
The ABCs of Evangelism
- its been great to hear of what God accomplished
at SEMP this summer
- its humbling to realize that we all have a responsibility
to reach out to our neighbor
- Im not going to give you a full-blown sermon
tonight
- I want to challenge you in four areas, because I think
we all need to replicate what happened at SEMP in our lives
- its easy to think that evangelism is somebody
elses job, but God has given you the responsibility of reaching
your own neighbor
- I want to ask if you have four things tonight:
- ATTITUDE
- consider the contagious enthusiasm of the early church
in the book of Acts
- when the believers spilled out of the Upper Room into
the streets of Jerusalem, everyone there heard them in their own language
"speaking of the mighty deeds of God" (Acts 2:11)
- but their testimony didn't stop with speaking
- (Acts 2:42) They devoted themselves to the apostles'
teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.
- (Acts 2:43) Everyone was filled with awe, and many
wonders and miraculous signs were done by the apostles.
- (Acts 2:44) All the believers were together and had
everything in common.
- (Acts 2:45) Selling their possessions and goods, they
gave to anyone as he had need.
- (Acts 2:46) Every day they continued to meet together
in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together
with glad and sincere hearts,
- (Acts 2:47) praising God and enjoying the favor of
all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were
being saved.
-
- let me ask you a question
- what do you think would have happened if the attitude
of the early believers was one of disharmony, disunity, self-centeredness,
and leader-bashing?
- "Who do these apostles think they are?" "These
apostles preach too long!" "They're serving fish again?"
- do you think that people would have jumped at the chance
to participate in a group like that?
- not likely!
-
- once upon a time, there was a woman named Ethel who
went to church every week
- and very week she was frustrated because her pastor
refused to give an invitation at the end of the service
- Ethel felt it was important to invite people to walk
forward and accept Christ, but the pastor wouldn't do it
- every Monday at work, her longtime friend Harriet asked
about her weekend
- and every Monday Ethel complained about that hardheaded
pastor of hers
- "He wouldn't know a good idea if it socked him
in the face," she muttered
-
- one week, Ethel suggested for the zillionth time that
the pastor give an invitation
- "Hmmm," he said, "that might be a good
idea."
- Ethel was shocked
- "If you get someone who needs the Lord to church,
then I will offer the invitation"
-
- Ethel couldn't wait for Monday to roll around
- she marched up to her friend Harriet
- "Would you come to church with me this week?"
- "No," said Harriet, with a quizzical look
- "But you're my oldest and dearest friend,"
Ethel blurted. "Why not?"
- "Well, I'd do just about anything for you, Ethel,"
replied Harriet. "But for two years I've been hearing what an imbecile
your pastor is - I'll never, ever go there"
- what sort of attitude do your friends pick up from
you?
-
- BOLDNESS
- the second ingredient necessary to capture the heart
of the community is boldness
- (Acts 4:29) Now, Lord, consider their threats and enable
your servants to speak your word with great boldness.
- (Acts 5:18) They arrested the apostles and put them
in the public jail.
- (Acts 5:19) But during the night an angel of the Lord
opened the doors of the jail and brought them out.
- (Acts 5:20) "Go, stand in the temple courts,"
he said, "and tell the people the full message of this new life."
- (Acts 5:21) At daybreak they entered the temple courts,
as they had been told, and began to teach the people. When the high
priest and his associates arrived, they called together the Sanhedrin--the
full assembly of the elders of Israel--and sent to the jail for the
apostles.
-
- people's lives were touched dramatically as the apostles
demonstrated the power of God in the streets of Jerusalem, at peril
of arrest, imprisonment, or worse
- and the church began to grow beyond Jerusalem
- the early believers were bold
- they couldn't help but tell you about the Lord!
-
- I made a new firefighter friend last month
- one thing about firemen - they spend a lot of time
together
- they practically live together for 24 hours at a time
- what a place to be a Christian!
