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Surrender: When Obedience Costs Everything

Posted on Thursday, June 11, 2026
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by Jonathan Griffin
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This article is part of a yearlong series exploring one foundational biblical word each month. This month, we are focusing on SURRENDER. Subscribe to the Sunday Morning Newsletter and catch up on the entire series at amac.us/faith.


Just this week, I received a text from a friend who manages the social media team for his company. One of his employees posted a “Pride Month” graphic on the company’s channels. After careful thought and prayer, my friend made the call to have it removed. He believed it conflicted with his convictions as a follower of Christ. Shortly afterward, he was predictably accused of being a homophobe and promptly called into HR.

He admitted to me that he initially hesitated to get involved, because he was faced with a choice many believers know too well: stay silent and protect his position, or surrender in obedience and risk his reputation, security, and even his job. Stories like this remind us that true surrender is rarely convenient or cost-free.

The Apostle Paul provides one of Scripture’s clearest examples of the cost of surrender. His conversion reminds us that surrender is not merely a one-time prayer of salvation. It is the complete and ongoing relinquishing of self, status, and security in exchange for the surpassing worth of knowing Christ.

Paul’s Life Before Surrender

To understand the depth of his surrender, we must first grasp what Paul gave up. Before his encounter with Christ, Paul (then known by his Hebrew name, Saul) had status, security, and power. Born in Tarsus as a Roman citizen by birth, he enjoyed privileges that opened doors across the empire. He was a Pharisee “of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of the Hebrews” (Philippians 3:5), educated under Gamaliel, the most renowned Jewish rabbi of that time.

Saul was given authority from the High Priest in Jerusalem to hunt down Christians. He actively approved of the execution of Stephen, the first Christian martyr, and was “breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the Lord” (Acts 9:1). He was hell-bent on destroying the early church by dragging men and women to prison. Saul was not just opposed to Christianity – he was its most zealous and effective enemy.

The Damascus Road

Around AD 33–36, while traveling to Damascus to arrest more Christians, Saul experienced an encounter that changed everything. “As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, ‘Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?’” (Acts 9:3-4).

When Saul asked who was speaking, the voice replied, “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting” (Acts 9:17).Struck blind, he had to be led by the hand into Damascus. For three days, he neither ate nor drank. This physical blindness mirrored his sudden realization that he had been spiritually blind all along. The status, power, privilege and zeal he had spent his life accumulating, now seemed pointless and empty – what he would later refer to as “rubbish”.

Complete Surrender

Paul’s only response was complete and immediate surrender. This proud, self-sufficient leader who rode out to conquer became completely dependent. The man who once wielded authority now had to be led by the hand like a child into the city.

In Paul’s moment of divine brokenness, God sent a Christian named Ananias to pray for him. Despite his initial fear, Ananias obeyed and laid hands on Saul: “Brother Saul, the Lord – Jesus, who appeared to you on the road as you were coming here – has sent me so that you may see again and be filled with the Holy Spirit” (Acts 9:17). Scales fell from Saul’s eyes. Immediately after regaining his sight, he was baptized. He did not negotiate terms or modify his new allegiance; he surrendered his entire identity to Christ.

The Radical Aftermath

Paul’s new faith in Christ cost him everything socially, professionally, and personally. The Jewish authorities immediately plotted to kill him. The hunter became the hunted. In exchange for his previous life of luxury and respect, Paul’s new existence was marked by beatings, shipwrecks, stonings, and repeated imprisonments. He traveled thousands of miles planting churches, boldly opening the faith to Gentiles, and authoring 13 books of the New Testament.

Paul summarized his surrender beautifully in his letter to the Philippians:

“But whatever were gains to me I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. What is more, I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them garbage, that I may gain Christ” (Philippians 3:7-8).

He traded his resume, power, and prestige for the “surpassing worth” of knowing Christ.

The Fruit of Full Surrender

My friend’s story echoes Paul’s in important ways. Choosing to risk it all in obedient surrender may cost worldly status, security, or professional advancement. Yet, like Paul, when we completely surrender to God, the result is not ultimate loss but incomparable gain: renewed purpose, deep transformation, and intimate fellowship with Christ.

Paul’s life after Damascus was harder by every external measure, yet infinitely richer. The same Lord who met Saul in blinding light still meets us in our own moments of decision. Most of us will never face a Damascus Road experience, but we are regularly confronted with smaller opportunities to surrender moments when obedience may cost us approval, comfort, advancement, or security.

The question remains the same: Will we cling to what we cannot keep, or surrender everything to gain what we can never lose? Like Paul, we may discover that what feels like loss in the moment is actually the doorway to the surpassing worth of knowing Christ.


Closing Prayer

Heavenly Father,

Thank You for the example of Paul, who surrendered everything to follow You. Give me the courage to trust You fully, even when obedience comes at a cost. Help me to value Christ above status, security, and the approval of others.

When facing moments that test me faith, remind me that no sacrifice made for Your sake compares to the surpassing worth of knowing Jesus. Teach me to walk in daily surrender, confident that Your plans are always better than our own.

In Jesus’ name, Amen.


Daily Scripture Readings

Monday: Acts 9:1–9
Saul’s encounter with Jesus on the Damascus Road reminds us that God can radically transform even the hardest heart.

Tuesday: Acts 9:10–19
Ananias demonstrates obedient surrender by trusting God and ministering to a man he once feared.

Wednesday: Philippians 3:4–8
Paul willingly counts his accomplishments and status as loss compared to the surpassing worth of knowing Christ.

Thursday: Luke 9:23–24
Jesus teaches that following Him requires daily self-denial and surrendering our lives to His purposes.

Friday: Romans 12:1–2
True worship involves offering ourselves completely to God and allowing Him to transform our minds and lives.

Saturday: Galatians 2:20
The surrendered life is no longer centered on self but on Christ living and working through us.

Jonathan Griffin, Director of Advertising & Partner Development at AMAC | Former pastor & professor | Current husband & father | Redeemed sinner, saved by grace.

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