Person to Person: A
practical approach to effective
evangelism
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Personal
Evangelism: Part 6
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A Portrait
of the Christian Ambassador
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by Jim Berlucchi
Three qualities are
essential for the Christian ambassador. When
all is said and done, our success will largely
be determined by our faith, our love for God,
and our love for men and women.
Faith
The work of evangelism
depends primarily upon the action of God.
God is the One Creator and sustains the world.
God himself who intervened in human history to
save all men through the one man, Jesus
Christ. He now lives in us through the Holy
Spirit, whose power enables us to love and
serve him. We enter into these realities
through faith. Faith is the key for us. Faith
in God and reliance upon his promises and
power are essential for divine approval. We
concur with the writer of Hebrews when he
boldly declares that “without faith it is
impossible to please him” (Hebrews 11:6a).
In our evangelistic
endeavors, we, too, recognize with the
psalmist that “Unless the Lord builds the
house, those who build it labor in vain.
Unless the Lord watches over the city, the
watchman stays awake in vain” (Ps 127:1).
“Unless the Lord,” is the constant instinctive
refrain of our hearts as we realize the
immensity of our Christian commission, the
meagerness of our abilities, and the
immeasurable greatness of him who sends us
forth. With the psalmist we can say, “Some
boast of chariots, and some of horses but we
boast in the name of the Lord our God” (Psalm
20:7). In this battle we do not trust in our
bow, nor can our sword save us for “In God we
have boasted continually” (Psalm 44:8a).
As we serve the Lord in
evangelism, we labor by faith in him. Though
we gain insight and expertise through
experience, our ultimate trust is founded in
the work of his own hand with the people we
are serving. One of the foremost principles
for fruitful evangelism is to pay first
concern to what God seems to be initiating
in someone’s life and then to
cooperate with that lead. Such action is
founded primarily in faith.
It is by faith
that we decide to reach out to others. It is
by faith that we are open about our Christian
lives, that we invite friends and neighbors to
share our lives, that we pray for them and
take concern for them. By faith, too, we share
the gospel with them, realizing that God’s
word will change lives. Paul rejoiced that his
disciples in the city of Thessalonica first
responded to his words because they recognized
God’s voice. “And we also thank God constantly
for this, that when you received the word of
God which you heard from us, you accepted it
not as the word of men but as what it really
is, the word of God, which is at work in you
believers” (1 Thessalonians 2:13). Again, Paul
emphasizes that God gave the growth in
Corinth, even though Paul planted and Apollos
watered. “So neither he who plants nor he who
waters is anything, but only God who gives the
growth” (1 Corinthians 3:7).
Exercising faith for
those around us can be challenging,
particularly in light of some of the painfully
obvious obstacles that prevent their spiritual
progress. However, one of Satan’s primary
strategies to make us ineffective is to
discourage and dishearten us. He will bring to
our mind all the things that seemingly cannot
be overcome. If we focus solely on the
obstacles, our confidence will plummet. Here
is precisely where faith begins. By its very
nature faith focuses not on what is seen, but
on what is invisible. “Now faith is the
assurance of things hoped for, the
conviction of things not seen” (Hebrews
11:16). As we work with and pray for those who
haven’t fully responded to God’s call, we
should view them with the imagination of
faith. We should visualize them in our minds’
eye precisely as God would have them be, not
as they currently appear to be.
Trusting in God and
knowing that our labor is not in vain releases
God’s power and enables his servants to work
in his peace.
Love
of God
Hear, O Israel: The Lord
our God is one Lord and you shall love the
Lord your God with all your heart, and with
all your soul, and with all your might
(Deuteronomy 6:9).
And one of them, a
lawyer, asked him a question, to test him.
“Teacher, which is the great commandment in
the law?” And he said to him, “You shall love
the Lord your God with all your heart, and
with all your soul, and with all your mind.
This is the great and first commandment”
(Matthew 22:35-38).
Loving God wholly is
the ultimate Christian ideal. It is why
we were made. Our love for and pursuit of God
will fuel our desire to see all people know
and follow him.
It is no coincidence that
the great evangelists through the ages have
always demonstrated a sincere and loving
devotion to God himself. This supreme love for
Jesus Christ was the foundation for their
evangelistic success. Likewise, we must root
our evangelism within the context of our
decision to love God above everything.
Anyone who would
introduce Christ to another must first know
Christ well himself. Anyone who would teach
another to love Christ must love Christ first
himself. The better one knows and loves his
master, the more eager and competent he will
be to show others the way.
