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Text Box: Bible Study Opportunities
"How To Study the Bible" Study Guide
Inspiration and Preservation of the Bible  (Bible Study Material with Questions)
Bulletin of the Month
Some Recent Daily Bible  Messages
Topical Study Material
Free Bible Study Offers (Kankakee, Illinois Area)
Bible Correspondence Course (U.S.A. Only)
 The DaVinci Code - Why It is Broken
Links
Expository Files
Links and Area Churches (Kankakee, IL area)
Nationwide Church Locator Assistance
Return to Homepage 
                                         

 

Saul: An Enemy Becomes a Friend

By Jon W. Quinn

 

 

 
     He is called by two names in the New Testament; "Saul" is
his Hebrew name which means "asked for" and was also the name of
Israel's first king a thousand years before, and like king Saul,
the Saul of the New Testament was also of the tribe of Benjamin. 
 
     But he is known best by his Roman name "Paul" which means
"little". He was born in Tarsus in the region of Cilicia. It is
thought that he was born into a favored family for several
reasons.
 
     First, he was born a Roman citizen (ACTS 16:37).
 
   Second, he was privileged to have been instructed under the leading
educator of the day, Gamaliel (ACTS 22:3).
 
   Thirdly, he was a "Pharisee of Pharisees" and a voting member of
 the Sanhedrin, which was the ruling council of the Jews (ACTS 26:10).
 
     And finally, he was entrusted with authority as a defender of the
Jewish faith to imprison any who were found to be Christians
(ACTS 22:4). In short, he had everything going for him: Status,
privilege, power, respect from others, education and a great
potential for advancement. Yes, this man was going to go places;
but no one, not even Saul himself, had the faintest idea what the
future held. Only the Lord knew that, because He knew Saul's
heart and character. He was trustworthy, zealous, noble and he
had the integrity to change his life around and even turn it
upside down if that proved to be the right thing to do. And that
is exactly what happened.
 
SAUL MEETS HIS ENEMY
     "And I persecuted the Way unto death, binding and putting
both men and women into prisons...And it came about that I was on
my way to Damascus in order to bring even those who were there to
Jerusalem to be punished. And...a very bright light suddenly
flashed from heaven all around me, and I fell to the ground and
heard a voice saying to me, 'Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting
Me?' And I answered, 'Who art Thou, Lord?' And He said to me, 'I
am Jesus the Nazarene, whom you are persecuting'...And I said,
'What shall I do, Lord?' (ACTS 22:4-10). This was certainly an
unforeseen turn of events! But it would certainly take something
like this to cause a dedicated man such as Saul to turn his whole
life in the opposite direction so suddenly. Nothing else can
explain the change in Paul's life. As we have already seen, he
had everything going for him, and he is about to give it all up
for Jesus! He is about to say "good-bye" to his status, prestige
and power and "hello" to prisons, persecution and poverty. And
after it is all done, he will write about how happy he was to
have made such a choice, how spiritually rich and joyful he had   
become and about how wonderfully bright his eternal future with
the Lord would be.
 
WHEN WAS SAUL SAVED?
     "I thank Christ Jesus our Lord, who has strengthened me,
because He considered me faithful, putting me into service; even
though I was formerly a blasphemer and a persecutor and a violent
aggressor. Yet I was shown mercy, because I acted ignorantly, in
unbelief..." (I TIMOTHY 1:12,13). The Lord extended mercy and
saved Saul not by ignoring his sins and transgressions but by
sending the word to him. It was still up to Saul to respond by
faith to be saved and that is exactly what he did. He had "acted
ignorantly, in unbelief" but was not saved until he acted
knowingly in belief!
 
     When was Saul saved? Some say on the road to Damascus, as
soon as he accepted in his heart as true that Jesus was indeed
the Lord. I suppose that this would be about the time he said,
"What would you have me to do, Lord?" there on the road. This is
a popular view with those who say that salvation is by "faith
alone" and if faith alone saves us then that is probably the time
Saul was saved.
 
     Of course, it could have been later, at Damascus that Saul
actually prayed for Jesus to save him. Some say that to be saved
we must "ask the Lord into our hearts". The Bible says that after
Saul, who had been blinded by the light, was led to Damascus that
"he was three days without sight, and neither ate nor drank" and
that he was "praying" (ACTS 9:8-11). If we are saved by asking
the Lord into our hearts then that may well have been when Saul
was saved.
 
     Actually, the Bible proves beyond any doubt that Saul was
saved at neither of the above mentioned times. He was yet in his
sins. After accepting the identity of Jesus as the Son of God and
after three days of praying Saul is still without salvation! The
Lord told a devout Christian, Annanias, to go and talk with Saul.
He was told to lay his hands on Saul so that he might regain his
sight because he was God's chosen instrument to take the gospel
to the Gentiles (ACTS 9:10-16). Annanias did exactly as the Lord
instructed. He told Saul of the Lord's plans for his future. And
then, after all this, Annanias, sent by the Lord himself, said
the following: "And now, why do you delay? Arise and be baptized,
and wash away your sins, calling on His name" (ACTS 22:16). Saul
was not saved until he was baptized to wash away his sins! In
this act of obedience he called upon the name of the Lord. This
is when the Bible says he was saved.
 
SAUL'S BAPTISM
     "Or do you not know that all of us who have been baptized
into Christ have been baptized into His death?" (ROMANS 6:3).
This is how Saul later looked at his baptism. It was at that
point that he was placed "into" Christ and gained access to the
benefits of His death. It was from baptism that he arose to "walk
in newness of life" (ROMANS 6:4).
 
     Of course there is no such thing as a literal washing away
of sins by the power of water. The "washing away" of sins is
another way to say that ones sins are being forgiven. Saul's sins
were forgiven when he was baptized, and it was by the power of
God. Before Saul's baptism, we find him mourning and fasting.
After his baptism, we find him beginning his new life. When Saul
was baptized, he was not relying on the water, but on the Lord
upon whose name he was calling in the act of faith that the Lord
Himself has prescribed (MARK 16:15,16).

 

Reprinted From the Bradley Banner    
Bradley Church of Christ
Bradley, Illinois
November 18, 1990