"It may be hard for an egg to
turn into a bird: it would be a jolly sight harder for it to learn to fly while
remaining an egg. We are like eggs at present. And you cannot go on
indefinitely being just an ordinary, decent egg. We must be hatched or go
bad. - C.S. Lewis: ((1898–1963: British
novelist, poet, & academic)
Scripture
Text: (ACTS 22:3-16)
Paul addressed the people in these
words:
“I am a Jew, born in Tarsus in
Cilicia,
but brought up in this city.
At the feet of Gamaliel I was educated
strictly in our ancestral law
and was zealous for God, just as all
of you are today.
I persecuted this Way to death,
binding both men and women and
delivering them to prison.
Even the high priest and the whole
council of elders
can testify on my behalf.
For from them I even received letters
to the brothers
and set out for Damascus to bring back
to Jerusalem
in chains for punishment those there
as well.
“On that journey as I drew near to
Damascus,
about noon a great light from the sky
suddenly shone around me.
I fell to the ground and heard a voice
saying to me,
‘Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting
me?’
I replied, ‘Who are you, sir?’
And he said to me,
‘I am Jesus the Nazorean whom you are
persecuting.’
My companions saw the light
but did not hear the voice of the one
who spoke to me.
I asked, ‘What shall I do, sir?’
The Lord answered me, ‘Get up and go
into Damascus,
and there you will be told about
everything
appointed for you to do.’
Since I could see nothing because of
the brightness of that light,
I was led by hand by my companions and
entered Damascus.
“A certain Ananias, a devout observer
of the law,
and highly spoken of by all the Jews
who lived there,
came to me and stood there and said,
‘Saul, my brother, regain your sight.’
And at that very moment I regained my
sight and saw him.
Then he said,
‘The God of our ancestors designated
you to know his will,
to see the Righteous One, and to hear
the sound of his voice;
for you will be his witness before all
to what you have seen and heard.
Now, why delay?
Get up and have yourself baptized and
your sins washed away,
calling upon his name.’”
The conversion of St. Paul from a persecutor
to an apostle is probably one of the greatest conversion stories we can find in
the Scriptures. It is a scary thought for many of us that God can call us in
our brokenness, like St Paul, to be His messengers. ‘Who me?’ is our response.
Familiar territory always seems very comforting. Yet when we look at the story
of St. Paul or many other ordinary people like us who drastically changed, we
are encouraged to say, ‘Yes Lord, I can!’
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