Friday, March 28, 2008

A Dangerous Gospel

I recently heard this true story about a mission trip to a Muslim country. It was told by John Meador, pastor of First Baptist Euless. I heard him tell this at a conference so my version is going to be coming to you third hand. I was taking notes, but couldn’t remember the name of the person the story is about – but it’s more about the Lord anyway.

John had a young college student in his church. This student was small but on was a collegiate wrestler. Although he was only 125 pounds he had a tendency to speak the truth wherever and whenever. One time this young man went with a group on a short term mission trip to a Muslim country. One day he went with his interpreter to a small Muslim village and began preaching and sharing the gospel. He began speaking to a group of about 70 men who were leaders in that village. He began to present the gospel and at one point the men in the crowd began to ask him questions. One man asked him who Jesus was. The college student replied, “Jesus is God in the flesh, the Son of the living God, the one and only true God.” The men of the Muslim village then asked him who Allah was. The brave evangelist said, “He is a demon and Mohammed is a false prophet.” It was at this moment that the interpreter encouraged the young man that they needed to leave. They could sense the growing hostility of the crowd and departed unscathed.

The next day the young man felt compelled to return back to the village. He wanted to return because he didn’t get to finish his gospel presentation to the people. As he and the interpreter entered the village they saw a group of about 30 women. He asked them if he could share with them about Jesus Christ. The women said, “No. we don’t need to hear your message, we are ready to embrace your God.” The young man was confused and asked the women, “How can you be ready to receive my God if you haven’t listened to all of my message?” The women replied, “We heard you yesterday and we know it must be true because those men were not able to kill you. Your God must have protected you and your message must be true. We want to know your God.”

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Missionary Strategy of Paul

My Bible reading for this week has been through the book of Acts. As I was reading I got started on a small project. I was reading the accounts of all Paul's missionary journeys. As I looked at these I started to jot down what his approach was and the response. I won't catalog all of them here, but I will summarize.

Paul went from town to town and preached the undiluted gospel. He often offended some portion of the population. So much so that he was run out of or abused in every city that he went to. He was debated, attacked, abused, arrested, vilified, beaten, almost killed more than once, stoned, and finally arrested and sent to Rome.

Now compare that with the missions philosophy today. Not every situation and country has comparable circumstances to the ones that Paul encountered. But, there are many that do. I don't think that Paul's example is modeled enough. And I know that it is easy for me to be a critic while I am here in my American freedom and one-week-plush-mission-trip experiences. But, I still question the philosophy.

In my next post I will give a real life, modern day, Paul-like, missions encounter from a true story I heard.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Must Read Article -- "Ethical Evangelism


Pastor Nathan Lino, of Northeast Houston Baptist Church wrote a great article on evangelism. He is a personal friend of mine and is someone I highly respect for his walk with the Lord.


March 20, 2008

ETHICAL EVANGELISM


“Relevance” and “contextualization” are the two buzz words in evangelism circles today. Relevance is the term that is employed when referring to effectiveness. In today’s evangelism world, if one is not effective in reaching lost people then they are said to be no longer relevant or irrelevant. In its simplest form, contextualization refers to communicating the Gospel message in terms that are appropriate and understandable to one’s audience. For example, I would expect those who teach our church’s empty nesters to present the Gospel differently than those who teach our third graders. I preach differently in our seminary chapels, where the audience knows theological terminology, than I do at inner city missions in Houston. A significant number of churches today make almost all their ministry decisions and plans based on contextualization and relevance. I believe much good can and has come from discussions related to these two issues.

