The Big Idea
“He said, ‘Who are You, Lord?’”
Acts 9:5
Chambers uses Saul’s conversion to explore the mystery at the heart of obedience: genuine obedience is only possible where a higher authority is genuinely recognized. Without that recognition, disobedience is not moral failure—it is simply freedom. The sign of a true encounter with Jesus is the instant recognition of His right to absolute authority.
The Simple Takeaway
Two people have each been confronted by the claims of Jesus Christ.
Person A engages intellectually with Christianity, finds it interesting and even morally admirable, but never quite submits—continuing to treat Jesus as one voice among others to be weighed and assessed, never quite giving Him the authority that would make His commands binding.
Person B, through the miracle of redemption, has encountered Jesus in a way that produced the same recognition Saul had: ‘Who are You, Lord?’—the moment when Christ’s identity was unveiled and His right to complete authority became undeniable.
Chambers calls readers to examine whether their relationship with Jesus has ever moved from intellectual engagement to the personal encounter that produces genuine recognition of His lordship.
One Question to Sit With
Is your obedience to Jesus rooted in genuine recognition of who He is—or is it still primarily a moral effort to comply with standards you find admirable but haven’t yet owned as His authoritative word to you?
Commentary
“Through the miracle of redemption, Saul of Tarsus was instantly changed from a strong-willed and forceful Pharisee into a humble and devoted bondservant of the Lord Jesus.”
Redemption produces what no self-improvement can
Chambers opens with Saul as the exhibit: the transformation was not gradual moral improvement but an instant miracle. The same person who had been Saul became Paul not by trying harder but by encountering the risen Christ. This sets the frame for everything that follows: genuine change is miraculous, not manufactured.
“There is nothing miraculous or mysterious about the things we can explain. We control what we are able to explain.”
Explanation is a form of control—and control is the opposite of obedience
Chambers observes a fundamental human instinct: we seek to understand in order to control. What we can fully explain, we can manage on our own terms. But genuine encounter with God produces mystery—things we cannot reduce to our own categories—and that irreducible mystery is part of what opens us to real obedience.
“It is not natural to obey, yet it is not necessarily sinful to disobey.”
Disobedience only becomes meaningful when authority is genuinely recognized
This is a carefully constructed theological point: genuine moral disobedience requires genuine recognition of the authority being disobeyed. A child who does not recognize a stranger’s authority is not sinning by ignoring their commands. Disobedience to God is only fully disobedience where His authority has been genuinely acknowledged.
“If one rules another by saying, ‘You must do this,’ and ‘You will do that,’ he breaks the human spirit, making it unfit for God.”
Coerced compliance destroys the capacity for genuine obedience
Chambers draws a sharp line between forced compliance and real obedience. The person who obeys only under compulsion has not actually obeyed in any meaningful spiritual sense—they have simply been controlled. Real obedience flows from willing recognition of authority, not from being overpowered.
“A person is simply a slave for obeying, unless behind his obedience is the recognition of a holy God.”
Obedience without recognition is mere servitude
Mechanical rule-following, compliance with religious conventions, and moral effort that stems only from social pressure—none of this is the obedience that matters to God. What makes obedience spiritually significant is the recognition behind it: this is the holy God who created me and has the right to command me.
“Many people begin coming to God once they stop being religious, because there is only one master of the human heart—Jesus Christ, not religion.”
Religion can be a substitute for Christ rather than a path to Him
Chambers makes one of his most penetrating observations: religious practice can actually create a distance between a person and Christ by providing a substitute relationship with God that feels adequate without requiring genuine personal encounter. When the substitute fails, the real thing becomes accessible.
“Jesus will never insist that I obey, but if I don’t, I have already begun to sign the death certificate of the Son of God in my soul.”
Refusal to obey Christ begins a process of spiritual death
Jesus does not coerce—He never overrides the will. But Chambers says that choosing not to obey when we have genuinely recognized Him is not a neutral act: it is the beginning of the extinguishing of the very life that His presence was kindling in us. The freedom to refuse is real, and the cost of using it is also real.
“It makes no difference to God’s grace what an abomination I am, if I will only come to the light.”
God’s grace is unbounded by the extent of our failure
Chambers ends with the great equalizer: no depth of sin, no history of refusal, no accumulation of disobedience puts a person beyond the reach of God’s grace—if they will come to the light. The condition is not moral improvement but the simple act of turning toward rather than away from Him.