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What Presbyterians Believe |
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April 2002
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An ongoing series of
articles on the distinctive beliefs and practices of Presbyterians.
View other What
Presbyterians Believe articles. |
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Reluctant evangelists?
Telling the Good News may not come easy,
but it is an essential part of a Christian lifestyle
By Sherron Kay George
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Do Presbyterians still believe
in evangelism? I quickly discovered in the required class on mission
and evangelism I taught at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary
that many students had little interest in or even an aversion
to evangelism. Isn't that something Baptists, Pentecostals, megachurches,
and TV evangelists do? |
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We Presbyterians station smiling greeters
at the front door, and we may take bread to visitors. We may
invite someone to our church. But we generally do not feel comfortable
speaking publicly about our personal faith.
Presbyterian pastors do not often preach evangelistic
sermons or give altar calls, and door-to-door evangelism is
rare among Presbyterians. Is there a way to practice evangelism
without emotional manipulation and aggressive marketing techniques
that lead to superficial decisions? Can Presbyterians reclaim
with integrity our historical commitment to evangelism?
Evangelism is one part
of God's mission
Many Presbyterians are confused about the relation between mission
and evangelism. The word mission comes from the Greek
for "sending," and evangelism from "good
news" or "public messenger of good news." God
is at work in our troubled and broken world. This is good news!
What is God doing in this world where many
forms of devastating evil are rampant? God sent the Son and
the Holy Spirit and now sends the church into the world as instruments
of redemptive mission. God is bringing to fruition the new reality
that was manifested in the life, ministry, death and resurrection
of Jesus Christ — God's reign of life, love, justice and
peace. While this reign seems hidden, it is present like yeast,
light, salt and a small seed.
Jesus defined the mission of God's reign:
"The Spirit of the Lord ... anointed me to bring good
news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to
the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the
oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor"
(Luke 4:18-19).
God's "holistic" or total mission
activity includes three essential areas, all high priorities
for the PCUSA: evangelism, compassionate service, and social
justice (see table below). Jesus practiced and intermingled
all three. Each is a distinct and necessary part of God's mission.
If any area is neglected, the church's mission is truncated.
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Lives speak louder than
words
All evangelism is mission, but not all mission is evangelism.
Evangelism, compassionate service, and social justice are integral
to the Christian's lifestyle. Our lives speak louder
than our words and are the first Bible many people will read.
The attitudes of respect, compassion and humility should characterize
our evangelism and all other participation in God's mission.
While words are necessary at some point in evangelism, our deeds,
attitudes and lifestyle help or hinder evangelism.
The specific intention of evangelism, compassionate
service and social justice is an important distinctive of each.
Building the church through conversion and discipleship is the
intention of evangelism, while service and justice seek primarily
to promote the values of God's reign — although there
are many overlaps. With integrity we can consider responding
to human need, building sustainable community, and social transformation
as intentions of mission. However, the ultimate end of every
kind of mission activity is the consummation of God's reign,
where Jesus Christ is Lord of all forever.
Evangelism in an interfaith
context
Sometimes we engage in social service and justice without speaking
about Jesus or the church, and this is advisable in interfaith
cooperation endeavors. For example, when people of diverse faith
communities who belong to Austin Area Interfaith Ministries
cooperate in ministry to the homeless or advocacy in public
places on behalf of justice issues, they do not practice verbal
evangelism. On the other hand, when members of a congregation
help a family renovate their home or take food to flood victims,
they should spell out who they are and why they are doing it,
and evangelism is intertwined.
Words are helpful to explain why we practice
compassionate service and social justice. When people ask us
questions about the Christian faith or our view on ethical issues,
we must be ready to answer with bold humility and in clear non-technical
language.
Presbyterians believe both in cooperation
or dialogue with and in evangelism or witness
to people of other faiths. Mission workers in Muslim countries
practice mission through compassionate service and community
cooperation, but must be reticent in relation to evangelism
because of government prohibitions. Christians in China testify
that a major reason for the amazing growth of the church during
the repressive Cultural Revolution was the "silent witness"
of compassionate and honest Christians in daily life.
Dialogue presupposes the faith commitment
of all parties, so we need not hide or compromise what we believe.
We can openly share our belief in Jesus and respectfully listen
while others share their beliefs in order to learn from one
another. We witness evangelistically and invitationally only
as we discern that the Spirit is opening doors and preparing
hearts to respond to God's gift of salvation in Jesus Christ.
