Are You Really That Much Different Than Paul (From Our 11-30-25 Worship)
Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/8cmv3NWIQq8
Summary of the Sermon: “God’s Plot” & “A Tool in God’s Hands”
Summary of the Sermon: “God’s Plot” & “A Tool in God’s Hands”
Introduction – The “Brookie”
- People often struggle with decisions, like choosing a dessert.
- A “brookie” (brownie + cookie) is the result of not choosing—and this sermon is the same: two messages blended into one.
- Both come from Acts 9 and the story of Saul’s conversion.
SERMON 1: “God’s Plot”
1. God Uses Unlikely People (Acts 9:1–2)
- Saul was a violent persecutor of Christians—the last person we would choose.
- Scripture shows God repeatedly chooses the unlikely (e.g., David overlooked by his own family).
- God’s choices don’t align with ours; He sees the heart.
2. God Uses Unlikely Circumstances (Acts 9:3–6)
- Saul’s change began with a dramatic encounter on the road to Damascus.
- Ministry often happens in strange, unexpected situations—Facebook posts, random meetings, unusual life moments.
- What looks unpromising to us is often exactly the place where God works.
3. God Brings Others Into the Story (Acts 9:10–14)
- Enter Ananias, the reluctant helper.
- God always provides people at the right time (like Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch).
- Ministry is interconnected—God uses people to reach people; we are not meant for isolated Christianity.
4. People Still Must Choose (Acts 9:17–19)
- Even after the encounter, Saul still had to respond—he had a choice.
- Ananias obeyed regardless of how Saul responded.
- God brings opportunities, but He does not remove human responsibility.
5. People Really Can Change (Acts 9:20–22)
- Saul immediately began preaching Christ.
- People were shocked—“Is this the same man?”
- Transformation still surprises people today, but God can radically change lives.
Summary of God’s Plot:
Unlikely people, unlikely circumstances, unexpected helpers, personal choice, and real transformation—all repeated over and over again. God’s plot hasn’t changed.
Unlikely people, unlikely circumstances, unexpected helpers, personal choice, and real transformation—all repeated over and over again. God’s plot hasn’t changed.
SERMON 2: “A Tool in God’s Hands” (Shorter Sermon)
1. Saul Was a Chosen Tool (Acts 9:15–16)
- God calls Saul a “chosen instrument”—meaning a tool designed for a specific job.
- Like a surgeon’s instrument or a custom-made tool, Paul was crafted for a particular purpose.
2. We Are God’s Tools Too (Ephesians 2:10)
- All Christians are God’s workmanship—created to accomplish good works prepared in advance.
- God designs us uniquely for the assignments He intends for our lives.
3. Tools Sometimes Get Worn or Hurt (1 Peter 4:12–16)
- Being used by God often involves struggle, hardship, and spiritual “pressure.”
- Suffering for Christ is not strange; it’s part of being a tool in God’s hands.
- Paul himself endured hardship (2 Corinthians 12:7–10).
4. The Worst Thing for a Tool Is Not Being Used
- A tool left on the shelf becomes wasted potential.
- Christians are meant to serve, act, go, shine, and endure—not sit unused.
Conclusion – “Are You Really That Different From Paul?”
- Paul’s story shows a pattern God still uses:
- An unlikely person
- In an unlikely situation
- With another person involved
- Who had to make a choice
- And who shocked others with real change
- That same pattern is seen in our lives.
- God designed each of us as a tool for His purposes—large or small.
- Whatever someone needs (help, prayer, support, answers), God loves them, the church loves them, and the invitation is open.
If you'd like, I can also:
✅ Turn this into a bullet-point outline for preaching
✅ Create a PowerPoint using your sermon template
✅ Make a short summary handout
Just let me know!
✅ Turn this into a bullet-point outline for preaching
✅ Create a PowerPoint using your sermon template
✅ Make a short summary handout
Just let me know!
