Summary: God has a need for each one of usTo do His work – To be disciples To do what He needs us to do - To spread the message

Conversion – What is conversion – And why should we worry about it

Webster defines conversion as something that’s converted from one use to another

• We take something that’s being used for one thing

• And we change it so that it can be used for a something else

• Something completely different from what it originally was intended to be used for

Now the 1st rule in the conversion process is that there has to be a need for the thing to be converted

• There has to be something wrong with it in the first place

• There has to be a need for the change

• Remember the old saying if it aint broke don’t fix it

• Numbers – Measurements – Currency

• Vans = conversions

• Furnaces= Gas to propane

• School bus = Campers

• We’re making something new out of something old

This is what we see in today’s text

• Paul who is still Saul at this point is going through a conversion

• There’s a need for Saul to be converted – changed

Read Acts 9:1-9

Saul’s Conversion

9 Meanwhile, Saul was uttering threats with every breath and was eager to kill the Lord’s followers. So he went to the high priest. 2 He requested letters addressed to the synagogues in Damascus, asking for their cooperation in the arrest of any followers of the Way he found there. He wanted to bring them—both men and women—back to Jerusalem in chains.

3 As he was approaching Damascus on this mission, a light from heaven suddenly shone down around him. 4 He fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him, “Saul! Saul! Why are you persecuting me?” 5 “Who are you, lord?” Saul asked. And the voice replied, “I am Jesus, the one you are persecuting!

6 Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do.” 7 The men with Saul stood speechless, for they heard the sound of someone’s voice but saw no one! 8 Saul picked himself up off the ground, but when he opened his eyes he was blind. So his companions led him by the hand to Damascus. 9 He remained there blind for three days and did not eat or drink.

Now the first thing we see

• Is that there is a huge difference between the Saul we see in verse 1

• And the Saul we see in verse 8

• One moment he’s storming up the road, determined to capture and imprison Christians.

• And The next minute he is being led like a child by the hand into Damascus.

God’s grace is often shown through powerful acts

• And what appears on the surface to be catastrophes.

We see here that there are two needs for conversion

• First we see Saul’s need for conversion

• He was Persecuting Christians

2 He requested letters addressed to the synagogues in Damascus, asking for their cooperation in the arrest of any followers of the Way he found there. He wanted to bring them—both men and women—back to Jerusalem in chains.

• The Way” (9:2) was what Christians were called before they were called Christians

• And what it meant was, “the way of salvation”

So here is Saul traveling down the road and Jesus calls him out

• Jesus asks Saul the question, Why do you persecute Me?

• The reason that this statement is so important

• Is because it shows the union between Jesus and His church.

Jesus didn’t say, “Why are you persecuting My church?”

• He said Why are you persecute Me?

• By saying “Me” this gave Saul his first glimpse

• Of the relationship that we have in Christ.

• That we aren’t alone and He is with us

But at the same time It’s important to understand that this conversion was personal

• That this encounter was all about Jesus and Saul – Nobody Else

• We know this because in vs 7 it says

• 7 That the men with Saul stood speechless, for they heard the sound of someone’s voice but saw no one!

• But Saul had heard the voice of Jesus and

• And He’d seen Him as well

• He see’s Him in the form of a light from heaven.

Saul needed to see Jesus because it assured his role as an Apostle

• In Acts 1:21-26, we see the qualification for Matthias,

• He was chosen as an apostle after Judas’s death,

• Because an apostle is someone who is sent out by someone (Jesus)

• And the Qualification is that they be an eyewitness: (See Him after the Resurrection)

• Matthias was present with Jesus from the time of John the Baptist through His death and resurrection of Jesus.

Saul in 1 Cor. 9:1 says

Am I not as free as anyone else? Am I not an apostle? Haven’t I seen Jesus our Lord with my own eyes? ( 1 Cor. 9:1).

But here after Saul Sees Jesus and Hears Jesus

• He suddenly found himself on the ground! (Acts 9:4)

• This wasn’t a heat stroke

• This wasn’t an attack of epilepsy that put him there,

• It was a personal meeting with Jesus Christ.

• And it humbled him / It changed him / it was his moment of conversion

And seeing their leader fall down the men with him also fell to the earth (Acts 26:14)

• They heard the sound, They knew something was happening

• They heard Saul talking to someone,

• But they didn’t understand what was being said.

• And they didn’t have a clue as to what was happening.

This brings us to the second need for conversion

• The second need was that it was part of God’s plan

• God wanted Saul - God needed Saul

• We see this in verse 9:15:

• Where Jesus is talking to Ananias and He tells him (Explain Situation)

“Go, for Saul is my chosen instrument to take my message to the Gentiles and to kings, as well as to the people of Israel.

• And what makes this verse so important

• Is we see that God chose someone that the rest of us probably wouldn’t have

• And God does this a lot in life

• He chooses the some of the most unlikely candidates as part of His plan

This confrontation betwen Jesus and Saul

• Brought about a radical change to Saul’s life.

• Saul had discovered that this Jesus from Nazareth

• Really had been the One that they had been waiting for

• The promised One, The promised and exalted Lord.

• Now maybe we wouldn’t think that Saul was a good choice

• Because we look at the outside

• Here was a man who went around grabbing God’s chosen people

• Put them in chains and draged them back to Jerusalem

• He was a man who uttered threats with in every breath

• And whose main goal was to kill the Lord’s followers.

• This doesn’t sound like the best choice for a PR man

• But it fit God’s plan- It fit His need – And because of this there was a need for conversion

• Saul’s conversion shows how God overcomes all the things that get in the way of the gospel message.

You see it’s under God’s power, that even the worst persecutor of the church

• Was changed into its most influential evangelist.

Personal application.

• The person least likely to convert often makes the most committed Christian.

• People that you know -Unlikely candidates for God’s work (examples)

We have to understand that each one of us has our own needs of conversion

• We may not be as bad as Saul was before his conversion

• But each and everyone one of us needs to be converted

Why

• Because each one us needs improvement-

• Each one of us needs to continue in our conversion processes

• Areas of our lives that need work

• And we all need to have that personal relationship with God

God has a need for each one of us

• To do His work – To be disciples

• To do what He needs us to do - To spread the message

• Saul’s job was to take the message to the Gentiles

• And we need to understand that this is our job as well

• We are to take his message to all (the Gentiles)

• Everyone Who hasn’t heard about Jesus Christ

• So that they too may begin their conversion process