
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This powerful exploration of Acts 9 confronts us with a radical truth: the same grace that saves us also sends us into the world with purpose. We encounter Saul, a man actively working against Jesus, breathing threats and murder against His followers. Yet in his darkest opposition, Jesus intervenes with blinding light and a personal call. This dramatic conversion teaches us that God meets us at our worst, not our best. We don't need to clean ourselves up before we're worthy of grace. The story challenges our modern obsession with platforms and significance, reminding us that holiness often looks like faithful obedience in ordinary moments—changing diapers, showing up to the same job, loving difficult people for decades. The question isn't whether grace is available, but whether we'll receive it and step into what it calls us toward. Just as scales fell from Saul's eyes, we're invited to see our everyday encounters as divine appointments, recognizing that if we still have breath in our lungs, we're still being sent into this world with the transformative message of Jesus.
By Celebrate Community Church5
1515 ratings
This powerful exploration of Acts 9 confronts us with a radical truth: the same grace that saves us also sends us into the world with purpose. We encounter Saul, a man actively working against Jesus, breathing threats and murder against His followers. Yet in his darkest opposition, Jesus intervenes with blinding light and a personal call. This dramatic conversion teaches us that God meets us at our worst, not our best. We don't need to clean ourselves up before we're worthy of grace. The story challenges our modern obsession with platforms and significance, reminding us that holiness often looks like faithful obedience in ordinary moments—changing diapers, showing up to the same job, loving difficult people for decades. The question isn't whether grace is available, but whether we'll receive it and step into what it calls us toward. Just as scales fell from Saul's eyes, we're invited to see our everyday encounters as divine appointments, recognizing that if we still have breath in our lungs, we're still being sent into this world with the transformative message of Jesus.

4,424 Listeners

14 Listeners