Transformative Encounter: Saul's Journey to Redemption

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The essence of this transformation lies in the recognition of Jesus as the risen Lord. Saul's question, "Who art thou, Lord?" and the response, "I am Jesus whom thou persecutest," is a revelation of the divine nature of Christ. This encounter underscores the centrality of Jesus in the Christian faith and the reality of His resurrection. [00:01:02]

The change took place in the apostles' condition not because the conditions outside him were changed but because he was changed. Now that is absolutely vital and pivotal here is this man I say who was like that now so happy and so calm and so collected and so rejoicing in the midst of tribulations. [00:10:16]

The Christian message is to this effect, that it can so do something to us that though our circumstances and conditions remain precisely what they were before, we are different. We see them differently, and whereas we were miserable, we are now filled with joy and with happiness and with peace. [00:16:01]

Christianity is not merely an experience. Christianity is not merely that you adopt a certain teaching. Christianity is based solidly and surely upon certain historical events and facts. Now here we are on Remembrance Day. We've been thinking today of September the 3rd, 1939, and all that followed it. [00:19:37]

The greatest fact in history is the fact of Jesus Christ, and that was the fact that Paul met face to face on the road to Damascus. And it was coming face to face with this Central pivotal fact of all time and history that made the difference between Saul of Tarsus and the Apostle Paul. [00:21:04]

The Son of God has been in this world. It means that the Lord of Glory has entered into time. The controller of History has put himself under history and into history. What's it mean? Well, let me tell you the facts. It means this, that there in eternity from eternity with no beginning. [00:28:22]

The Son of God came into this world because of that. Now I say this tends to reason if man could save himself, why should the Son of God ever have come? If men can really tackle the problem, why did God send out his own son and why didn't he spare him from the cross? [00:38:31]

The glory of the Gospel that the very God against whom man had sinned and against whom he rebelled had pity and had mercy upon men and sent his own son to deliver that very Rebel and the son came and he took unto him human nature he identified himself with us. [00:39:38]

Saul of Tarsus knew about Jesus. He knew about his teaching. He knew about his miracles. He knew about his death. He heard about his resurrection. He didn't believe it. He there saw it was a fact, and if it's a fact, that must be the meaning of the fact. I am Jesus. [00:40:01]

The inevitable conclusion to draw from all that Saul of Tarsus with his acute brain and his masterly understanding he saw it in a flash if you are Jesus and I believe it he said after he had seen him there is only one conclusion to draw you are the Savior and apart from you there is no salvation. [00:44:31]

To be happy and to master this world depends upon one thing only and that is to know God and to be blessed of God and there's only one way to that and that is to believe and to accept this truth that the Son of God left heaven and came on Earth and did all I've been describing. [00:46:34]

The facts are still the same they're still there but you say I don't believe that I don't believe this what you've been telling us about the Trinity and about the Incarnation and about this Jesus to in one person I can't accept it I don't believe it Saul of Tarsus couldn't he rejected it all he hated it. [00:48:08]

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