Unstoppable Church 25 | We All Need a Jesus Story | Acts 21-22
In a sermon from Acts 22, Pastor David Watson opens with a disarming question: if you had one chance to tell someone you loved about the good news of Jesus, what would you say? Rather than pointing to theological frameworks or rehearsed Bible verses, Pastor David turns to the Apostle Paul, who — standing on the steps of a Jerusalem jail, freshly arrested and facing a hostile crowd — chose to simply tell his own story. Paul's testimony, Pastor David notes, is the second most told story in the entire New Testament, second only to the story of Jesus himself, and its power comes from one simple truth: real stories have real power.
Pastor David walks through the three-part framework Paul uses to tell his story in Acts 22. First, Paul lays out his backstory — a zealous persecutor of early Christians, educated under the great scholar Gamaliel, and on his way to Damascus to arrest more followers of the Way. Then comes the climax: a blinding light on the Damascus road, a voice calling his name, and a face-to-face encounter with the risen Jesus. Finally, Paul points to the greater story — a life now commissioned to bring the gospel to the Gentiles, no matter the cost. Pastor David argues that every believer has these same three parts to their story, whether their Jesus moment was a single dramatic instant or a slow, unfolding season of transformation.
The sermon closes with a practical and personal challenge. Pastor David draws on a viral clip from comedian Theo Vaughn, who — after studying John 5 — said publicly, "I think I'm ready for a new story." Pastor David suggests that Jesus is asking the same question of everyone in the room: do you want a new story? And for those who already have one, the call is to stop buying into the lie that your past disqualifies you. Your homework for the week is to write out your story using Paul's framework — backstory, Jesus story, and greater story — because, as Revelation 12:11 reminds us, the followers of Jesus overcome not just by the blood of the Lamb, but by the word of their testimony.