YES

Acts 9:10
“In Damascus there was a disciple named Ananias. The Lord called to him in a vision, “Ananias!”
“Yes, Lord,” he answered.”

You can get yourself into all sorts of trouble when you say YES to the Lord.
It doesn’t take long to put a list together of who said YES to God.
Noah said YES and saved the world.
Abraham said YES and nearly sacrificed his son.
Moses said YES and saved Israel.
David said YES and faced a giant.
Esther said YES and realised she was born for such a time as this.
Daniel said YES and spent a night with lions.
Mary said YES and magnified the Lord.
The disciples said YES and formed the first Church.
And you?
The Lord will call you by name. Be careful how you respond.

3 days behind the scenes.

Acts 9: 9
“For three days he was blind, and did not eat or drink anything.”

Sometimes you have to lose the physical to explore the spiritual.
Saul was bring convinced of the resurrection of Jesus, his spiritual sight was being opened as his physical sight was closed.
You may be hindered today, your circumstance may be difficult but it could prove your finest moment.
Sometimes God has to shut you in. He has to close down your options. He has to take all control from you. It might seem unfair at the time. But trust Him. He is working in you to work through you, it might just take some time, even all of 3 days!

Take the hand

Acts 8:8
“Saul got up from the ground, but when he opened his eyes he could see nothing. So they led him by the hand into Damascus.”

Yesterday I had the pleasure of meeting a lovely lady who has recently come back to Jesus as a follower. I spoke to her of baptism and service to God. It was obvious to me that she would need a helping hand.
Saul recovered from the knockdown but he had temporary blindness and so his friends led him by the hand.
Maybe today you should not tell someone what to do but lead them by the hand. Be with that person, let them journey with you for awhile.

No words

Acts 9:7
“The men travelling with Saul stood there speechless; they heard the sound but did not see anyone.”

On Friday morning the nation woke up divided in its decision.
The BBC had filmed a short documentary of the Barnes family who were divided in its decision in the days before the referendum. The family agreed not to watch or listen to the news on the nations decision and then the BBC filmed them hearing the result together. The response from the older family members who voted LEAVE and the younger members who voted REMAIN was the same, they were speechless. LEAVE didn’t think it would happen and REMAIN couldn’t believe it would.

Sometimes words don’t come easily, in fact they don’t come at all.
The men accompanying Saul was standing there watching their leader fall to the ground.
They heard a sound so knew something had happened but they couldn’t see in order to understand.
All they could see was Saul knocked to the ground.
Why? What? How? What now? How does this effect us?
Speechless.
But I think that’s okay. I think there are times when for a moment we should not speak for speaking sake. Times for when out of respect and impact of that moment, we should be silent. Shocked, stunned, perhaps upset, maybe anxious, or overjoyed. Whatever it is be quiet. Tomorrow is the day for words of hope or doom perhaps but right now is the day for no words.
There is no better example of this than when a friend is knocked down. Just be there, they don’t necessarily need your words of wisdom there and then, they just need you to be there. They need you to share their confusion, their question marks and there isn’t a better way than to use no words.

Get up and go

Acts 9:6
“Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do.”

Wasn’t yesterday interesting?! Our UK changed overnight and emotions ran high, too high at times throughout the day.
Was God in a crisis? Did He have His head in His hands? NO!
He knew what would happen.
Saul has been knocked down. Many used words like devastated and the “worst day of my life”!
Sometimes our lives are knocked down, our world rocks and we wonder are we ever going to be the same again.
What was the response of Jesus to Saul: “now get up and go”
You may be tempted to wallow in your disappointment but Jesus says today “Get up and Go”.
Today let us do exactly that and we will then discover how we should live this life.

Jesus is at the centre

Acts 9:5
“”Who are you, Lord?” Saul asked.
“I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,” he replied.”

Saul called the voice Lord, not that he knew who this Lord was, but the voice was obviously more powerful than he was.
Can you imagine the shock to find out it was Jesus?!
Saul knew what Jesus meant. He knew that the persecution of the followers of Jesus was the persecution of Jesus.
Friends whatever you go through for your faith you go through it with Jesus.
Jesus is being persecuted all around the world. Where is Christ in all this suffering under the hands of ISIS for example? Well this verse shows us he is right in the centre being persecuted himself. How long will this go on for? For there will come a time when He comes again and this persecution will end as the perpetrators find themselves on their knees before the King of Kings.