I also believe much harm is being done to the Kingdom in the name of contextualization and relevance. For example, if relevance deals with a church’s effectiveness, what is the measuring stick? Numerical attendance? If a church’s goal is to get as many people in the doors as possible, then that church will pursue almost any program/ministry/approach/style that will get ever growing numbers of people in the door. And as the numbers come in, that church will deem itself “relevant” in reaching today’s lost culture. However, to be logically consistent, this line of thinking also has to consider the churches that aren’t drawing huge crowds to be “irrelevant”. This is a dangerous line of thinking. Take John 6 for example. Jesus feeds about 20,000+ people (5,000 men besides women and children in a day without contraceptives). That is quite the numerical attendance and is comparable to the biggest churches in America today. However, in the same chapter, Jesus says to His audience in verse 56, “He who eats of My flesh and drinks of My blood abides in Me and I in Him.” In a culture that considered blood to be religiously unclean, the audience quickly rejected Christ’s message. The chapter says the audience grumbled and argued over the sermon. Verse 66 says Christ’s huge following left Him after that sermon, and Jesus turned to the twelve disciples and asked them if they were going to leave Him also. In one sermon, Christ’s numerical attendance shrunk 20,000 to 12. Must we conclude that Christ’s ministry was “irrelevant”? (As an aside, I want to acknowledge that this line of thinking should make no sense coming from a pastor whose church is realizing a record number of people involved in overseas missions, conducting a large construction program because there are too many people to fit into the building we currently have, looking for staff, checking into offsite parking/shuttle options because we have no more room in our parking lot on Sunday mornings, etc. but, bear with me.) Based on Christ’s ministry, relevance cannot be measured by numerical attendance. Yet, in today’s church culture, numerical attendance is everything. An American church is considered relevant when there are lots of bodies in the worship center and irrelevant when there aren’t. This logic has led the American church down a road that is damaging the Kingdom. Before I flesh that out, let me briefly discuss contextualization.

If contextualization is communicating the Gospel to an audience in a way that they can understand it, how does one evaluate how good they are at contextualization? If I stand in front of 2,000 people and present the Gospel, how do I know if I what I said was clear to them? The defacto measuring stick of contextualization by the American church has become numerical results. Someone who gets a good numerical response when presenting the Gospel is considered a leader in the contextualization of the Gospel. But such thinking is problematic. If contextualization is to be measured by numerical results, then eventually and inevitably the Gospel message will get watered down so that more people will “respond”. The standard of salvation will be adjusted downward, and that is what I believe we are seeing in the American church today. The Gospel is often presented as an equitable contract between the lost person and God. “If you will turn to Jesus, He will be your friend.” “If you will invite Jesus into your heart, He will provide for you.” “If you will trust Jesus, He will watch over you.” We sell the Gospel to people based on what they will get from God in this lifetime which means their motive for turning to Christ is the impending blessings God wants to pour into their lives.

The American church has walked herself into the buzz saw of numerical results driven ministry. Misguided measuring sticks are driving the discussions of relevance and contextualization, and the American church is in troubled waters. We need a wake up call. We are doing much damage to the Kingdom of God. We are telling people who have not reached the biblical standard of salvation that they are saved. We are telling lost people, whom we have pronounced redeemed, that they can be decision making members of our faith communities. We are leading people who have no intention of making personal sacrifices for the sake of the Kingdom in singing I Am a Friend of God. We are baptizing people who have no intention of choosing the Lord Jesus’ will over their own will when inevitable conflicts arise between them and God. In short, we have reached a day in the American church where we have given ourselves the authority to adjust the biblical standard of salvation, and we are reaping what we have sowed. Prayer meetings are empty. Churches are doing well if they can get 20% of their members to share their faith during the week. Sacrificial service in the church is on the list of spiritual extinction, Americans willing to die for the faith are a rare breed, and personal safety on mission trips is of more importance to church members than getting the Gospel to lost people. In Southern Baptist life, the IMB has more money set aside to fund new missionaries than we have missionary candidates in the pipeline. Nasty church conflict is now the norm, and there is little respect for the office of the pastor. Pastors are preaching sermons initiated by requests from their congregation instead of the time they spend on their face before God. Our already sad baptism numbers are padded by churches that count individuals who are being baptized for the second and third time. Just a few years ago, LifeWay produced a survey that showed, on average, only 40% of a church’s recorded baptism numbers are first time baptisms.

