Some Further Thoughts on Evangelism

            Here are a few more thoughts that I had following Tom Short’s visit last week. 
1.      It is important to remember that most, if not all of the men, who preached in Acts were appointed by a church or other elders. The picture in Acts is not of lots of men just deciding to go preach in the open air. The men who preach in Acts, Peter, Paul, Philip, Stephen, Barnabas, Silas, Timothy, were appointed men who had been recognized as gifted and sent by a church. God does not expect that many men will do open air preaching. There are some gifted for this. These men should be trained and appointed to the task. We should support them with prayer, money, and if we have time accompanying them as they preach.
2.      I have made this point before, but it is worth repeating. There are not a lot of commands in the New Testament for the average Christian to go out and evangelize (Ephesians 6:19 might be one of those verses).  There is such an emphasis in churches on evangelism that we fail to look at the Biblical data. Here are some passages that talk about our relationships with non-Christians: Matthew 5:13-16, Colossians 4:5-6, I Thessalonians 1:6-10, 4:11-12, Peter 2:11-12, 3:1-6, 3:13-17.  These passages emphasize a holy life that is dedicated to Christ and a willingness to talk about God and Christ as the opportunity arises. I am not encouraging silence about Christ. But I am saying that for most of us evangelism will be done in the context of our daily living, not as we jump out of our daily lives to do something special. The danger is that our day to day living suffocates our desire to evangelize. We must work against this and look for ways in our daily lives to tell others about Christ.
3.      The raising of godly children is one of the most effective ways of discipleship.  A man who has several children would do better to raise those children in holiness than to spend every weekend evangelizing. Once his children are firmly planted in the Lord then he can extend his reach.
4.      Good discipleship is essential for good evangelism. It is not enough to reach the lost. We must make disciples.  That is why having a good church life, including good preaching, good fellowship, etc., is essential to the task of evangelism.
5.      Our evangelism must be motivated by love for Christ and love for the lost, not by guilt.
6.      The lifeblood of evangelism is prayer. We need to pray in a very deliberate fashion for those who do not know Christ. 

Kind of Like a Compass or Road Map

“What role does a worldview play in our lives? The answer to this, I believe, is that our worldview functions as guide to our life. A worldview, even when it is half unconscious and unarticulated, functions like a compass or a road map.  It orients us in the world at large, gives us a sense of what is up and what is down, what is right and what is wrong in the confusion of events and phenomena that confronts us. Our worldview shapes, to a significant degree, the way we assess the events, issues, and structures of our civilization and our times.  It allows us to “place” or “situate” the various phenomena that come into our purview.  (Albert Wolters, Creation Regained, p. 5)

Ways Sinners Fight the Truth

John Frame describes the ways sinners fight against the truth. He warns that we “should not fall into the trap of assuming that all sinners always use the same strategy.”

1. Simply deny the truth.
2. They ignore the truth.
3. They psychologically repress the truth.
4. They acknowledge the truth with their lips but deny it in deed.
5. Put the truth in a misleading context.
6. Use the truth to oppose God.

It is worthwhile to ask, as we confront unbelievers, which method they are using to fight against the truth.  Our evangelism and defense of  the Gospel could be more effective if we are accurate in our diagnosis.