T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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693.1 | Billy Graham relay in Reading, UK | ICTHUS::YUILLE | Thou God seest me | Wed Mar 15 1995 09:04 | 22 |
|
This is being relayed in the UK. If you live within commutable distance of
Reading, the card I have may be of interest. It says :
You are invited to
BILLY GRAHAM
GLOBAL MISSION
By satellite to
Loddon Valley Leisure Centre
Rushey Way, Lower Earley
March 16th, 17th, 18th 1995
Doors open 7:15 p.m.
The Time is Now....
01734 792169 01734 791038
|
693.2 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Wed Mar 15 1995 09:20 | 3 |
| There's talk of an audience of one Billion.
That would be phenominal. One in six people on the earth
tuning in!
|
693.3 | God Bless Billy Graham | OUTSRC::HEISER | Grace changes everything | Wed Mar 15 1995 11:49 | 1 |
| Something like 170 countries and 80 different languages too.
|
693.4 | (See note 14.27286) | AUSSIE::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Wed Mar 15 1995 16:38 | 13 |
| Extract from our Digital Australia Christians At Work Ad-Hoc Newsletter
(See it in full in Chit-chat if it's still there)
Billy Graham Crusade On Now
There is an international Billy Graham Crusade
happening right now and for the next two or three
days. Various churches in Sydney are taking the
delayed satellite broadcast in the evenings.
Please pray for Billy and those in the support
networks in the local churches.
James
|
693.5 | LET US PRAY | HOTLNE::JPERRY | | Thu Mar 16 1995 01:02 | 18 |
|
Dear Friends in Christ,
I stand corrected on my numbers put forth here and concur with
those of you who said possability 1 BILLION hearing, 165 various
countries, and 80 various languages. LET US PRAY! RIGHT NOW!
> Pray for the technical aspect of this vast undertaking!
> Pray for the spiritual, those hearing the words!
> Pray for Billy Graham's health, energy and spirit of delivery
of his message!
all best in Christ's love....Jack
|
693.6 | Thank's friends | VNABRW::WILLIAMS | | Thu Mar 16 1995 05:17 | 8 |
| Thank you friends for this information. I am working on a project in
Rome at the moment and as I do not speek Italiano I couldn't follow the
news. I'll be praying that Christs' precious blood will protect Him
from the Evil one. Thank's again
Brother in Christ
Peter
|
693.7 | | ICTHUS::YUILLE | Thou God seest me | Fri Mar 17 1995 08:04 | 13 |
| "Rejoice with me; for I have found my lost sheep!!!!"
"I tell you, there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over
one sinner who repents ."
Luke 15:6,10
....just excited about hearing of someone going forward at the Billy Graham
relay here last night....
Andrew
|
693.8 | | AUSSIE::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Sun Mar 19 1995 08:14 | 11 |
| Re: Note 693.7 by ICTHUS::YUILLE
>....just excited about hearing of someone going forward at the Billy Graham
> relay here last night....
^^^^^
Chuckle. ;-) We had about 800 or so, and about ten or twenty went
forward. Not that it was terribly clear _why_ they should go forward!
This was the third broadcast... which we saw delayed on Saturday night.
James
|
693.9 | | GIDDAY::SCHWARZ | | Sun Mar 19 1995 17:33 | 7 |
| re Note 693.8 by AUSSIE::CAMERON
> Not that it was terribly clear _why_ they should go forward!
James could you explain what you mean by this.
|
693.10 | | AUSSIE::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Sun Mar 19 1995 19:09 | 11 |
| Re: Note 693.9 by GIDDAY::SCHWARZ
> > Not that it was terribly clear _why_ they should go forward!
> James could you explain what you mean by this.
Sure! My wife and I talked about this afterwards, it was not made
clear at any time by BG himself or the local voice-over _why_ people
should go forward, or what would happen to them. I'm guessing it was a
hole in the presentation sequence or something.
James
|
693.11 | | GIDDAY::SCHWARZ | | Sun Mar 19 1995 19:52 | 7 |
| James,
You have made this a little clearer. Im still confused why people DID
go forward.
kym
|
693.12 | | AUSSIE::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Sun Mar 19 1995 22:34 | 10 |
| Re: Note 693.11 by GIDDAY::SCHWARZ
> You have made this a little clearer. Im still confused why people DID
> go forward.
I suspect that they thought that BG was asking them to become a
Christian, and so they were coming forward to show that decision and to
collect the "literature".
James
|
693.13 | | GIDDAY::SCHWARZ | | Sun Mar 19 1995 23:08 | 11 |
| James,
If they were coming forward as a outward sign of them giving their
lives to Christ then the _why_ is because of the Holy Spirit's
prompting.
Does it really matter why they came forward at that particular time?
The fact that they felt moved by God to do so is reason enough to
rejoice.
kym
|
693.14 | | GIDDAY::SCHWARZ | | Sun Mar 19 1995 23:12 | 9 |
| an aside:
Do people _go out the front_ because someone has asked them to ie the
preacher, or because of God's promping? What difference does it make?
How does this affect to way we approach 'alter calls'?
Kym
ps: we dont have alter calls in my church.
|
693.15 | hmmm... | SNOFS1::WOODWARDC | Somewhere Else... | Mon Mar 20 1995 00:56 | 9 |
| re: -.1
> Do people _go out the front_ because someone has asked them to ie the
> preacher, or because of God's promping? What difference does it make?
> How does this affect to way we approach 'alter calls'?
Could make an interesting topic...
hazza :*]
|
693.16 | | GIDDAY::BURT | Let us reason together | Mon Mar 20 1995 01:33 | 5 |
| re -.1
wot, conversions? altered states?
Chele
|
693.17 | | AUSSIE::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Mon Mar 20 1995 02:49 | 23 |
| Re: Note 693.13 by GIDDAY::SCHWARZ
> If they were coming forward as a outward sign of them giving their
> lives to Christ then the _why_ is because of the Holy Spirit's
> prompting.
If you wish to be silly about it, then yes, anything that happens in
this entire universe is because God prompted it. That was not what I
was originally speaking about. I was thinking in terms of what the
people going forward (or _not_ going forward) were rationalising;
i.e. what were _their_ reasons _why_ they went forward, not some all
encompassing _why_ such as the Spirit's prompting.