As we direct every
dimension of our lives toward loving and
serving Jesus, we will, in fact, be
increasingly eager to see his will done on
earth. We will view those around us with God’s
eternal perspective, rather than with our own
limited view. As we deepen our contact with
the living God, we will bring his wisdom,
charity, and courage to bear in our daily
situations. The more we love him, the more
we will bear his image and likeness, his
interests and strengths, his perception and
concern. We will see others with his eyes and
respond to them with his mercy.
To love the Lord with all
our hearts is not a romantic aspiration that
provokes primarily an emotional response. It
is a decisive commitment to a commandment
which should mobilize all our energies and
resources. The response is practical, as we
seek to surrender our time, money, desires,
and relationships to the will and good
pleasure of our Maker. To fulfill the
commandment requires our allegiance to the
person who stands behind it and dependence on
his grace to see it realized.
As we love God in prayer,
in the reading of his word, and in service, we
will grow in the fruit of the Spirit. A fruit
tree with deep roots, that is regularly pruned
and nourished, bears the most attractive
fruit. Likewise, just as we have received
Christ Jesus the Lord, so we should “live in
him, rooted and built up in him and
established in the faith” (Colossians 2:7).
The fruit of the Spirit amply demonstrated in
the life of a believer serves as an almost
irresistible attraction to others. People want
to be around and to be like one who embodies
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness,
goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and
self-control (see Galatians 5:22-23). Such a
person will draw others to Christ. We can
demonstrate these qualities of character only
to the degree that we are united to Christ.
Loving
Others
The commandments, “You
shall not commit adultery, you shall not kill,
you shall not steal, you shall not covet” and
any other commandment, are summed up in this
sentence, “You shall love your neighbor as
yourself!” (Romans 13:9).
For the whole law is
fulfilled in one word, “You shall love your
neighbor as yourself” (Galatians 5:14).
If you really fulfill the
royal law, according to the scripture, “You
shall love your neighbor as yourself,” you do
well (James 2:8).
The third quality of the
Christian ambassador is love for others. The
dwelling of God is with man. Human beings are
the focus of God’s intense love and concern.
God so loved us that he became like us in all
things except sin. If the life of Christ shows
us anything, it most dramatically and
refutably proves God’s love for men.
This second commandment
sums up in seven words our obligation to
others. This short phrase reflects remarkable
psychological insight in directing us to love
others as we love ourselves. All of us, by
instinct, are concerned for our own need.
Consider for a moment how thoroughly aware of
our own needs we are. When we feel fatigue,
hunger, or pain we eagerly seek relief. We are
indignant when cheated, manipulated, violated,
or rejected by others. We go to great ends to
make life work well for ourselves and to
fulfill our aspirations and desires. The
orientation to love ourselves comes quite
naturally.
If we take but a fraction
of this self-love and direct it toward the
needs of others, we move in the direction
commanded by the Lord. He wants us to become
increasingly aware of the needs of others and
to demonstrate a readiness to serve them. “The
Son of Man himself came not to be served, but
to serve, and to offer his life for the
ransom of many” (Mark 10:45). Our
charge is to carry the burdens of our
neighbors and to view their needs with genuine
concern.
Jesus cited the Good
Samaritan as an ideal example of a person who,
in his act of service to another human being,
fulfilled the second commandment.
Jesus said:
“A man was going down from Jerusalem to
Jericho, when he fell into the hands of
robbers. They stripped him of his clothes,
beat him and went away, leaving him half
dead. A priest happened to be going down
the same road, and when he saw the man, he
passed by on the other side. So, too, a
Levite, when he came to the place and saw
him, passed by on the other side. But a
Samaritan, as he traveled, came where the
man was; and when he saw him, he took pity
on him. He went to him and bandaged his
wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he
put the man on his own donkey, took him to
an inn and took care of him. The next day
he took out two silver coins and gave them
to the innkeeper. ‘Look after him,’ he
said, ‘and when I return I will reimburse
you for any extra expense you may have.’
“Which of
these three do you think was a neighbor
to the man who fell into the hands of
robbers?”
The expert
in the law replied, “The one who had
mercy on him.”
Jesus told
him, “Go and do likewise.”
(Luke
10:30-37)
A brief analysis of the parable can alert us to
loving others in our daily situations:
The Samaritan “as he
traveled, came to where the man was.” The
Samaritan was carrying out his own business
when he came upon the man in distress.
Likewise, we need not look around for all the
needy people we can find in order to fulfill
the commandment. The Lord will provide
sufficient opportunities in the course of
our routine daily life.