Sharing good news —
every Christian's responsibility
Every person in the world has the right to hear and respond
to God's universal offer of grace in Christ. And sharing this
good news is the responsibility of every Christian and the church
as a whole. Christians in every country around the globe have
the privilege of joyfully sharing the good news of the whole
gospel with their friends, relatives, acquaintances, neighbors
and colleagues.
Salvation is a gift of grace that God freely
gives, but God chooses to communicate and offer this gift through
human agents. We simply take advantage of opportunities to articulate
and explain our personal faith in Jesus Christ and our life
as his disciples, and leave the results to God's Spirit.
Only God calls, elects, sends and saves people.
Asking who is "saved" or "lost" are inappropriate
questions for Presbyterians. We leave that to God's sovereign
love and justice. The important question is: Are we faithful
witnesses?
When a young Brazilian, Rodrigo Cardoso,
made a personal commitment to Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord
he started sharing his faith every day in the post office
where he worked. He simply allowed the love and peace of Christ
which filled him to spontaneously overflow to others. He shared
his faith with his mother and his siblings. When he was taken
to São Paulo for open-heart surgery, he asked permission before
the anesthesia to witness to the medical team, which he did
with joy and confidence. He told them that in life and death
he belonged to Christ. Later he became a lay evangelist and
started a new church development in Dourados in south Brazil.
His heart finally failed fatally while witnessing to Christ
in a vacation Bible school.
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No room for
arrogance
Evangelism is invitational. Jesus came into the world as a gift
of God's grace. Some people "did not accept him. But to all
who received him, who believed in his name, he gave
power to become children of God" (John 1:11-12, italics added).
God offers gifts, but never forces people to accept them. God
invites a response. When we share our faith and invite others
to accept Christ, pray, read literature, or attend a Bible study
or church service, we must allow them to accept or reject God's
loving grace. |
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Repentance is the response that recognizes
mistaken attitudes, words, actions or priorities and determines
to change. Such recognition and change can come in a moment,
as it did for the crowd at Pentecost (Acts 2) and for the Philippian
jailer (Acts 16), but it lasts a lifetime. Presbyterians understand
evangelism as a process that calls people to conversion, discipleship,
incorporation into Christian communities, and participation
in God's mission.
Not only do we evangelize as we share and
invite others to respond to the good news, but we too are continually
evangelized as we hear afresh and respond to the gospel challenges.
This humble approach leaves no room for arrogance. Darrell Guder
offers Presbyterians a relevant theology of evangelism in The
Continuing Conversion of the Church. He says: "Evangelizing
churches are churches that are being evangelized. For the sake
of its evangelistic vocation, the continuing conversion of the
church is essential."
How Presbyterians evangelize
Lifestyle evangelism is a matter of speaking,
inviting and receiving. We learn to speak
about our Christian faith to others, to share what difference
the presence of God and the support of the Christian community
make in our lives, especially in times of suffering and transition.
We tell others of the spiritual resources and guidance we find
through prayer, Bible reading, worship and service.
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An example: Ernie, a seminary student, mobilized
colleagues to make and distribute peanut butter and jelly sandwiches
(PBJ mission) to hungry people in Austin. Ernie looked each
recipient in the eye and said, "Jesus loves you."
The most mature articulation of the Christian
faith I have ever seen was my mother's during the 66 days between
the discovery of her cancer and her death. Her love, joy, peace
and confidence in God's plan in life and in death were a powerful
testimony that touched many lives.
Many people around us are searching and hurting.
After we articulate our faith to them, or if we simply cannot
yet do that, we can invite people to attend a Bible study,
a support group appropriate to their need, or a church service.
While not all will accept our invitations, we will find that
people are more spiritually hungry and open to receive them
than we are to extend them.
Most people go to a church initially because
they are invited, and many are simply waiting to receive an
invitation. When people respond to our invitations or come to
our churches on their own initiative, we must receive
them in Jesus' name and way. From the moment visitors enter
the church property, their ease in navigating the facilities,
the way they are greeted, the understandability of the service,
the relevance of the message, the response of people to them
after the service, the follow-up calls, letters or visits —
each is a positive or negative witness to the gospel.
First impressions are determinative. Do visitors
feel welcomed? Do they feel that we are a warm, inclusive community
or a closed, exclusive clique? Especially when people are different
in any way from the majority, do they feel accepted? After all,
when we receive the "least of these," we receive Jesus
Christ.
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Sherron Kay George is an education
consultant for South America for the PCUSA
Worldwide Ministries Division, based in Campinas, Brazil.
She recently taught at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary.
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