Chuck Colson, founder of Prison Fellowship,
spent 40 years helping people hear and understand the gospel of Jesus Christ. When
he died in April 2012, one newspaper article carried the headline, “Charles
Colson, Nixon’s ‘dirty tricks’ man, dies at 80.” It seemed surprising that a
man so transformed by faith should be identified with things he did as a
politically ruthless presidential aide decades earlier before he knew the
Savior.
The apostle Paul’s conversion and his early
Christian witness were greeted with skepticism and fear. When he began
preaching that Jesus is the Son of God, people said, “Is this not he who
destroyed those who called on this name in Jerusalem, and has come here for
that purpose?” (Acts 9:21). Later when Paul went to Jerusalem and tried to join
the disciples, they were afraid of him (v.26). In years to come, Paul never
ignored his past, but spoke of it as evidence of the mercy of God (1 Tim.
1:13-14).
Like Paul, we don’t need to parade our
failures or to pretend they didn’t happen. Instead, we can thank the Lord that
through His grace and power, our past is forgiven, our present is changed, and
our future is bright with hope for all He has prepared for us.