Intro
God is full of surprises.  He looks down from heaven at the sin and rebellion 
mounting against Him by those whom He created.  But instead of destroying them 
all in righteous anger, deep, passionate love moves Him to send His Son to die 
for their sins.  You may be so used to the Gospel that it no longer astonishes 
you, yet it is still surprising.  

Main Body
God is also full of surprises when it comes to Pharisee Saul.  He’s so smug, 
for he’s figured God out.  For such is the way of the Pharisee.  Saul even 
describes himself as a Pharisee’s Pharisee, brimming with zeal for the Law of 
God.  He’s doing God’s will—of this He is convinced.  Ever the zealot, he 
strives to squash the growing, dangerous cult of the crucified Nazarene, named 
Jesus.

The more Saul tries to stamp out these blasphemers, the more they scatter like 
cockroaches, spreading their evil teachings.  So, he pays a visit to the High 
Priest to get his blessing to go to Damascus and round up these Jesus 
followers.  He plans to haul them back to Jerusalem in chains—before they can 
infect the other Jews!

Saul is traveling to Damascus, his target now in sight.  On the cusp of 
victory, he is almost giddy, when an unforeseen surprise knocks him to the 
ground.  A blazing light from heaven topples him into the dust.  The Lord Jesus 
calls out to him.  “Saul, why are you persecuting me?”

How can that be?  He’s dead in the tomb.  The bedrock of Saul’s life crumbles 
in an instant.  His mind falls into the chaos of confusion and doubt.  You were 
doing God’s bidding, better than anyone else, with unfettered zeal.  Pride 
filled your heart at being a Hebrew among Hebrews.  Now, what was right is now 
wrong—you were not on God’s side but Satan’s.  

Paul descends into the gloom of depression, pondering what will God do?  I’m in 
league with the enemy, even while looking to be on His side.  Treason is the 
word—when you claim to be loyal but are working for the enemy.  What eternal 
fate awaits those guilty of such spiritual treason?

Jesus tells Saul to arise, go into the city, which he now can’t see because 
he’s blind.  “I will tell you what to do.”  How ominous!  Saul must wait like a 
little boy for events to unfold, powerless.  God came and surprised him, 
overthrowing everything in his life.

Another surprise, however, still awaits—this time for Ananias.  Ananias fears 
Saul.  Stories of arrests, beatings, and confiscations have come his way.  Such 
hardship and anguish the Lord’s people suffered at Saul’s hands.  He’s the 
enemy.  

Ananias was aware of Saul coming to Damascus, with an armed escort, to take 
fellow believers and him to prison—or worse!  The entire Christian community 
was asking God to rescue them from such an evil man.

Jesus now comes to Ananias: “Here’s a job for you.”  “Sure, Lord.”  “A man 
named Saul is blind, and he’s expecting you.”  Ananias must be thinking, 
“Saul’s blind now?  Such splendid news.  Serves him right.  God, indeed, is 
answering our prayers.”  

So, he starts arguing with Jesus.  “Excuse me, Lord; are you kidding?  This 
Saul is the spawn of evil.  He’s been terrifying Your people in Jerusalem.  You 
don’t want me to help him, do You?”  “Oh, yes, Ananias.  I have big plans for 
Saul.  He will carry my name to Gentiles, before kings, and to the people of 
Israel.  So go.  Do what I tell you.”  

Ananias runs outside, waves of nausea rising in this throat.  How can Jesus 
choose someone whose life’s work is bent on destroying Christians?  Will Saul 
become God’s preacher to the Gentiles?  Ananias now ponders the topsy-turvy 
world of the Gospel.

As astonished as he was, Ananias went and found Saul, who spent the last few 
days picturing himself on the death row of eternity.  The question was not if 
the Lord would deliver him to the flames, but when—and the torment awaiting 
him!  

Saul cradles himself in his darkness, imagining the horrors awaiting him.  Each 
creak of the door and fall of the footstep startles him.  “Is judgment here?  
Does my eternal fate now come to claim me?”  He takes no food or drink.  He 
can’t.  He waits, expecting the hammer to descend.  How strange: it doesn’t.

Saul is sure: The Lord’s retribution will be swift and terrible.  How 
unbearable, this waiting and not knowing!  God is using time and our Lord’s 
revelation to destroy the proud legalism inside Saul, on which he built his 
life and reputation.  God’s tearing him down, turning him away from himself, 
only to raise him up in Christ.  

