Religious, Wrong, and Rescued

David

Know the Bible
Joined
May 13, 2025
Messages
837
Reaction score
786
Points
93
Age
67
Location
Charlestown, IN
Website
know-the-bible.com
Gender
Male
Country
United States
Religious-Wrong-Rescued.webp

“And I fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to me, ‘Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?”
~ Acts 22:7

Imagine being so convinced you’re right that you’re willing to imprison and even kill people for it. That was Saul of Tarsus. He wasn’t some godless thug, he was deeply religious, trained by the best, zealous for God, and committed to preserving truth as he understood it. But he was dead wrong.

One day, on a dusty road to Damascus, everything changed. Not because someone debated him or gave him new information, but because Jesus Himself stepped in and confronted him. A blinding light, a voice from heaven, a question that cut through all his pride: “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?” (Acts 22:7). Notice this, Jesus didn’t say, “Why are you persecuting them,” but “Me.” Because when you attack those who follow Jesus, you’re attacking Jesus Himself.

Saul’s entire world collapsed in that moment. The man who thought he was serving God realized he was fighting against Him. And the only response he could give was the right one: “What shall I do, Lord?” (Acts 22:10). That’s the turning point, when a proud heart becomes a humble one, when a persecutor becomes a servant.

This wasn’t some mystical inner journey or vague spiritual awakening. It was direct, personal, and real. Saul was blinded by the glory of Christ and physically led into Damascus. But God didn’t leave him in the dark. He sent a man named Ananias with a message: “The God of our fathers appointed you to know His will, to see the Righteous One, and to hear a voice from His mouth” (Acts 22:14).

The same Saul who hated Jesus now saw Him. And the Lord didn’t just open his eyes physically, He opened his heart. Saul’s sins were washed away not by religion or ritual, but by calling on the name of Jesus (Acts 22:16). He was transformed from the inside out, not patched up but made new.

That’s the power of the gospel. Jesus doesn’t come to make bad people a little better, He comes to raise the dead. Saul became Paul, a bold witness who would suffer and eventually die for the very gospel he once tried to destroy.

And here’s the truth, you don’t have to be on a dusty road to Damascus to encounter Jesus. He’s calling out today. Maybe not in a blinding light, but through His Word. And the question still stands, Why are you fighting Him? If He’s Lord, then the only right response is, “What shall I do, Lord?”

The answer hasn’t changed. Repent, believe, and call on the name of Jesus. Let Him open your eyes. Let Him change your story. The One who turned Saul from enemy to witness is still in the business of saving souls, including yours.
 

Latest Profile Posts

The Bible is not on trial. Man is. Jesus said, “the scripture cannot be broken” ~John 10:35. God’s Word does not bow before modern skepticism. It exposes the heart and stands forever. The question is not whether Scripture will stand. It will. The question is whether we will stand with it.
When God warns you, don’t brush it off. Answer Him while you still can, because a hardened heart doesn’t stay neutral, it moves toward judgment. Scripture is clear: “Today if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts” ~Hebrews 3:15, and again, “He, that being often reproved hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy” ~Proverbs 29:1.
We must be careful not to cater to people's carnal desires, but rather point them to God.

Online statistics

Members online
0
Guests online
238
Total visitors
238

Invite Others

🔗 Invite a Friend

Know someone who loves the Bible? Invite them to join us at Biblical Truth Forum — a place where God's Word comes first.

Join Now

Truth matters. Help us build something grounded in Scripture.

Members online

No members online now.
Back
Top