> Does it really matter why they came forward at that particular time?
> The fact that they felt moved by God to do so is reason enough to
> rejoice.
I have no idea how many of them felt moved by God to come forward. I
have no idea whether it really matters why they came forward. You
sought the clarification on my comment that there was no reason
_stated_ _clearly_ for them to come forward.
James
|
693.18 | | ICTHUS::YUILLE | Thou God seest me | Mon Mar 20 1995 05:26 | 47 |
| Hi James, re .8, I guess I should have clarified ... the specifics of my
excitment was at who the particular individual was. I don't have stats on
the whole deal.
btw, from when I've been involved in these, usually around half of those
going forward are counsellors, tagging a specific inquirer.
� Sure! My wife and I talked about this afterwards, it was not made
� clear at any time by BG himself or the local voice-over _why_ people
� should go forward, or what would happen to them. I'm guessing it was a
� hole in the presentation sequence or something.
So your relay did not include any invitation to go forward, yet people did.
Presumably when they saw people on screen going forward?
� Do people _go out the front_ because someone has asked them to ie the
� preacher, or because of God's prompting?
If the first, then it will come to nothing. If the second, they're on the
way, whether this is their time to be 'altered' or not ;-)
� What difference does it make?
The parable of the sower and the seed covers all sorts of soil.... They
all get the seed. Some give it a try without root [in their own strength],
and haven't any spiritual resource to stand.
� How does this affect to way we approach 'altar calls'?
Don't go forward unless you're sure it's from the LORD, and not fron yourself...
Kym, my church doesn't make altar calls either. We'd have a job to, as
there is no altar at my church either ;-) But a fair few people at my
church have responded to invitations following gospel meetings elsewhere.
They can be overdone, we can be starved of them. I don't see it as
terribly critical, as in any gospel preaching church there should be some
sort of invitation (which in our case is just to speak to the pastor or
similar if anyone has any fuerther questions).
The fact that some can be put off by what they see as excessive
emotionalism or crowd manipulation is generally just indicative of the
infinite variety that God has created in mankind. Each to his taste. And
while some may fuss that what is not to *their* taste is liable to put
people off Christianity, God knows the heart, and will not let that be an
excuse to keep any of His own out of heaven. Neither will He deprive those
for whom that might be the best channel to open the heart...
Andrew
|
693.19 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Mon Mar 20 1995 08:14 | 19 |
| FWIW,
I just wanted to confirm from my point of view that there was
no clear meaning give to the alter call. Billy Graham just
said something like, "Now, I want you all to come up here.
Get up from your seats and come down to the front....." He
did not explain why. I was thinking, "I hope those people
figure out what he means. I don't know how they are going to
fit everyone in that stadium down on the field." Appanently,
they figured it out because some people did stay in their seats.
I think this may just have been a slip. He has been doing this
for so many years and is getting old.
All in all, I think the Global Mission was terrific. I only
watched 2 nights of it on tv but it seemed to be very successful.
Praise God!
Pam
|
693.20 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Mon Mar 20 1995 09:37 | 36 |
| .18 Andrew
>Kym, my church doesn't make altar calls either. We'd have a job to, as
>there is no altar at my church either ;-) But a fair few people at my
>church have responded to invitations following gospel meetings elsewhere.
>They can be overdone, we can be starved of them. I don't see it as
>terribly critical, as in any gospel preaching church there should be some
>sort of invitation (which in our case is just to speak to the pastor or
>similar if anyone has any fuerther questions).
>
>The fact that some can be put off by what they see as excessive
>emotionalism or crowd manipulation is generally just indicative of the
>infinite variety that God has created in mankind. Each to his taste. And
>while some may fuss that what is not to *their* taste is liable to put
>people off Christianity, God knows the heart, and will not let that be an
>excuse to keep any of His own out of heaven. Neither will He deprive those
>for whom that might be the best channel to open the heart...
Glad to see this wisdom Andrew. I have been thinking about some things
over the weekend and the "Altar call" was one of them. You see, I have
a friend in the BCC who parroted someone's understanding that the altar
call was not a Biblical concept. And it is this notion that grants some
people license to feel a spiritual superiority over those whose practice
includes the Altar call response. I'm going to write more about it
elsewhere, but when one examines the reasons for "Altar calls" instead
of the means by which some people have used altar calls, one can see
a distinctive Biblical application, especially in the Old Testament where
sin offerings were made. "But we are not bound by the law and sacrifice
was abolished." Not quite. Animal sacrifices were, but moving from
action to attitiude, the attitude of bringing your sins and yourself
and laying them at the feet of Jesus for cleansing remains an important
part of the regeneration of the individual. NOT in the physical coming
forward and NOT in any outward expression, but as Andrew says, in the
heart. And the altar call is merely one expression of a heart response.
Mark
|
693.21 | | AUSSIE::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Mon Mar 20 1995 16:28 | 2 |
| Thank you Pam, I was hoping that somebody else had seen and heard the
same sort of thing! ;-)
|
693.22 | | MIMS::CASON_K | | Mon Mar 20 1995 17:01 | 22 |
| I didn't see the crusade, but having worked at one I find it odd that
Dr. Graham did not explain why people should come forward. Generally
his altar call sound pretty much the same from service to service.
"In just a moment I'm going to ask you to come forward (couselors cue
to get in position). By coming forward you are saying I want to make
Jesus Lord of my life... (or some other form of affirmative consent to
the message)."
On another earlier note...Yes, about one third to half of the people on
the field are counselors or supervisors. By the way counselors are
primarily there to record the conversion not to facilitate it. Any
additional counseling that may need to be done is referred to the
clergy/supervisors in the crusade.
Having been involved in the follow-up in the Atlanta area, I am
disappointed with the long term results of the crusade. Some 90% of
the people we followed up on, when asked why God should allow them into
heaven, had no idea what their salvation was based on. Answers ranged
from, "I went forward at the crusade" to "I try to do the best I can."
Kent
|
693.23 | | AUSSIE::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Mon Mar 20 1995 17:34 | 5 |
| I really liked BG's simple explanation though... we have a soul, it is
eternal, and even if you estimate a ten percent probability of hell
existing, it would be a good idea to hedge your bets and chose heaven.