Based on what I see in the American church today, it appears that few churches realize what a mess we are in. Most of the churches that do recognize the problem are trying to program their way to a healthier state. However, the problem cannot be fixed through leadership style, church structure or programming. The problem can only be fixed through salvation. If we will return to the biblical standard of salvation and only allow genuinely saved people into membership, our churches will regain their spiritual vibrancy. If we will make lost people meet the biblical standard of salvation, they will desire the Lordship of Christ once they are saved. They will hunger for the Word of God. They will serve sacrificially. They will sell all they have and move to Yemen as missionaries. They will share their faith. They will see the effectiveness of prayer. We will see genuine life change. The American church, and that includes mine, needs to return to the biblical standard of salvation.

I’d like to remind you of Christ’s sermon in Luke 14:25-35 during which He provided the standard of salvation. The premise of the passage is that a decision as significant as becoming a follower of Christ should not be made without first considering the cost involved. The decision should not be made emotionally or frivolously (see Parable of the Sower), but with serious consideration given to the price that may have to be paid. In vs. 28-30, Christ provides the illustration of how foolish it would be to begin a large construction project without first making sure that one can financially and logistically support the work that has to be done. In vs. 31-32 Christ provides the illustration of how foolish it would be to go to war without first making sure one has the resources and personnel to win the fight. His point is that in much the same way, it is foolish to rush into a decision to become a follower of Christ without first counting the cost.

In vs. 26 and 33 He provides examples of the types of sacrifices that may be required of a believer: family, one’s own life, and one’s possessions. A follower of Christ needs to understand that the day could come that for the good of the Kingdom, one’s relationship with their family, one’s possessions, and even one’s own life may have to be sacrificed. And Christ clearly says that if one is not willing to pay that kind of price, then they are not ready to be saved. Wow. Strong words. Hard words. Harsh words. But, the fact that the passage sounds hard to us is evidence of how far we have lowered the bar of salvation. Christ was preaching to LOST people. In their lost state they were to consider the price to be paid and if they couldn’t pay that price, they weren’t ready to be saved. Wow. Christ modeled this kind of evangelism for us in Luke 18:18 with the story of the rich young ruler. He came to Christ as a lost man and asked in vs. 18 what it would take for him to inherit eternal life. Jesus told him that to demonstrate his readiness to pay the price for the sake of the Kingdom, the ruler was to go and sell his possessions and give away the money. A lost man was asked to be willing to pay the price for the sake of the Kingdom and when he was unwilling, he was deemed unready for salvation. Jesus expects a willingness to pay a significant price for the Kingdom from day one in a believer’s walk with Christ. Wow.

This is the biblical standard of salvation. This is the standard a church must maintain with its ministries. As for NEHBC, this will be our standard. We will kindly, firmly, and urgently call the lost world to this standard of salvation. We will do everything we can to help lost people move to this point in their lives. We will teach, counsel, encourage, rebuke, urge, beg, and plead as much as we have to in order to give every lost person we can the opportunity at salvation. In other words, we will do everything we can do help them get up and over the bar, but we will not lower the bar. And I think therein is how the American church got into our predicament. Through our love for people, our desire to see lost people saved, and our hunger for the Kingdom of God to grow, we got so passionate about helping people over the bar that we started lowering the bar to accommodate them. We forgot that we are not allowed to touch the bar. It is time for our churches to put the bar back where it belongs and focus our attention on helping people clear it. Will a church’s numerical numbers go down? Probably. Will there be fewer baptisms? Probably. Might you be criticized by the lost members of your congregation? Definitely. Will you be told you are too hard on the lost people? Probably. Will lots of your visitors filter through your church and end up going to visit the church down the road that has lowered the bar? Probably. But, will you ever shrink your church from thousands to twelve in one sermon? Unlikely. But, if irrelevant means holding the bar of salvation to the biblical standard, I’m willing to be irrelevant; how about you?

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Offensive

In the passage that follows Jesus has a confrontation with the Pharisees and lawyers of his day. I was struck by this confrontation. Notice what he says to the lawyer.