Saul despairs of all life, but he throws himself on the Lord’s mercy.  Only 
then does God give him the vision of a man, named Ananias, coming to his aid.  
God’s surprise of the Gospel now comes to Saul.  In Christ Jesus and His 
life-giving death, God is restoring lost and blind sinners to Himself.  

Saul’s eyes now open for the first time in his life.  He thought he was living 
for God, but was digging himself deeper into hell.  When he died to himself and 
his imagined good works, only then did he live by faith in Jesus.  He didn’t 
expect such grace, but God was there with surprising love and compassion in His 
Son.  Ananias then baptized Saul, in the house, where they were.  Former 
enemies are now brothers in Christ.

God will do even more, for He will send, yet, another surprise.  Presume 
yourself a Jew, in a Damascus synagogue.  You know about these wearisome 
Christians.  They bolted from Jerusalem, trying to escape from the law.  Some 
of them came to our worship services with their message of Jesus—until we threw 
them out!  Too many are following the delusions of this false Messiah, who 
died, but whom they say, walked away from the tomb.

Who rises from death, no one I know?  So, this Jesus is the Messiah must be the 
folklore of myth and fable.  These fanatics are dividing families and bringing 
our community to ruin.  How fortunate that Saul is here!  He’s here to arrest 
these heretics and haul them away to prison.  Rabbi Saul will be speaking at 
our synagogue.  Hey, he might even expose their dark secrets as he rids us of 
these vermin.

Saul gets up to speak.  He reads aloud the assigned passages of Scripture and 
begins to explain how they all point to Jesus of Nazareth.  He is God’s Son: 
The long-expected Messiah sent to save the world from sin.  People are stunned 
in disbelief.  Our man, Saul, is proclaiming the faith he came to destroy.

How crazy: The High Priest sanctioned Saul to speak at all the synagogues in 
Damascus about Jesus.  But Paul isn’t doing what the High Priest wanted.  He’s 
preaching Jesus AS the Messiah, not against Him.  God gives another surprise.

What surprises will God send your way?  Our Lord’s disciples may have woken up 
each day, wondering what surprise God was going to do next.  His surprises for 
you and me all flow to bring us to His salvation.  Our reading today from Acts 
showed us as much.  God does His startling work through the power of His 
Gospel—what we don’t expect.  

But will we miss it?  What do I mean?  Consider sin.  Each of us struggles with 
different sins—places in our lives, still in full-blown rebellion against God.  
We tell ourselves, “I’ll never conquer this.  I can’t change.  I keep doing the 
same, stupid sins.  I promise to do better, but I don’t.  I’ll just live with 
it.  God understands.”  

Such nonsense!  Would you harbor a serial killer in your home—who planned to 
strangle you in your sleep?  Of course not!  So, why would you do so in matters 
of faith?  Yes, you can change—but not through your efforts.  For if you could 
be holy and righteous on your own, why would you need Jesus?

God makes you holy, not you.  So, if He could change the murderous Saul, He can 
also change you.  God will even change you as He did Saul—through the death and 
resurrection of Jesus, and the washing away of your sin through Him.  Give it 
to God; you may be surprised what will happen.

Examine your life.  You don’t like someone, and the dislike becomes more 
entrenched over time.  Your neighbor, someone in this congregation, or even me 
keeps frustrating you.  You think, “We’ll be enemies for life.  Why even 
bother?”  Ananias thought as much about Saul.  Was he ever mistaken!  Could you 
be wrong, as well?

What about the person you want to bring to Jesus?  The words you want to speak 
elude you.  The proper moment never comes.  He’ll never trust Jesus.  You keep 
convincing yourself you can do nothing to help.  Don’t be so sure.  God’s grace 
and mercy in Christ Jesus to lost sinners can astound us all.  

Expect to be astonished, and expecting it, you become God’s mouthpiece where He 
places you to serve.  YOU can be part of God’s surprise to someone else.  God 
is full of the wonders of His grace.  He’s even bursting with them for those 
who live by faith, with the biggest surprise of all: The Gospel of Christ Jesus 
and the life He gives us.  

Conclusion
Expect to be surprised, for you will be.  For the most glorious one still 
awaits you in Christ—eternity!  Most of what God wants for you will astonish 
you, for what awaits you is beyond your reckoning.  So, live by faith in the 
God of surprises.  Every day is a day of astounding grace, even if you don’t 
realize it.  For every day, God is not treating you as you deserve, but as His 
Royal Son.  For that is who you are in Christ Jesus.  Amen.
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