James
|
693.24 | | ICTHUS::YUILLE | Thou God seest me | Tue Mar 21 1995 05:21 | 56 |
| It must be around thirty years since I went to a Billy Graham crusade, so I
have no strong memories of the detail of his altar call. I've been to
other ones more recently, which were rather clearer. Including some 14
years back, locally, when my second lad went forward. I was some way back
in the (sizeable) group as a supervisor / counsellor at the time, and the
evangelist happened to seize on Fergus, and made an impassioned plea for
the poor lad's father to come forward and be saved as well! He went on for
some minutes on this theme, but was unable to convince me to renounce my
salvation so that I might be saved again ... ;-} It was a rather clumsily
inappropriate few minutes, and while it might have touched someone';s heart
to come forward, it might also have persuaded anyone who had come forward
from more complacent motives to return to the seat where they belonged.
I am surprised that Billy Graham doesn't make the basis of the 'call'
clear, and would regard that as personally disappointing. However, from
the point of view of those attending, his reputation is such that I guess
most would be aware of what the move forward signified, and would have come
either prepared for that, or ready to be prepared for it. No excuse for
him (or is it the relay technicians?), but some excuse for at least some
going forward.
Kent, you were disappointed with the 90% 'failure' rate in those going
forward. This is higher than the sort of figure I've understood these
campaigns usually achieve, from surveys in the UK. However, that does not
totally invalidate even what is achieved in the hearts of the 90%. Agreed,
they have not made the leap of understanding and spirit we simplistically
hope for, but I believe that even this gesture of acceptance to the LORD
Jesus gives Him an opening He can call back to their remembrance, maybe
much later in life. For us (and Billy Graham), our responsibility is to
make the message crystal clear, by our life first, and also by passing on
the Word of life. The result is in the hands of the Holy Spirit.
.23� I really liked BG's simple explanation though... we have a soul, it is
.23� eternal, and even if you estimate a ten percent probability of hell
.23� existing, it would be a good idea to hedge your bets and chose heaven.
James, I have to differ with you on that one. I used to think it a great
line of reasoning. However, the 'salvation' it motivates is a merely
intellectual decision, like taking out an insurance you can then forget
about while you get on with life, rather than a reality based on an
awareness of sin and guilt before a holy loving God.
Sadly, the insurance method can also be an immunisation against revisiting
the real issues and exposing the soul to God. It leaves people thinking
they have experienced salvation, without finding peace with God. They then
tend to dismiss 'Christianity' as something they have tried without finding
peace, and can be sidetracked onto, say, eastern religions, where the
physical etc disciplines imposed give a substitute impression of achieving
'enough' righteousness under one's own strength.
I guess I've argued 'for' and 'against' the effect of this type of call
above. However, I would not be without it, and trust the Judge of all the
earth to do right, for 'the LORD knows those who are His', and will not let
one of them be lost at the final day. Whatever mean we use ;-}
Andrew
|
693.25 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Mar 21 1995 09:03 | 26 |
| > Agreed,
>they have not made the leap of understanding and spirit we simplistically
>hope for, but I believe that even this gesture of acceptance to the LORD
>Jesus gives Him an opening He can call back to their remembrance, maybe
>much later in life. For us (and Billy Graham), our responsibility is to
>make the message crystal clear, by our life first, and also by passing on
>the Word of life. The result is in the hands of the Holy Spirit.
Spot on.
In addition to the "come forward" Billy is also on TV and asks those
watching the televised program to make a commitment to Jesus Christ
right in the privacy of their homes. In other words, the "altar
call" is much less a form than it is a manner of response, and what
I mean by that is that it is not some magical prescription like some
people might like to make it. (My BCC friend almost derided altar
calls because, of course, you didn't see them in the pages of the
first century church.)
When action follows attitude, the attitude is strengthened. You can
learn a lot about driving by reading about rules of etiquette on the
road and stuff like that, but actually getting behind the wheel makes
you a better driver. Practice must follow principle. And works
must *follow* faith. "Bear fruit in keeping with repentance."
Mark
|
693.26 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Mar 21 1995 09:11 | 34 |
| > However, the 'salvation' it motivates is a merely
>intellectual decision, like taking out an insurance you can then forget
>about while you get on with life, rather than a reality based on an
>awareness of sin and guilt before a holy loving God.
>
>Sadly, the insurance method can also be an immunisation against revisiting
>the real issues and exposing the soul to God.
Andrew,
I acknowledge your cautions about immunization, but I can attest that
salvation is (or can be) a merely intellectual decision. "No man can serve
two masters..." When I was convinced of this statement by the Holy Spirit,
I was faced with my choice in the matter. I chose to serve God on an
intellectual basis; not with any great outpouring of emotion of sorrow
over the sins I had committed.
You see, I was always a fairly good kid. There was little to change in
my behavior in life (although there indeed was some!). But what needed to
be changed was what was at the center of my life.
The passion and emotion and love, and the visiting of the "real issues"
came in his time and I dealt with each by the help of the Holy Spirit.
I am still a fairly logical kind of guy when I approach something new
that the Spirit has for me to deal with. (And emotion is not isolated
from me, by the way.) Some people do in fact come to believe in God
and believe on God for salvation based on an intellectual decision.
If they are sincere about their decision, there is no doubt whatsoever
that they will not be immune to the "real issues" and their soul will
indeed be exposed to God. And the person may do so on an intellectual
basis. What God does with that opening of the soul is His business, and
He does a great business!
Mark
|
693.27 | | MIMS::CASON_K | | Tue Mar 21 1995 09:48 | 27 |
| Andrew,
The response of the 90% raises the question of, "What are we trusting
for our salvation?" If salvation requires a faith response then that
faith must have an object associated with it. The only reasonable
object, of course, is the atoning work of Jesus Christ's death and
resurrection. Anything else still puts "I" as the object of faith and
strictly becomes a salvation of works which is no salvation at all. My
regret is that the counselors do not have enough training/latitude/time
to be able to clarify the commitment that the inquirer (Billy Graham's
term) is making. I've talked to many people who had difficulty
articulating their faith and then there are those who simply haven't a
clue. Am I saying that those people are less saved or not saved at
all? I don't think so in every case, God knows the heart. But when the
fiery darts come I believe the one who knows the object of his faith will
have a much larger shield. I believe that when the flood waters come
that the one who knows the object of his faith will have a deeper
foundation laid and will be less likely to be washed away. I don't
think it's responsible evangelism to throw the seed out and say, "Here,
you plant it!"