Luke 11:37-52
37 While Jesus was speaking, a Pharisee asked him to dine with him, so he went in and reclined at table. 38 The Pharisee was astonished to see that he did not first wash before dinner. 39 And the Lord said to him, “Now you Pharisees cleanse the outside of the cup and of the dish, but inside you are full of greed and wickedness. 40 You fools! Did not he who made the outside make the inside also? 41 But give as alms those things that are within, and behold, everything is clean for you.
42 “But woe to you Pharisees! For you tithe mint and rue and every herb, and neglect justice and the love of God. These you ought to have done, without neglecting the others. 43 Woe to you Pharisees! For you love the best seat in the synagogues and greetings in the marketplaces. 44 Woe to you! For you are like unmarked graves, and people walk over them without knowing it.”

45 One of the lawyers answered him, “Teacher, in saying these things you insult us also.” 46 And he said, “Woe to you lawyers also! For you load people with burdens hard to bear, and you yourselves do not touch the burdens with one of your fingers. 47 Woe to you! For you build the tombs of the prophets whom your fathers killed. 48 So you are witnesses and you consent to the deeds of your fathers, for they killed them, and you build their tombs. 49 Therefore also the Wisdom of God said, ‘I will send them prophets and apostles, some of whom they will kill and persecute,’ 50 so that the blood of all the prophets, shed from the foundation of the world, may be charged against this generation, 51 from the blood of Abel to the blood of Zechariah, who perished between the altar and the sanctuary. Yes, I tell you, it will be required of this generation. 52 Woe to you lawyers! For you have taken away the key of knowledge. You did not enter yourselves, and you hindered those who were entering.”


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In hearing Jesus' harsh words to the Pharisees the lawyer tells Jesus that he is also offended by those words. How does Jesus respond? Does he apologize for his offensiveness? Does he soften what he has been saying? Does he try to be politically correct? Does he become less confrontational?

No -- in fact Jesus gets more offensive with the lawyer.

I am not good at confrontation, some people are. I confess that I too often worry about being too harsh. I need to learn to follow Jesus' example more.

This must be done in the right way. Many people are offensive and harsh for the wrong reasons. They are offensive and harsh because they are mean-spirited or unrighteously angry. Jesus was not. He was kind and loving, yet spoke clearly about matters of truth.

The nature of the gospel is going to be offensive and harsh to many people. That is what we cannot shy away from. The offense of the gospel does not need to be watered down, lessened, or made politically correct. To do so is to alter the gospel. It will be a stumbling block, and a stone of offense to some.

But, "I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God unto salvation." (Romans 1:16)

Friday, March 14, 2008

Share The Story

I ran across an evangelistic idea that I thought was fascinating. Ronnie Hill Evangelistic Ministries has a website where people can sign up to win one of three brand new cars. The only requirement is that you have to listen to a 3 minute story -- which is a gospel presentation.

Check it out. Pass it along. Click the link below. (by the way - pastors, and church staff are not eligible to win.)


Monday, March 10, 2008

Jesus, Thank You

I've noticed that many of my blogs are critiques of various issues and things. That is necessary, but I also want start showing that there are some things out there that are good and right.

I am very picky about worship music. I recently stumbled across a great song by Sovereign Grace Ministries and Bob Kauflin. It is a great worship song, about propitiation called "Jesus, Thank You." If I knew how to upload audio to this blog I would put it on here. I don't so here are the lyrics.



The mystery of the cross I cannot comprehend,
The agonies of Calvary.
You, the Perfect Holy One, crushed Your Son,
Drank the bitter cup reserved for me.

Your blood has washed away my sin,
Jesus, thank You.
The Father’s wrath completely satisfied,
Jesus, thank You.
Once Your enemy, now seated at Your table,
Jesus, thank You.

By Your perfect sacrifice I’ve been brought near,
Your enemy made Your friend.
Pouring out the riches of Your glorious grace,
Your mercy and your kindness know no end.

Your blood has washed away my sin,
Jesus, thank You.
The Father’s wrath completely satisfied,
Jesus, thank You.
Once Your enemy, now seated at Your table,
Jesus, thank You.