The New Year is almost upon us! In the third quarter of the year, I had many posts with a similar amount of hits. I am picking one of my favorites. This post from September 5 came at the beginning of my series on Evangelism in a post-modern culture. I encourage you to listen to these talks found at www.seattlecrc.org. The sermon page is a bit clunky, but we are working on it!
We want to see people come to know Jesus. We want to see people in heaven with God forever. We want to see people become devoted followers of Jesus Christ. That's what you and I long for. That's way you're reading this book. You and I won't be satisfied until God's hand is stretched out and we're seeing more fruitfulness.
This chapter is about identifying and taking down barriers- old ways of viewing and doing evangelism. If we don't first understand what's holding us back, we won't be ready to embrace important new ideas.
Often when we start to make witness a passion and a priority, we run into a major barrier: our "boxes," mental models of ministry and evangelism that keep us from pouring our passion into new ways of witness. If we are growing in our passion for witness but pouring our efforts and energy into the same structures and strategies we've always had, we will see little increase in fruitfulness. After a time we will get discouraged and our passion will disappear.
Rick Richardson, Evangelism Outside the Box, 17.
This week at First CRC of Seattle we will begin a series on evangelism in our evening service time. As with every new series, I wonder how it will go. There is little that catches my interest and attention more than the topic of personal and corporate evangelism! I only wish this topic was a passion of more people.
What do I mean? Are not most biblical Christians interested in evangelism? Yes, as a concept we are interested. There are the great commands of scripture (Matt. 28:19-20). There are the heroes of the faith who began and encouraged movements of grace by the power of the Holy Spirit (I think of Jonathan Edwards or the Wesleys). Yet, I find most of us are more interested in the concept of outreach than we are in doing anything about it.
Why?
I think many of us are scared to death of witnessing for Jesus. I think others are so self-consumed that they figure once they get their life in order they will begin witnessing (unfortunately this will never happen). I also think that many of us have false and misleading views of evangelism and outreach. We think of a method or a knowledge base that we must know and understand so we can be effective witnesses. We know what worked (sort of?) in the past, and we hold to this method as the best way to move forward in outreach. Yet, the conditions never appear to be just right. In time, we talk about evangelism and outreach, but we do very little to make it happen.
The beginning of Richardson's book helps us identify the "boxes" or categories we have firmly in mind when we think about "proper evangelism." I say proper, because most of us have some notion of how it should be done. This is particularly true in churches.
It is my belief that most churches do not engage in effective evangelism and outreach because we corporately have invented, maintained, and enforced methods of thought and ministry that actually work against effective outreach.
This is quite a mouthful and it could be taken as quite accusative. I do not intend it to be! I work as a church revitalizer. I love the Church. I wish to see each local body of Christ moving forward in effective ministry. I believe following the NT pattern, a healthy church will be constantly growing deeper in the gospel and outward in ministry. Such a church will be marked by at least 5-10% growth in new converts per year, and it will have many young believers who need to be discipled.
The problem is I work in a denomination where this is seldom the case with our established churches. I also find that my denomination is not alone in our struggles for healthy growth!
So, what do we do? We talk about outreach. We spend money on programs. We look for and reward those individuals and churches who have effective ministry. Yet, nothing seems to change. In fact, our churches grow older, we find less children in the pews, and we can see strange and scary handwriting on the wall that says something has to be done.
So, we talk more about outreach, we get a new leader/pastor, we spend money on programs, and often still nothing changes.
Is it hopeless? Is growth and outreach into this culture impossible?
Perhaps it is if we expect that God will and must work through the same means as He did generations ago. Perhaps the problem is not our passion for the lost, but our way of thinking about how to "do church" and "do outreach."
I honestly do not believe that individual and corporate evangelism is particularly hard in today's world. I find that people are open to talking and very needy! The problem is that our methods of operating need to "fit" with the way people dialogue and think. Notice I did not say our theology should adapt! Most of the time this is not true. If we lose the gospel, we have no real purpose and no real message.
What needs to change is our methods of ministry.
Some individuals and churches will change easily while others just cannot make the transition. In 20 years, those that change will still be going strong while those that refuse to address their ministry "boxes" will be ineffective and possibly closed. Thankfully God in His sovereign love will raise up other churches and other denominations to reach this generation!
As I work through this evangelism material for our church, I will continue to share some of my thoughts. What do you think?
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