BTW, the 90% number is singly referring to my church's follow-up of
~100 inquirers. I don't have figures on the US but 100 is a pretty
good sample size.
Kent
|
693.28 | | ICTHUS::YUILLE | Thou God seest me | Tue Mar 21 1995 11:17 | 74 |
| � My BCC friend almost derided altar calls because, of course, you didn't see
� them in the pages of the first century church.
Different times, different customs. And 'even' Paul suited his methods to
the culture (1 Corinthians9:19-23, which seems to have come up a few times
recently ;-). Meanwhile, can you imagine him making an altar call in Acts
14:18 ... ;-) or 13:43? Because of the type of understanding of that
culture, they had rather the opposite problem...
Meanwhile, the result looked for in both instances is 13:48 - "all who were
appointed for eternal life believed."
Funny, Mark - I had much the same sort of conversion experience as you.
Brought up in all the [baptist] teaching of the Word, etc, yet there was
something which meant it had to be real, not faked. When I gave my heart
to the LORD, I got utterly 0 response. reaction change, to my awareness. To
say I was disappointed would be an understatement. So much so that the
next night I tried again... (I'm sure I've mentioned this here before...)
He just kinda put in my heart "I heard the first time."
It was some years before I got a real depth of assurance.
I'm not saying that conversion mustn't involve the mind, nor that the
convert mustn't think he's made a decision - these would be impossible
criteria. I think that [almost] always the decision seems to rest in the
mind of the convert (part of the chosen / free will dichotomy), and that
free will choice includes and implies enthroning the LORD in the daily life,
walk and understanding from then on.
What I was guarding against is the one stage back intellectual decision,
where the heart is not involved, and there is no real awareness or
conviction of guilt. The person making that sort of decision is staying in
control. But on the face of it neither they nor we can necessarily see the
difference for maybe many years, if ever, in time.
Pretty much as Kent is saying - the more the counsellor can draw out the
counsellee, to be able to understand and express where his faith is placed,
the better armour they have to advance in the kingdom. Not that
articulation is a prerequisite of salvation, but that this is our usual
means of communicating the gospel, what it all means to us, and where we
stand as individuals.
But however skilled the counsellor, there's always occasional people who's
position is very very difficult for ordinary people to be sure of. They
say the wrong words & phrases, and don't have a grasp on the gospel, yet
there's uncertainty whether this really reflects their heart, maybe because
of some certain tenacity for the LORD, or something like that. The LORD
knows the heart, and on the day of judgement, He won't be fooled by either
suitable words or inadequate words. but these weren't the sort of people
I was referring as endangered in .24.
I've met arrticulate, educated people, who had tried Christianity, and after
a while, moved on to other things, as they saw greater truths in various
philosophies. But they had clearly never known the LORD Jesus Christ. For
a time they had paid lipservice to what they thought was a way of life in
human strength. And thought there was no more. Thes were the people I
was sad for.
� I don't think it's responsible evangelism to throw the seed out and say,
� "Here, you plant it!"
Agreed. But that's where one may be limited by one's personal vision. We
may know that the seed needs certain types of watering, and we should
exercise that gift according to our revelation. I wouldn't stamp on a
power spray just because I couldn't personally place every drop...
I like that versse in Revelation 14:6
"Then I saw another angel flying in mid-air, and he had the eternal
gospel to proclaim to those who live on the earth - to every nation
tribe language and people..."
Ultimately either method of delivering the message is in the LORD's hands,
and He gives the increase.
Andrew
|
693.29 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Mar 21 1995 12:52 | 19 |
| � I don't think it's responsible evangelism to throw the seed out and say,
� "Here, you plant it!"
But Kent, the seed is scattered and not planted, isn't it?
The parable of the soils indicates that the word is scattered and
some falls on different type of ground. The gospel tells of four types
of soils and hopefully it doesn't imply 25 percent each!
>Ultimately either method of delivering the message is in the LORD's hands,
>and He gives the increase.
Amen, Andrew. (Philip planted a seed in the Ethiopian Eunuch and Peter
preached to a crowd of people from different parts of the world.)
>He just kinda put in my heart "I heard the first time."
This made me chuckle Andrew. I know just what you mean.
Mark
|
693.30 | | MIMS::CASON_K | | Tue Mar 21 1995 13:45 | 48 |
| Mark,
Good question. Is it the responsibility of the sower to scatter or
plant the seed? The second question that you did not ask is, "What is
the seed?" The parable that we commonly call the parable of the sower
seems to indicate an indiscriminate scattering of the 'seed'. Some
falls on good soil, others on rocky, some in thorns and others are
stolen away and never take root. If the seed is the gospel then the
question is not where it is planted but how it is planted. Clearly
the parable says not to take any regard for where but does that also
mean that we take no regard for how? I have tracked the results of
mine and my evangelism team's efforts. Thirty five percent of the
time when the gospel is presented to an individual they accept Christ
as savior (this may seem like a low number but the US national average
among organizations such as Campus Crusade, Billy Graham Evang. Assoc,
and Evangelism Explosion is 10%). That means that 65% of the time we're
sowing but the seed is stolen. I have not measured the remaining 35%
to determine what portion get choked out or scorched. The 65% heard
the same gospel as the 35% which includes a clear definition of the
only basis of ones trust for salvation, the sinfulness of man, and the
love and righteousness of God, and the atonement of Christ. In all
three accounts the sower sowed the seed which implies a careful placement.
I'm not advocating discrimination in where we sow, I'm advocating due
care in how we sow. Where I see pitfalls is in presenting a need for
salvation, an invitation to acknowledge that need and then saying,
"We don't have time to explain this to you right now but read this and
go to church." The cultists also recognize this and at every Billy
Graham Crusade there are, waiting outside, hundreds of them waiting for
the chance to steal the seed. They wait until the crowd thins and then
hit the cars that remain (higher likelihood of those who have gone
forward) with official looking literature, "FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL...." In defense of Billy Graham there are workers after the
crusade who stay until dawn tallying the professions and assigning them
to a church for follow-up. It is the church's responsibility to
follow up but they may not see the card for a week after the crusade.
