“. . . go and make
disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son
and the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you
. . .” (Matt. 28: 19-20a)
Jesus’ "great commission" to his followers was to share his
Gospel message with all the world. Throughout
the ages, Christianity has employed many strategies to this commission, from
sending missionaries to foreign countries to knocking on doors and asking
strangers if they know where they’d go if they died tomorrow.
Unfortunately, in the zealousness with which we meet this
call, I fear we might have lost the heart of the message. I fear the gospel message has become
unfocused, like a throw-away photo. We
teach in our churches the proper words needed to “lead someone to Christ,”
quoting a few verses from the book of Romans, asking a couple of personal questions,
and having the prospective convert repeat a (“sinner’s”) prayer that we have
memorized as if magical. And when we
find someone who agrees to repeat it, we claim victory. This person has now been changed forever, we
have been taught to believe. S/he is now guaranteed a Christian life and an afterlife in heaven; and if we are
honest, we have probably also put a proud notch in our own belt. One more convert for me (and we can hardly
wait to “humbly” share it with all our church friends).
I remember one summer when I was serving as a church planter,
my partner and I had weekly paperwork to fill out about our ministry. One of the questions was “How many people did
you lead to Christ?” Most weeks my paperwork
said 0, but my partner, every week,
responded with numbers of 20-something to 50-something. Was she following the Great Commission that
much better than I? Maybe. Maybe not.
Here’s what she was doing. As we
led Vacation Bible Schools and Backyard Bible Clubs for dozens of children, she
would say a few words about “accepting Jesus into your heart” and then ask for
a show of hands of all who wanted Jesus to come into their hearts. The children, perhaps wanting to please the
teacher, perhaps raising their hands because their friends did, perhaps having
no idea what the question even meant, would raise their hands, thus being
counted for the weekly paperwork.
I don’t know that there’s harm in this, except to our own
spirits, but I think we have missed the point.
I think most of our “how to witness” classes are out of focus from Jesus’ intent. Over the years, we have allowed words to take
the place of heart.
If we look to Jesus’ life and his teachings as our model for
“witnessing,” we come out with something quite different. Jesus’ challenge to the “church people” of his
day was always to love, not to say the word “love,” but to live every day,
every hour, every second of their lives touching every person they encountered with genuine love. When asked what was the greatest of all the
commandments, Jesus answered, “Love the
Lord your God will all your soul and with all your mind, . . . and . . . love
your neighbor as yourself. All the law
and the prophets hang on these two commandments.” (Matt. 22:37-40)
1 John 4:16a-21 says: "God
is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God and God in him. In this way, love is made complete among us
so that we will have confidence on the day of judgment, because in this world
we are like him. There is no fear in love, But perfect love drives out fear,
because fear has to do with punishment.
The one who fears is not made perfect in love. We love because he first loved us. If anyone says “I love God,” yet hates his
brother, he is a liar. For anyone who does not love his brother, whom he has
seen, cannot love God, whom he has not seen.
And he has given us this command: Whoever loves God must also love his
brother." And if we need a picture of
what this love looks like, 1 Cor. 13 offers us a clear view.
If we actually read through the four Biblical Gospels,
beginning to end, we see in Jesus’ everyday life, as he walks among friends and
strangers, how transforming that love can be. Jesus’ gentle and sincere love transformed
dirty fishermen, outcasts, hated tax collectors, prostitutes, the poor . . .
almost everyone except the “church people” who thought they already knew
everything they needed to know. (Is there a message here for us?)
What is happening to the Great Commission in our society
today? I’m afraid we have flipped it
upside down. I’m afraid Jesus weeps at
our misinterpretation. Yes, we are going
through the motions that have become our church “witnessing” traditions, but
while we are adding a few notches to our belts, we are managing to completely
turn off those around us like never before.
The mere mention of Christians is all it takes to send people running
for cover. They, like every human of every time and culture, are still seeking
meaning, answers, God, and love, but we, in our self-righteous judgment, which
resembles Jesus’ love in word only, are chasing them away, and they are landing
wherever they find love. Universalist churches,
Pseudo-Buddhism, and a new “paganism” that embraces and affirms women are
offering the love that we have forgotten.
We believe we are recipients of the transforming love of
Jesus. Yet when it comes to loving those
outside our church tradition, we have chosen judgment and labeled it “love” to
protect ourselves. We have allowed the
politics of our day to creep into our faith and take it over.
But there is hope.
Our hope is not in politics, or in judging and condemning our poor, our
lepers, and the women at our wells, but in Christ. It is time, Christians, to refocus our
view. It is time to return to the Christ
we proclaim. It is time to challenge ourselves beyond the mere words and to
actually love our neighbors, yes, even those neighbors, and those. This is Jesus’ Gospel, not that we pronounce
the word “love,” but that love floods every part of our being, so that those
around us cannot help but be transformed.
"We draw people to Christ not by loudly discrediting what they believe, by telling them how wrong they are and how right we are, but by showing them a light that is so lovely that they want with all their hearts to know the source of it." -Madeleine L'Engle
"We draw people to Christ not by loudly discrediting what they believe, by telling them how wrong they are and how right we are, but by showing them a light that is so lovely that they want with all their hearts to know the source of it." -Madeleine L'Engle
photo credit: digital-photography-school.com
6 comments:
I believe the major problem is the 'gospel' we are teaching.Do you know 'gospel' in not used once in the young's literal translation? "Good news" in what's used, and Jesus proclaimed this good news the whole time he was living and walking among us.But this good news could not have been "I'm going to be punished in your place so God can forgive you", because he hadn't even died yet. So what was this good news?
Good thoughts to ponder, kellbell! Thanks for sharing! Indeed we have evolved the "gospel" (good news) into something of our own cultural making, maybe because we prefer it to hit others and not us. But if we are to believe Jesus, he said the greatest of all the commandments was to love God and love each other. Maybe too hard for us to want to listen to. "And whosoever believes in me" is maybe too inclusive for us to accept.
I was inspired to write my own blog on this. Hope you like it.http://kellbell-justmythoughts.blogspot.com/2013/06/good-news-or-gospel.html
Great to see you writing again, kellbell, and it's fun when one blog post inspires another!
Wonderful blog Kathy!
kellbell, your story relates to mine!
Thank you, Joyce! Good to hear from you!
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