The parable says, “and
when he saw him.” The Samaritan perceived the
man’s awful condition. May we too perceive the
miserable condition of our fellow men and
women. May we have eyes to see those around us
who are ravaged by Satan, lying in sin, at the
mercy of their circumstances. The first step
in loving others as ourselves is simply to see
them as they truly are.
The Samaritan “took pity
on him.” His immediate response was pity. He
wasn’t repulsed by the bleeding body, as
perhaps the Levite had been. He wasn’t
indifferent as perhaps the priest was. He
responded with compassion. As we see the truly
pathetic state of many around us, our response
should be the same. It is this attitude which
will give birth to appropriate action.
The Samaritan “went to
him.” He took initiative. Unlike the priest
and Levite who sidestepped the problem, the
Samaritan faced it squarely. His pity
translated into action and involvement.
Likewise, we are called to respond to people
and reach out toward them. We should take
initiative rather than shrinking back in fear
or timidity.
He “bandaged his wounds,
pouring out oil and wine. Then he put the man
on his own donkey, took him to an inn and took
care of him.” What a beautiful description of
personal service rendered at the cost of
personal inconvenience, possessions, and time!
With his own hands, cloth, wine, and oil the
Samaritan helped the victim. The scripture
says that the Samaritan loaded his own donkey
with the bruised body. He further cared for
him at an inn. Surely our love for others will
normally carry a personal price tag.
“The next day he took out
two silver coins and gave them to the
innkeeper. ‘Look after him,’ he said, ‘and
when I return, I will reimburse you for any
extra expense you may have.’” The Samaritan
continued to serve at his personal expense and
he had enough concern to follow up by insuring
for the man’s proper care until his full
recovery. He showed a readiness to serve
beyond the immediate need. His commitment to
the man was genuine and deep, not merely
functional. It proceeded from a heart that
reflected the intention of God.
As Christian witnesses,
we, too, must have a genuine interest in the
welfare of others. This compassion and
readiness to serve people is essential for
effective evangelism. Watchman Nee, a
twentieth-century Chinese teacher and martyr,
underscored this principle in an address on
evangelism and love for men:
If you try to preach the
gospel to the unsaved, but have never been
touched by the words “God created man,” so
that you approach men as your fellows; if you
have never had more than a casual interest in
men; then you are unfit to preach Christ as “a
ransom for many.” It needs to dawn on us that
God created man in His likeness and set His
love on man because man was exceedingly
precious to Him. Unless man becomes the
object of our affection we cannot possibly
become a servant of men . . .
Brothers and sisters,
in the light of God’s passionate concern for
man, can you still regard your fellows with
indifference? We shall be worthless in His
service unless our hearts are enlarged and
our horizon is widened. We need to see the
value God has set on man; we need to see the
place of man in God’s eternal purpose; we
need to see the meaning of Christ’s
redemptive work. Without that, it is vain to
imagine that you and I can ever have a share
in the great work of God. How can anyone be
used to save souls who does not love souls?
If only this fundamental trouble of our lack
of love for men can be solved, our many
other difficulties in relation to men will
vanish. We think some people are too
ignorant and we think others are too hard,
but these problems will cease to exist when
our basic problem of lack of love for men
has been dealt with. When we cease to stand
on a pedestal and learn to take our place as
men among fellow-men, then we shall no
longer disdain any.1
As we grow in these
attributes – faith, love of God, and love of
neighbor, we will be increasingly useful to the
Lord of the harvest. Methods amount to nothing
without the Spirit and character of God as the
foundation and power of our outreach. That comes
with prayer and fellowship with the Spirit. May
God grant us all the grace to be formed in his
nature so that we may bear lasting fruit for
him.
Note 1: Watchman Nee, The
Normal
Christian Worker (Fort Washington,
Pennsylvania: Christian Literature Crusade,
1965), p. 37-38.
[This article is adapted from the
book, Person to Person: How to be
effective in evangelism, © 1984 by Jim
Berlucchi, and published by Servants Books,
Ann Arbor.]
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Jim Berlucchi is the
Executive Director at Spitzer
Center for Ethical Leadership.
He formerly served as the Executive
Director of Legatus, an
international association of
Catholic CEOs. He is the work/life
columnist for Faith
Magazine, and a published
composer and recording artist.
Sample audio
clips of his music are
available online.
He served for many years as a
community leader in The Word of God
and The Sword of the Spirit.He and
his wife Judy reside in Dexter,
Michigan, USA. They are the grateful
parents of eight children and enjoy
a steadily increasing number of
grandchildren. |
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