The key, in my opinion, to effective evangelism is (1) presenting a
clear gospel and (2) following up IMMEDIATELY with discipleship and
assimilation. If the gospel is not presented clearly, such that the
basis of one's salvation is not clearly understood, then the need for
immediate follow up expands dramatically. Conversely, if the gospel is
presented clearly and there is no follow up then you can be sure that
you will have some who get choked out or scorched.
I hope that I've been able to clearly express what I was originally
trying to say. Sometimes my passion gets ahead of my intellect.
Kent
|
693.31 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Mar 21 1995 15:10 | 35 |
| ---
Good question. Is it the responsibility of the sower to scatter or
plant the seed? The second question that you did not ask is, "What is
the seed?" The parable that we commonly call the parable of the sower
seems to indicate an indiscriminate scattering of the 'seed'. Some
falls on good soil, others on rocky, some in thorns and others are
stolen away and never take root. If the seed is the gospel then the
question is not where it is planted but how it is planted. Clearly
the parable says not to take any regard for where but does that also
mean that we take no regard for how?
---
Before I continue with your note, I want to comment here.
How is not our business. God says that His Word will accomplish His
purpose. Scattering is indiscriminate, just as God is indiscriminate
in offering salvation to all (who will accept). He is no respector of
persons.
Now, on the personal level, we are to love our neighbor as ourselves.
This means treating everyone alike with the Love of the Lord. Yet,
we know by experience that this love is often received differently
by different people (soils) and sometimes even rejected. Yet, again,
we broadcast the seed. It is God who causes the seed to take root.
Our purposeful planting of a seed in a pot (for example) is no guarantor
of growth or life, right? We might struggle with making the environment
as pleasant as possible for the seed to germinate and grow, and there
is value to that. But understanding that we live in a world of many
soils and are called to scatter the seed, we should spread the word
and allow the Word to accomplish what He will.
Now, back to the rest of your note...
Mark
|
693.32 | How else to deal with the volume? | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Tue Mar 21 1995 15:17 | 23 |
| >In all three accounts the sower sowed the seed which implies
>a careful placement
I'll have to go back and look but I don't see this. Why would anyone
carefully place seed among thorns or on hard pathways?
> I'm not advocating discrimination in where we sow, I'm advocating due
> care in how we sow.
Perhaps were getting lost in the language, then, because I am unsure
of your meaning and disctinctions.
> The key, in my opinion, to effective evangelism is (1) presenting a
> clear gospel and (2) following up IMMEDIATELY with discipleship and
> assimilation.
BG attempts the first and logistically is targeting as much of an audience
as possible. As you know he enlists the area church's help inthe campaign.
He encourages #2 by telling people to go to church. (Get plugged in.)
When dealing with vast numbers, sometimes you have to rely upon people
taking an intitative to get plugged in.
Mark
|
693.33 | | AUSSIE::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Tue Mar 21 1995 16:03 | 18 |
| Re: Note 693.24 by ICTHUS::YUILLE
>.23� I really liked BG's simple explanation though... we have a soul, it is
>.23� eternal, and even if you estimate a ten percent probability of hell
>.23� existing, it would be a good idea to hedge your bets and chose heaven.
>James, I have to differ with you on that one. I used to think it a great
>line of reasoning. However, the 'salvation' it motivates is a merely
>intellectual decision, like taking out an insurance you can then forget
>about while you get on with life, rather than a reality based on an
>awareness of sin and guilt before a holy loving God.
Agreed. It is lame compared to the alternative arguments that one
could present. But given that he was talking to a very broad
cross-section of the planet, it was probably the most simple to
translate.
James
|
693.34 | A picture of the seed's yield, not how the planting was done | MTHALE::JOHNSON | Leslie Ann Johnson | Tue Mar 21 1995 16:09 | 28 |
| Not all seeds need to be carefully buried in the soil. Different types of
seed are sown in different ways. We broadcast grass seed on our lawns rather
than planting each individual seed, only we use one of those things you roll
along that lets the seeds out a little at time. Same way with those wildflower
meadows in a can things you can purchase now - you simply scatter the seed
in the general area you want to plant. Some of the seed may fall on your
driveway, paving stones or edges where the lawn meets the woods that is
blanketed with leaves and pineneedles. Only the seed that has fallen on the
good ground is going to grow into a yard.
Things like peas and squash we tend to plant more carefully, placing
it down into the soil and covering it over. But what Yeshua's parable was
using as an illustration was probably the planting of grain in which case the
seed was just scattered or broadcast over the field. At the edges of the
field there would be seed falling amongst the weeds or stony ground or pathways
that lay outside the cultivated field. Remember that when this parable was
told there were not the tractors and plows of today that would cultivate large
swaths with little effort.
I think you (generic) may be trying to read too much into the parable. It just
means that there will be places where your witness will produce the fruit of
changed lives sumitted to God, and there will people who will not pay any
attention to God, and there will people who catch on to the teaching as a
passing fad but won't stay with it. I don't think the parable was meant to
teach us how to witness, only that some will respond, some will seem to respond,
and some won't respond at all.
Leslie
|
693.35 | | MIMS::CASON_K | | Tue Mar 21 1995 16:46 | 101 |
| Mark,
>How is not our business. God says that His Word will accomplish His
How is what not our business? I lost something here.
>Now, on the personal level, we are to love our neighbor as ourselves.
>This means treating everyone alike with the Love of the Lord. Yet,
>we know by experience that this love is often received differently
>by different people (soils) and sometimes even rejected. Yet, again,
>we broadcast the seed. It is God who causes the seed to take root.
Is "treating everyone alike with the love of the Lord" the seed that Jesus
speaks of? Perhaps, but only in the sense that it means sharing Christ and
the finished work of calvary. If by "treating everyone alike with the love
of the Lord" you mean kindness, gentleness, charitableness, philanthropic,
then we disagree on what the seed is because we can love on people like that
until Christ returns and never tell them about what he did and they may never
know or ask. Matthew records what the seed is very clearly when he says,
"When anyone heareth the word of the kingdom..." The word of the kingdom is
the seed.
>Our purposeful planting of a seed in a pot (for example) is no guarantor
>of growth or life, right? We might struggle with making the environment
>as pleasant as possible for the seed to germinate and grow, and there
>is value to that. But understanding that we live in a world of many
>soils and are called to scatter the seed, we should spread the word
>and allow the Word to accomplish what He will.