- you couldn't help but share your faith with others
- my friend's name is Winton, and he said that as he
opened up about his relationship with God to his co-workers, he began
to discover a large number of secret Christians
- they were too bashful about Christ
- if we're going to capture the heart of the community,
we need boldness!
- (Acts 4:29) Now, Lord, consider their threats and enable
your servants to speak your word with great boldness.
- we must become people and churches that take our light
out from under our bowls and put them on a stand, where we can draw
men and women home safely into the Master's arms
- the church must become that true lighthouse for people
in the storms of life
- if the church is not following the mandate of Jesus
to go make disciples, then why should we believe that God will bless
the church?
- or, if we as individuals are not willing to be molded
and used by our Lord, then why do we hope God will bless us?
- when a church loses its vision to reach the lost, God's
blessings are withheld
- but when the majority surrender themselves to be used
by him and to make him the real Lord of their lives, we begin to see
marvelous things take place
- CONTACT
- the third ingredient we need if we're going to capture
the heart of the community as a church is contact
- I believe the early church had two advantages over
us
- number one: they didn't have church buildings
- that might not sound like much of an advantage, but
they couldn't be contained and trapped by the four walls of a physical
plant
- it's my contention that North American churches have
unintentionally succumbed to a fortress mentality
- the bricks and mortar which we intended to provide
a place of worship have in effect walled us in so that we have little
effect for the gospel in our neighborhoods
- we're the salt of the earth, but the salt is still
in the salt-shaker
-
- we have to somehow prevent the walls of the church
from holding us in
- I believe we should purposely endeavor to establish
ministries within the community
- another conviction I have is that we should continue
to allow our facilities to be used by the community
- at present, our church is "home" to two girl's
groups, English as a second language classes, and other groups
- these may not be profound, but they demonstrate that
our attitude demonstrates that we have a heart from our community
-
- another advantage the early church had is that they
were scattered
- we read in Acts 8 that the believers were scattered
throughout Judea and Samaria because of persecution
- in other words, they were literally forced into contact
with unbelievers
- sometimes in church the opposite happens
- the longer we're Christians, the fewer friends we have
who are not Christians
- we need this contact
-
- to his Father, Jesus prayed, "My prayer is not
that you take them out of the world but that you protect them from the
evil one...As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the
world" (John 17:15,18)
- Jesus repeatedly addressed the importance of sending,
or scattering, of his people into the world
- ministry is incarnational; we need to be among people
- Paul even tells us not to separate from sinners in
the world
- let me challenge you: if you're going to capture the
heart of the community, how much contact do you have with the community?
- how well do you know your neighbors?
- what community groups are you involved with?
- what steps are you taking to keep involved with the
community?
- DESIRE
- perhaps the ingredient we lack the most is desire
- when Jonah went to Nineveh to preach, the entire city
repented and turned to God
- the Ninevites were known far and wide for their savage
cruelty
- what happened? Jonah was so upset that the Ninevites
repented that he wanted to die
- Jonah wished that they would be destroyed rather than
saved
- how much do we care about capturing the heart of the
community?
-
- a pastor came to church in jeans and a tee-shirt one
Sunday morning, and his hair was in a ponytail
- he preached about how Christians get concerned about
things that don't matter while not getting concerned about things that
do matter
- he preached the whole sermon without a word about his
appearance
- he talked about compassion for people in the community
who are marginalized, disadvantaged - about breaking our circles of
security
-
- finally, at the end he said, "Now some of you
today have been getting more upset about my ponytail than you are about
people not getting Christ's gospel and Christ's love. The truth is,
ponytails don't matter - but people do. I'm going to cut my ponytail.
What are you going to do about your neighbors?"
-
- the real question this morning is, how much do you
care?
- do you care enough about capturing the heart of the
community that you're going to pick an ingredient on this checklist
that needs work, and do something about it?
- these ABCs are not enough for a week of SEMP
they should challenge each of us to be a disciple wherever we
are, to win others to Christ and to bring glory to God