
Audio is available here. Please note that his week, the audio is very different than the manuscript.
Twenty-Third Sunday After Pentecost – October 28, 2018
Acts 9:10-21
In the New Testament, Saul or Paul (two names for the same person, Hebrew and Greek, respectively) comes on the scene in the seventh chapter of the book called The Acts of the Apostles, when he is present for the execution of the first Christian martyr, a man named Stephen. While Stephen was being stoned to death, Paul stood at some distance and watched over the coats of the murderers.
Paul apparently approved of Stephen’s death, as he quickly becomes a leader in a great persecution of Christians, even going door-to-door, dragging men and women to prison for their beliefs. Acts chapter nine describes Paul as “breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the Lord,” and tells of his gaining permission to hunt down these fearful, dispersed disciples, starting in the city of Damascus.
Yet on the way to Damascus, Paul has a theophany, a dramatic encounter with God, in this case, with the risen Christ. As he approaches Damascus, he is blinded by a great flash of light severe enough to knock him off his feet. As he lays there, blinded by the light, he hears a voice saying “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?”
It is Jesus, calling out to this fierce, determined persecutor of the church.
“Who are you, Lord?” Saul asks.
“I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting.”
Jesus then instructs Paul, who is still blind, to rise and continue to Damascus and await further instructions. His companions lead him into the city where he stays at the house of a man named Judas, on Straight Street, where he is without sight, and where he does not drink or eat for three days. This is where this morning’s text begins. Let us listen together for the world of God:
Ten months later, I was baptized in a small congregation, where the pastor ascended to the top of a high mountain and presented me to God, like Simba in The Lion King, and everyone in the congregation remarked how it was at that exact moment that they knew for certain that I was destined for service in Christ’s church, even before they heard the voice from heaven proclaim “This is my Doug, the beloved, with whom I am well-pleased.”
Audio is
Some months ago, we at Reveille assembled a team to talk about how to talk about the work of the Commission on a Way Forward and the future of our denomination at our church. One of the ideas that came out of our discussions was to create a toolkit to help inform and empower our congregation on this matter. As we created this resource, we did so with an eye to making something that might be useful to other congregations as well.
This month, my first pastoral appointment
Thanks to the wonderful Rachel Sanders, the Reveille Director of Communications, our sermon audio page is up-to-date. You can check it out
Sixteenth Sunday After Pentecost — September 9, 2018 (Reveille Day)
God Unbound: Wisdom From Galatians for the Anxious Church