Mark, you need to be consistent with your definitions.
>>In all three accounts the sower sowed the seed which implies
>>a careful placement
>I'll have to go back and look but I don't see this. Why would anyone
>carefully place seed among thorns or on hard pathways?
Matthew 13:3-9,18-23 Mark 4:3-8,14-20 Luke 8:5-15
>> I'm not advocating discrimination in where we sow, I'm advocating due
>> care in how we sow.
>Perhaps were getting lost in the language, then, because I am unsure
>of your meaning and disctinctions.
>BG attempts the first and logistically is targeting as much of an audience
>as possible. As you know he enlists the area church's help inthe campaign.
>He encourages #2 by telling people to go to church. (Get plugged in.)
The string was started because some people, having watched the crusade, had no
clear indication of why one should go forward. I agree that he attempts the
first and I don't want to sound like I'm Billy Graham bashing, I'm not. I'm
pointing out the hazards of pulpit evangelism of this magnitude. As to the
second point, being an interdenominational crusade the counselor is never
allowed to recommend a church 'on the field'. I agree with this. We're not
supposed to be in the business of building individual churches but building the
kingdom. But the hazard is this... Say you're Joe Pagan and you're sitting in
a crusade. Dr. Evangelist has given the message and now it's time for the
altar call. You come forward and a counselor takes down some information and
hands you a book. The book has some good information in it - a gospel of John
and a few lessons to build your faith. You pray a prayer and leave. On your
windshield is an official looking paper which instructs you to call a phone
number for additional information. Being the ignorant neophyte that you are,
you don't know that the paper is, in fact, bait laid by the local chapter of
Cults-R-Us. You may presume that it is literature left by Dr. Evangelist or
perhaps by a local church that meerly want to help you in your quest for truth.
This is reinforced when you recall the newspaper insert the Sunday before the
crusade with Dr. Evangelist's picture on it where 900 churches invited you to
check them out after the crusade. Among them was the local Bahai, UU, and
Metropolitan Church of your city. It appeared to be endorsed by Dr. Evangelist.
Who knows? But it's not. You're spiritual awareness is hightened and you're
curiosity is piqued so you take them up on their kind offer and promptly
get sucked into their merry band of heretics.
I heard a story one time about a man who went through a bank teller training.
In the training they were going to teach him how to recognize a counterfeit
bill. For five straight days, much to his surprise, he handled nothing but
genuine currency. On the sixth day was the test. The idea was to get so
familiar with the true currency that any deviation would become self evident.
We are the inquirers first contact with the truth and we need to make it clear
enough that when they hear a lie they can recognize it. You're not going to
immunize a new believer against every heresy in one sitting. I'm not that
foolish but there are some basic understandings that the new believer should
have which include what he is putting his trust in for salvation. A clear
message is necessary to establish faith. From the earlier notes that was not
apparent in the Billy Graham crusade. Immediate discipleship and assimilation
is necessary to nurture the young plant. The time delay in a crusade the size
of the one in Atlanta is at least one week. We received cards as late as a
month after the crusade. I'm not faulting Dr. Graham. The plan is there, it
just takes time to execute and the enemy is not going to cut you any slack in
that regard. Responsible evangelism is delivering a clear message and making
sure that that message is not only assented to but understood. Responsible
evangelism is making disciples not just converts.
>When dealing with vast numbers, sometimes you have to rely upon people
>taking an intitative to get plugged in.
Did Jesus say to go invite people to the banquet or to just throw open the
doors and say, "Well, the foods here. If they're hungry they'll come in and
eat."
|
693.36 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Wed Mar 22 1995 07:51 | 75 |
| >>How is not our business. God says that His Word will accomplish His
>
>How is what not our business? I lost something here.
Sorry. I should have typed "'how' is not our business."
>Is "treating everyone alike with the love of the Lord" the seed that Jesus
>speaks of? Perhaps, but only in the sense that it means sharing Christ and
>the finished work of calvary. If by "treating everyone alike with the love
>of the Lord" you mean kindness, gentleness, charitableness, philanthropic,
>then we disagree on what the seed is because we can love on people like that
>until Christ returns and never tell them about what he did and they may never
>know or ask. Matthew records what the seed is very clearly when he says,
>"When anyone heareth the word of the kingdom..." The word of the kingdom is
>the seed.
Again, my lack of clarity. I believe the seed is the Word of God, and
more specifically, the gospel. My reference here to the personal level
it the living out of the word. One can proclaim the gospel with their
lips (as we should), but we also need to proclaim the gospel with our
deeds and actions. This is all I meant.
>Mark, you need to be consistent with your definitions.
Why? Because I allow for purposeful planting in addition to scattering?
Scattering is purposeful planting (see Leslie's note), yet it is a different
type of planting than "of the peas and corn." Planting in a pot is something
that you and I do today. In talking about plants, we can discuss the
various planting methods. The planting is consistent; the methods are
not always the same.
>I'm pointing out the hazards of pulpit evangelism of this magnitude.
Does the BGC takes steps to minimize the cult hazards? Do we take steps
to minimize the cult hazards? In magnitudinous endeavors, there is always
risk and hazard. The parable of the sower shows that "the fowls of the
air devoured the first seed." Does this mean the sower should not sow?
No. But naturally we can see what we can do to minimize the bird loss:
scarecrows of some sort.
>We are the inquirers first contact with the truth and we need to make it clear
Sometimes. Remember that for many of these people it is not the first
contact with the Holy Spirit and convincing of the Truth, but a surrender
to the Lordship of Jesus Christ.
>Responsible evangelism is delivering a clear message and making
>sure that that message is not only assented to but understood. Responsible
>evangelism is making disciples not just converts.
Responsible evangelism requires a cooperative effort among the members
of the body of Christ. Knowing that some will be "devoured by the
fowls", we need to depend also upon the Holy Spirit to guide people
in the right direction as well. Responsible evangelism doesn't say,
"I'm sorry. We can only handle 1000 in discipleship classes so the rest
of you can't get saved until we can handle and process you." The Holy
Spirit must have some credit here. You see, I agree with you that we
do have the responsibility to tend to the seed that God causes to grow.
