How often do we say to ourselves, how can we get this person to come to church with us? If they would just come and hear our pastor give the sermon of his life, then they will "raise their hand and be saved." Whether we say it with words or not, the way we live our lives shows that we still believe God exists in a building and that our goal as Christians is to get as many non-Christians to cross the threshold as possible.
I'm excitedly reading through Surprised by Oxford
What did Jesus say in Matthew 26, "Go out into all the world..." John 1 also tells us that "His light came into the darkness, but the darkness did not understand it..." The point, I hope I am getting across, is that Jesus came to man to set them free. We as His followers, are called to go OUT to them where they are at and bring His light into their darkness. We do not need to "bring them to the light" to save them; the light is already right there next to them.
Whether we want to admit it or not, we have created a hierarchy in the American church today. We think we need the pastors to do the hard work of speaking the truth and leading people to salvation. Don't get me wrong, I love pastors (my Dad is one) and I know that they have an incredibly difficult and important job, but I believe part of the difficulty is a result of placing ALL the burden on them, instead of joining with them in the task God has called ALL of us to do. If you are a Christian, you carry the Holy Spirit inside of you. You can share the love of God with people right where they are at.
I recently listened to a talk by Erwin McManus where he shared how their community of faith encourages and releases their people. He said that when they first started, they would celebrate when people would leave as missionaries to other countries. They soon realized the message they were sending was that the people left behind weren't called by God. They soon switched their methods. Whenever, anyone chooses to join their community, they bring them up to the front, pray over them, anoint them with oil and send them forth as missionaries to their city. They give those individuals a Bible, and ask them to write a name of a non-believer they know in it and give it to that person that week as a step of faith. As I heard him share this, my heart went YES!!!!!!!!!! This is how it should be. The gatherings of the body of Christ on Sunday's should be ACKNOWLEDGING and ENCOURAGING it's people to go forth and be a light in their places of influence. You carry the life-changing gospel with you in your hearts and this Gospel has the power to change people's lives right where they are at!
And so the cherry on top of the Sunday: I've been working on this post for a week now, and as always letting it sit and simmer. This afternoon, my father-in-law shared a beautiful testimony of how he was able to share the love of Christ with someone at this work this week. My father-in-law had been praying for the opportunity to share God's love with someone and "out of the blue" this conversation started and that is exactly what happened.
What if we all were ready, available and expectant to have God allow us to share His love right where we are at?
In Christ,
![](http://signatures.mylivesignature.com/54488/57/BE29667D8C7A2D0C67853716B584D976.png)
I like the idea that the goal of church is to equip the saints for ministry... thus making the time we spend together about encouraging one another to bless the world and follow Christ more closely so the time outside of church is about sharing the Good News of Christ's love. I love how history so often sheds light on how we live and act today.
ReplyDelete~Luke