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Home > 2007 > NovemberChristianity Today, November, 2007  |   |  
THE CHRISTIAN VISION PROJECT
Getting Back on Course
It's time to return to the priority of evangelism.



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The Christian Vision Project's big question this year has been, What must we learn, and unlearn, to be agents of God's mission in the world? Many respondents have argued for increased attention to issues of global justice. Ajith Fernando, longtime Youth for Christ leader in Sri Lanka, doesn't disagree, but wonders if we're in danger of forgetting what he considers our highest mission priority. Fernando is the author of a number of books, including Jesus Driven Ministry and The Call to Joy and Pain: Embracing Suffering in Your Ministry (both Crossway), and is a corresponding editor for Christianity Today.

The Church is notorious for its course corrections. Toward the end of the 19th century, theological liberals began to emphasize the humanness of Christ. They presented Christ's life as the main focus of the gospel. Evangelicals reacted by emphasizing the atoning work of Christ (especially as explained by Paul), almost to the exclusion of the life of Christ. So liberals concentrated on good deeds and evangelicals on saving souls.

But by the middle of the 20th century, we evangelicals realized our mistake. Carl F. H. Henry's The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism in 1947 and the Lausanne Covenant of 1974 were landmark documents leading us to once again see social concern as an element of the church's mission. Some evangelicals gave greater weight than before to the Gospels and the kingdom of God, while others advocated for a right-wing political agenda. But regardless of where we fell on the political spectrum, we were encouraged to engage the culture and seek to demonstrate the Christian ethic daily.

The old "evangelism versus social action" war was over—or so I believed. In Sri Lanka, I was devoted to raising up a "post-war" generation for whom social involvement and evangelism were natural outgrowths of commitment to Christ.

Neglecting Evangelism?

But lately some disconcerting trends—more course corrections, if you will—have left me feeling uneasy. I hear evangelicals talking a lot about justice and kingdom values but not proclaiming the gospel to those of other faiths and winning them for Christ. Of course, if someone asks them about Christianity, they will explain the gospel. Thus, some people will be converted to Christ through their witness.

But that is a woefully inadequate strategy. Most of the billions of people in the world who do not know Christ will not come and ask us. We need to take the initiative to go to them.

Earlier evangelicals emphasized proclamation, while liberals emphasized presence—living out our Christianity before the people among whom we live. I fear that the old "presence versus proclamation" battle has come back to the church, or will shortly. Some evangelicals are going down that same road, though they claim to believe in proclamation evangelism.

This is why I am calling for a fresh commitment to proactive evangelism. We can't wait for people to come to us—we must urgently go to them. We must look for ways to make contact with them and use all our creativity and determination to communicate the gospel.

Yes, I praise God that evangelicals have discovered the AIDS challenge. I am only sorry that it took us so long. In biblical times, God called his people to pay special attention to sojourners, widows, orphans, and the oppressed. AIDS patients are the equivalent of such people today.

I pray that many evangelicals will devote themselves to lifelong service with such marginalized groups, including the mentally ill, the homeless, and the neglected aged. And, as Moses and Jesus said, "You always have the poor with you" (; ), indicating that we will have a responsibility to the poor as long as this world exists.





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[Reader Reviews]
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Eugene M. Wiese   Posted: November 02, 2007 12:02 PM
The Church, the company of all faithful believers, has fallen victim to the BIG MOVEMENT syndrome. If we are not carrying the message to thousands at a time, we feel, we are not doing our job; but it is in our everyday living that we carry out the task of bringing others to faith in Christ, by what we do over toward the non-Christian. If our lives truly show our love of God and of each other, that is a more persuasive witness than all the Big Movements that we can start. If our lives do not persuade our neighbors to come to Christ, we had better look at our own faith, and see where we individually are falling short.

lifestyle evangelism   Posted: November 02, 2007 7:51 PM
I disagree with social action because giving people food buys materialistic loyalty; as Jesus said they follow him for the bread he gave them instead of following Himself as the Bread of Heaven. I also disagree with "proclamation evangelism" because that is the domain of intelligentsia and bible-school know-alls. Also, it leads to intellectual conversions without leading to heartfelt lifestyle commitment to the Living-water Himself. Just like the intellectuals who aspire to being like Jesus but who are not men and women of sorrows. So, I adhere to the Great Commission which teaches that we are to go forth in the world and as we go about our daily lives we make students by our own heartfelt and loving and deep commitment to Jesus and to being salt and light. Professional Evangelists see themselves as salt and light but they are only effective when they get dirt-poor and live like the poor do, surviving purely by the grace of God and being bloody-well cheerful about it, by God's grace!

Doug   Posted: November 02, 2007 10:25 AM
Evangelicals have gone astray by getting involved in and identifying with political movements and the Republican party. This has greatly diminished our capacity to reach people who see us as more political than spiritual. Thus "if only we can get conservative judges or officials we can stop abortion" has become more of an emphasis than trying to evangelize the lost so they won't see abortion as legitimate. I'm not saying Christians should not be involved in politics or movements, but when large Christian organizations begin to align themselves with any political party it becomes self-defeating and the mission of making disciples becomes lost. I totally agree with the author. We need to get back on course.

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