But if God causes more to grow that we can handle, do we tell God that
we won't handle it? (We can tell Him that we *cannot* handle it, which
would be true, but God is in the business of the impossible.)
>>When dealing with vast numbers, sometimes you have to rely upon people
>>taking an intitative to get plugged in.
>
>Did Jesus say to go invite people to the banquet or to just throw open the
>doors and say, "Well, the foods here. If they're hungry they'll come in and
>eat."
The banquet parable shows that when the invited people did not come,
they went out to get anyone who would. There is plenty at the banquet
table for all, even if the servants are short-handed and it means
self-service buffet. God is merciful on whom God is merciful.
Mark
|
693.37 | Parable of the Sower (or soils) | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Wed Mar 22 1995 07:55 | 50 |
| Matthew 13:
3 And he spake many things unto them in parables, saying, Behold, a sower
went forth to sow;
4 And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the way side, and the fowls came
and devoured them up:
5 Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth: and forthwith
they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth:
6 And when the sun was up, they were scorched; and because they had no
root, they withered away.
7 And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung up, and choked them:
8 But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit, some an
hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold.
Mark 4:3 Hearken; Behold, there went out a sower to sow:
4 And it came to pass, as he sowed, some fell by the way side, and the
fowls of the air came and devoured it up.
5 And some fell on stony ground, where it had not much earth; and
immediately it sprang up, because it had no depth of earth:
6 But when the sun was up, it was scorched; and because it had no root, it
withered away.
7 And some fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up, and choked it, and it
yielded no fruit.
8 And other fell on good ground, and did yield fruit that sprang up and
increased; and brought forth, some thirty, and some sixty, and some an
hundred.
Luke 8:5 A sower went out to sow his seed: and as he sowed, some fell by the
way side; and it was trodden down, and the fowls of the air devoured it.
6 And some fell upon a rock; and as soon as it was sprung up, it withered
away, because it lacked moisture.
7 And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprang up with it, and choked
it.
8 And other fell on good ground, and sprang up, and bare fruit an
hundredfold. And when he had said these things, he cried, He that hath
ears to hear, let him hear. 9 And his disciples asked him, saying, What might this parable be?
10 And he said, Unto you it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of
God: but to others in parables; that seeing they might not see, and
hearing they might not understand.
11 Now the parable is this: ***The seed is the word of God.***
12 Those by the way side are they that hear; then cometh the devil, and
taketh away the word out of their hearts, lest they should believe and be
saved.
13 They on the rock are they, which, when they hear, receive the word with
joy; and these have no root, which for a while believe, and in time of
temptation fall away.
14 And that which fell among thorns are they, which, when they have heard,
go forth, and are choked with cares and riches and pleasures of this life,
and bring no fruit to perfection.
15 But that on the good ground are they, which in an honest and good heart,
having heard the word, keep it, and bring forth fruit with patience.
|
693.38 | | MIMS::CASON_K | | Wed Mar 22 1995 09:25 | 51 |
| Mark,
My comment about consistency referred only to the apparent (to me
anyway) defining of the seed differently in two paragraphs. You have
clarified so no more problem. You're not the only one that is not being
clear here. I have my own share in the confusion.
I keep harping on clarity in sharing the gospel and I can't even make
myself clear to my brothers and sisters. Let me try this one more way
(WITHOUT THE PARABLE OF THE SOWER). When I talk about responsible
evangelism one facet of that must be a clear presentation of the
gospel. If you are a motorist trying to get to a party (he said with
vague reference to the banquet parable) and you are depending on me for
directions then I have a responsibility to give you clear directions, I
have a responsibility to affirm that you understand them, I do not have
a responsibility to make sure you follow them. I can say, "It's about
a mile and a half that way," (he said gesturing is general
southeasterly direction) or I could say, "You go south on 6th Street
for five blocks, take a left onto Huneysuckle Blvd.. Follow
Honeysuckle Blvd. for seven blocks and then turn right onto Belvedere
Place. Four blocks down on the right hand side is 4218 Belvedere and
that's where you want to be." Either set of directions might get you
there but which one has the highest likelihood of success? Suppose
also that you begin this journey to the party and as you stop for gas
another man strikes up a conversation with you and, realizing that you
are going to the party, he begins to tell you how he is going to get
there. The directions he gives are completely wrong but seem to be in
the same general direction. If I gave you the first set of
instructions, "It's about a mile and half that way," then you might be
tempted to follow this gentleman's further direction. But if I have
communicated clearly the directions to the party then you have a basis
for recognizing the error of this man's direction. You may or may not
choose to follow them anyway but you have a realistic basis of
comparison. Now, discipleship is telling you, "Hey, get in the car.
We'll go there together." The methodology can and must be varied. So,
if by 'How' you mean the methodology of evangelism should not be a concern
then I agree. The disciples were concerned about some others who were
preaching but not part of the twelve. Jesus rebuked the disciples and told
them to let them be. Paul talks about those who preach for their own
benefit and out of strife but he says as long as the gospel is
preached.... Different venues will reach different people. If by 'How'
you mean that we can be haphazard in what we say and trust the Holy Spirit
to make it right then I disagree. I trust the Holy Spirit to overcome my
human failings and inability to communicate effectively. I trust the
Holy Spirit to do the drawing and convicting because that's what the
Word says he will do. It's not my job to do His job. But, as well as
I am able I want to, and I believe we need to, communicate the gospel.
Please tell me I've made sense this time even if you don't agree.
Kent
|
693.39 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Wed Mar 22 1995 10:30 | 42 |
| In the book, Pilgrim's Progress, Christian was made aware of his burden
and wanted to shed it. Evangelist didn't tell him each facet of the
journey he would make to the Cross and then onto the Celestial City.
Evangelist pointed Christian to the horizon and said, "Do you see
that light?" "I *think* so" Christian replied. "Head for that
light and beware of those who will put you off the path."
>Either set of directions might get you there but which one has the
>highest likelihood of success?
There are many methods. Give me a roadmap (veiled reference to the Bible)
and a destination. I won't need specific street names at the outset.
> preached.... Different venues will reach different people. If by 'How'
> you mean that we can be haphazard in what we say and trust the Holy Spirit
> to make it right then I disagree.