He fell to the ground

He fell to the ground.

I read these words this morning from the Bible, Acts 9:4.
It is of a man called Saul, a leading Pharisee who was persecuting early Christians. In a moment Saul the murderer became Paul the apostle. But it commenced on the ground.
God supernaturally knocked Saul to the ground.

In the gospels there is a story of an evil spirit throwing a young boy to the ground in a convulsion. The story ends with Jesus lifting the boy from the ground fully restored.

Today, June 23rd Elim UK remembers it’s missionaries who in 1978 were terribly murdered in the Vumba, Rhodesia. They fell to the ground.
Peter and Sandra McCann, Philip and Joy…Wendy White… Philip and Suzanne Evans and Rebecca…Catherine Picken…Roy and Joyce Lynne and Pamela Grace…Mary Fisher.
They are an inspiration who with the great cloud of witnesses cheer us on who are here today. They fell to the ground but their act propelled others into a life of service in missions.
They fell to the ground not because of God or an evil spirit, it was man who did this. But their life or their impact didn’t end on the ground.

Also in the gospels is the story of a leper who voluntarily falls to the ground in front of Jesus as an act of worship. The story ends with Jesus saying He was more than willing to heal the man.
Not God, not an evil spirit, not another person, but the man himself falling to the ground.

Today, the U.K. nation goes to the polls to vote either to Remain or Leave the EU. One of the many questions debated angrily by many is whether we will be better off? Are we going to have more money? What are we going to gain? What are we going to lose? You see we must not lose. That’s the main point. We don’t want to fall to the ground. That would be wrong. We want to rise and be something.

Yesterday I spent some time with TearFund discussing many things but mainly the plight of those under the threat of ISIS. We were sharing stories of people who are the epitome of a Living Sacrifice.
Before the meeting I read an email from our worker in the Middle East who has a hidden church 500m from a very dangerous place. We cannot promote him and as a result he doesn’t receive much compared to others, but we do our utmost to support. He wrote this, “…still talking about Jesus and sharing with new people about His saving love, the last person I spoke with about Jesus was yesterday.” He is a living sacrifice. He is a surrendered man. He has poured his life on the ground for God. Spending time with this man you realise how rich he is, but not the riches of this world, a richness that is not of this life.

I have just got off from a Skype call to a missionary and a church pastor. The missionary could today be earning lots of money and have what everyone else has in her generation. The pastor she works for has a church in a slum and he feeds the poor every day. My world is split into 2 parts: I spend part of it overseas and though there are equal examples of corruption and politics to be found in the church in various places, I gravitate towards those who are on the ground and I love sitting with them for awhile, learning from them no matter whether it was God, evil, man or themselves that caused the falling how do they live and serve a surrendered life. The second part I live with those who are standing tall, reaching for the heights, being somebody big or trying to be. I live in a culture that doesn’t do ground work. Everyone wants to richer, bigger, stronger, taller. But I am a better man with the broken.

I am off to vote now.

Knocked down

Acts 9:4
“He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?”

God has to position people in order to speak to them. If people don’t go to the ground willingly, God can make sure it happens. One day every knee will bow.
Don’t wait for Him to knock you to the ground, get on your knees right now.

The God who interrupts

Acts 3:9
“As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him.”

Thank God for His suddenlies! When we least expect Him. When it looks like it is over. When the enemy is pressing in. Suddenly!
God can apprehend the vile, the wicked, the oppressor. He can interrupt anything. A nation goes out to vote and then suddenly! Yes it is possible. Do not say God cannot come suddenly. For He can and He will. He is coming suddenly and it could be today.
Whatever you go through factor in the possibility of suddenly. Don’t be so sure.

The Way

Acts 9:2
“He went to the high priest and asked him for letters to the synagogues in Damascus, so that if he found any there who belonged to the Way, whether men or women, he might take them as prisoners to Jerusalem.”

This high priest is Caiaphas who was ruling during the trial of Jesus. He also charged Peter and John and charged them not to spread the gospel. So with Saul coming for permission to go after the followers of Jesus there was only going to be one answer. Saul would eradicate Damascus from these Christians. It didn’t matter who they were, male or female, they would be taken off the streets.
Of course, his scheme didn’t work.
It is hard to stop the way. The way is more than a direction or a sign post. It is more than a road. The way is more than a movement. The way is Jesus. He is the way, the truth and the life. Try and stop those who belong to the Way and the Way will continue being the way.