedes some sort of speaking. It is often related to some sort of
divinely inspired statement. We're not told about that immediately.
We're told that all Ananais says here is “that you may receive your sight and
be filled with the Holy Spirit.” We don't hear about the speaking until
verse 20.
“Immediately there fell from his eyes something like scales and he
received his sight...” It's not just gradual healing like you see in
these healing services today. The healing in Scripture is
instantaneously. It's not, “well you'll see a little fuzzy light, and
each day you'll see a little more and after a time your sight will return
completely.” It's instant. “...he received his sight at once and he
arose and was baptized.” Notice he doesn't wait to be baptized,
indicating he understood the significance of this. He had witnessed it,
he had seen it; this was a significant event because this was an identification
with Jesus as Messiah. He doesn't waste any time.
In verse 19, he receives food because he hasn't eaten in three days and
then he spent some days with the disciples at
In verse 20 we read, “Immediately he preached the Christ in the
synagogues that He is the Son of God.” Notice the emphasis. Paul is
proclaiming this that this is the Son of God. This is the only time we have
this full phrase: that Jesus is the Son of God. In verse 21 we read,
“Then all who heard were amazed and said, 'Is this not the one who destroyed
those who called on this name in Jerusalem, and has come here for that purpose
so that he might bring them bound to the chief priests'? But Saul
increased all the more in strength and confounded the Jews who dwelt in
Notice, he's arguing, he's discussing, all the time he's showing from
the Scriptures who Jesus is. When we witness to people, we need to do the
best we can do. You're not going to be the apostle Paul and neither am
I. We're not going to be as well schooled today as we will be five
years from now. There are things we can always do that help us master our
witnessing. Number one: Just know five or six good verses like John
3:16, John 3:18, John 3:36, Acts 16:31...verses like this that are good gospel
verses. Ephesians 2:8-9. Memorize those Scriptures.
Number two: Paul is referring to his own testimony in Acts 22 and
26 and in Galatians 1. He always goes back to his personal
testimony. That is something we all can do. Maybe you're saying,
“Yeah, but I'm like you, Robby, I got saved when I was six years old. I
really don't know what it was like before that. I barely remember that I
trusted Jesus when I was that young.” Sure, but there was some point in
your life when you decided it was 'fish-or-cut-bait time' in terms of our walk
with the Lord. And it was time to decide whether or not you really
believed what you thought you believed. Growing up, it was what our folks
did but at some point between fifteen and twnety-five you reach a point where
you realize it's not just their faith, it's yours. What is going to be
real in your life? At that point we go through a re-evaluation and decide
what is ours. That is part of your testimony. Something you can
describe to other people.
That is very much a part of Paul's witness, again and again and again to
tell others what Jesus did for him. His own story. God the Holy
Spirit uses that. The other part of that is learning how to talk to
others. Do you know how you learn to talk to unbelievers about the
gospel? By talking to unbelievers about the gospel. You don't learn
how to do it by sitting at home, listening to a tape or watching someone on a video
or listening to someone on evangelism. The only way we learn how to talk
to people is by talking to people. That means that many times we're going
to feel inadequate, that we didn't have the right answer.
Later on, we're going to play Monday morning, Tuesday morning, Wednesday
morning quarterback. Oh, you know. The wrong set of referees
was in. We had the backup team. That's what's happened the last
couple of days in pro-football. Somebody else should have been
there. The Holy Spirit wasn't there. God must have sent in the
backup team. God, the Holy Spirit is in control. He doesn't do it
apart from us. We may think we blunder but the Holy Spirit uses it.
One of the most important things I've found is just when we are who we are; when
we're just part of our life, people watch us. You'd be amazed at how many
people are watching you because they know you're a Christian.
I remember years ago when I used to live about three blocks from where I
live now and I was first out of college. I was less than a block from
Next time we'll come back and finish up with Paul and what happens to
him here in