I don't mean haphazard in what we say, but to be haphazard (yes) in
spreading as in "freely you have received; freely give." I don't think
the BGC is being haphazard in its spread of the gospel. It provides the
invitation to the party, points them in the way and cuations them on
how to receive further instruction because so many people will come
from so many origins. Imagine telling people to get to the party
when they come from different origins.
> I trust the Holy Spirit to overcome my
> human failings and inability to communicate effectively. I trust the
> Holy Spirit to do the drawing and convicting because that's what the
> Word says he will do. It's not my job to do His job. But, as well as
> I am able I want to, and I believe we need to, communicate the gospel.
Billy Graham is doing as well as he is able, also and will reach people
you and I never will. Will there be "casualties?" Yes. It is part of
the magnitude, but the gains seem to be effective enough to warrant
continued effort for this method (crusades) in conjunction and complementing
other methods.
> Please tell me I've made sense this time even if you don't agree.
I think so. Did I? :-)
Mark
|
693.40 | | ICTHUS::YUILLE | Thou God seest me | Wed Mar 22 1995 10:53 | 7 |
| � > Please tell me I've made sense this time even if you don't agree.
� I think so. Did I? :-)
Where's Glen when you want him?
;-)
&
|
693.41 | | MIMS::CASON_K | | Wed Mar 22 1995 11:02 | 42 |
| Mark,
I think we have some agreement and I don't know that it would be
productive to further break this down. Points I see of agreement are:
1) The seed is to sown (scattered) to all the world regardless of the
soil. If I can further beat this analogy to death we are more like
blind sowers in that we generally do not know the quality of the soil
until after the seed is sown. Unless you know the details of a persons
life (or the Lord gives specific discernment) you don't know where the
thorns are.
2) We are not responsible for the response.
Points of disagreement:
1) The witness is/is not responsible for the clarity and content of
the message.
2) I'd prefer to use Scripture than Pilgim's Progress. When Philip
asked the Ethiopian if he understood what he was reading he responded
how could he unless someone explains it (apparently couldn't read the
map).
As for Billy Graham, I appreciate what he does. I think it has great
value. I support it financially. I would be a counselor/supervisor
again if the opportunity arose. The question was posed that at a
specific crusade the invitation was not clear. My initial response was
that this was not like him. Generally, the invitation is very clear.
In talking to some others last night who saw the telecast, they
understood that the invitation was to be delivered by the host
nation/church. This makes sense to me. However, I think that there
could be improvement in the system if the counselor training was more
comprehensive. Right now, the training is five weeks which covers a
very basic overview of the crusade process and soteriological
fundamentals. There is no interaction between instructor and
instructee except the lecture. There is no measurement of whether or
not the prospective counselor understands or can communicate what they
do know. This is not condemnation, just observation.
Kent
|
693.42 | | MIMS::CASON_K | | Wed Mar 22 1995 11:03 | 6 |
| Andrew,
You stay out of this. :-)
Kent
|
693.43 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Wed Mar 22 1995 11:18 | 41 |
| > Points of disagreement:
We'll hammer this out with patience.
> 1) The witness is/is not responsible for the clarity and content of
> the message.
We do not disagree on this. Allow me to point out though that Jesus
preached to the crowd. Afterward, we see several instances of disciples
and others coming to Jesus for "clarification" or "deeper understanding."
Perhaps the second phrase is a bit more accurate. Certainly, we would
not accuse Jesus of being unclear. However, because of the nature
of the audience, each person received what they could and some wanted/could
receive more (and so we see Nicodemus asking what it means to be born again).
> 2) I'd prefer to use Scripture than Pilgim's Progress. When Philip
> asked the Ethiopian if he understood what he was reading he responded
> how could he unless someone explains it (apparently couldn't read the
> map).
I thought it as appropriate as the party anaolgy, Kent. The Ethiopian is
an individual and individuals respond differently to situations. Those
who cannot read the map need help. Those who can read the map (accurately)
need the map.
> I think that there could be improvement in the system
More agreement from this quarter! My dad used to say that the biggest
room in our house was the room for improvement. There is ALWAYS room
to improve our methods and I think we SHOULD seek ways to improve, and
learn from errors, such as being unclear (as we have been learning!).
>This is not condemnation, just observation.
I know this. And I am not criticizing you for making the observation,
but merely offering hypotheses around the reasons for the observation
such as time, crowd, and other factors.
:-)
Mark
|
693.44 | | MIMS::CASON_K | | Wed Mar 22 1995 11:53 | 33 |
| Great! I'm glad that we agree on more than I perceived.
On the one last note of disagreement, I beleive that Jesus spoke to the
crowd in mysteries deliberately. It was not given to them to
understand then but to the disciples. After the resurrection the time
for speaking in mysteries (deliberate unclarities not unfathomable
concepts) was over. I don't know of any accounts of the disciples
speaking cryptically (except maybe to us who do not understand the
culture and context of the statements). On the contrary, every epistle
is God clarifying the gospel. When Paul was on his missionary journeys
he did not go in, preach a couple of nights and then leave (unless of
course they were stoning him on the way). His purpose was to establish
the church and he stayed with it until he could leave behind a
functioning, vibrant fellowship of believers. How much he fed them at
a time, I don't know, but we don't always have months or years to
spend. We may only have minutes or hours and then we are out of that
person's life. Yes, I am aware that each witness may build upon the
work of another. My operating philosophy is this, and I'm going to
conclude with this:
When I share the gospel I make two assumptions; (1) it's the first time
they've ever heard the good news, and (2) it's their last opportunity
to ever hear it again.
Granted, evangelism is the call God has placed on my heart and I often
feel like, "Woe is me, if I do not preach this gospel." I admit that I
am operating from my own paradigm which includes a great sense of the
urgency of the hour to reach the lost. God bless you as you share the
gospel. I pray that God will bring abundant harvest through both of
us.
Kent
|
693.45 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Wed Mar 22 1995 12:16 | 14 |
| > On the one last note of disagreement, I beleive that Jesus spoke to the
> crowd in mysteries deliberately.
Sometimes. We do know he always used parables but they were not
always mysterious. The Pharisees understood some of his points
pointedly. And the Beatitudes are not mysterious.
However, the beauty of the Word, (and the word mystery applies),
is that it speaks to many levels of spirituality; a testament to
its being alive.
We're not so much in disagreement as you think, or do you disagree?
Mark
|