Tuesday, August 25, 2009

a contagious heart

We begin week two of our “Developing a Contagious Faith” series with a story, Lee Strobel. Lee tells of a Christian friend of his named John, who had taken a routine business trip to Atlanta. John said, “Everything was going according to schedule, and I decided I would stop into this little sunglass shop at the airport and buy some sunglasses. So I went into the shop, picked out some sunglasses, paid for them, and started to walk out of the store.
“As I was walking out the door, I had one of those nudgings from God. I just knew I had to turn around, go back into the store, and talk to the cashier about Jesus. I just knew I had to do it. But,” he said, “how could I? On what basis could I get into a spiritual conversation with this stranger? I’d already made the purchase. So I ended up using the worst transition into a spiritual conversation in the history of evangelism.”
Lee said, “Uh-oh. What happened?”
John replied: “I went back into the store and picked up some sunglasses to try to buy some time while I figured out what to say. Finally, I said to the guy, ‘Sunglasses, huh?’”
“He was reading a newspaper at the cashier’s station. He looked at me and said, ‘Yeah.’”
“I looked through the sunglasses and said, ‘Uh, isn’t it great that, uh, these sunglasses can, like, um, protect our eyes from the brightness of the flames of the sun?’ He said, ‘Yeah.’ Then I blurted out: ‘Well, wouldn’t it be great if we had something that could protect us from the flames of hell?’ As soon as the words came out of my mouth, I couldn’t believe I said that!
“The guy set down his newspaper, looked me in the eye, and said, ‘You know, I’ve been thinking a lot about that lately.’ I was shocked! I said, ‘You have?’ He said, ‘Yeah.’”
So John started talking to him about Jesus. He talked about forgiveness and grace and eternal life, and tears started flowing down this cashier’s face. Then in a prayer of repentance and faith, right there at the counter of the sunglass shop, that man received Jesus Christ as the forgiver of his sins and the leader of his life.
John said to Lee, “It was unbelievable! The day started out so routine, so normal, so average. Who would have known that it would end up in such an adventure?”
That’s what the Christian life is like when you develop a contagious heart—that is, when you yearn to let God use you to reach others, and you make yourself available to talk about Jesus as opportunities arise and as the Holy Spirit prompts you.
This is the antidote for a dry Christian life. When you want to share your faith, that’s when your prayer life is at its most fervent, because you’re praying to God for help; it’s when your Bible study becomes its most intense, because you’re not just looking for abstract theological truths, but for wisdom that can help your seeking friend find Christ; it’s when your dependence on God is at its greatest, because you know that apart from the work of the Holy Spirit, there’s no way you can bring about the conversion of anybody.
This is the real adventure of the Christian life. So how can we live on the edge, ready to share your faith? One way is to think about how Jesus would reach out to others if he physically lived in our house, or went to our school, or worked in our office, or laboured on our job site. What could we learn from the Master?
Because Jesus would look at his neighbours differently than we often do. He’d see them through heaven’s eyes. And if we could see them even a bit like Jesus does, that would not only change us, but the result would radically impact our neighbours.
That’s what Dr. Jack Sternberg found. He was a cancer physician from a conservative Jewish background and was very far from God. Listen to what he wrote about an incident that occurred when practicing medicine in Arkansas:
“One woman with terminal breast cancer was in her early thirties, with a husband and young child whom she would soon leave widowed and motherless. Yet she seemed more concerned about my spiritual welfare—in my knowing Jesus—than the fact that she was dying. She saw my lostness, my separation from God, as a greater tragedy than her own illness. She trusted this Jesus, then and for eternity. God had allowed illnesses to ravage her, yet she still loved, worshiped, and followed him. She seemed confident about her future and genuinely concerned about mine. That overwhelmed me.”
Dr. Sternberg ended up giving his life to Jesus—and it makes me wonder, “What if I cared that much about my neighbour?” Because, you see, Jesus cares that much for you and me. He saw our lostness, our separation from God, as a greater tragedy than his own brutal execution on the cross. That’s why he was willing to die for us so we can be reconciled with God.
So how would Jesus reach out if he physically lived in my house? I think there are many lessons he would teach us. The first might be this: before talking to his neighbours about their heavenly Father, Jesus would talk to his heavenly Father about his neighbours.
In other words, he would pray, just as many of you prayed for your friends this week. This kind of prayer was the pattern throughout Jesus’ life—before he embarked on anything of importance, he spent time in prayer. In fact, John Stott has pointed out, Jesus’ prayers for lost people continued right up until his final breaths on the cross. As the imperfect tense of the Greek indicates, Jesus didn’t say it once, but he kept repeating it over and over again, all through the torture of the crucifixion: “Father forgive them; Father, forgive them; Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.”
And if Jesus lived in my house, I know he’d pray consistently, specifically, and fervently for his lost neighbours. The question is, “Are we?” Or have we given up?
Lee Strobel tells about getting ready to baptize a woman during a service at Willow Creek. He said, “Have you received Jesus as your forgiver and leader?” She smiled and said, “Oh, yes, I have!” Then Lee did something unusual: he turned to her husband, who had accompanied her, and asked, “Have you received Jesus?” He looked at Lee for a moment and then suddenly burst into tears, weeping and sobbing. He replied, “No, I haven’t, but I want to right now!” So right there, in front of thousands of people, this man repented of his sin and received Christ—and then Lee baptized the two of them together!
Afterward, a woman came running up to Lee in tears, threw her arms around him, and kept sobbing, “Nine years! Nine years! Nine years!”
Lee said, “Who are you? And what do you mean ‘nine years?’”
She said, “That’s my brother who you just led to Christ and baptized. I’ve been praying for that man for nine long years—and I’ve not seen one hint of spiritual interest all that time. But look what God did today!”
Lee said his first thought was, “There’s a woman who’s glad she didn’t stop praying in Year Eight.” But the truth is that some of you have been praying longer than that for a lost friend or neighbour or family member or colleague. And you’ve given up hope. That woman would say to you: Don’t stop. Keep lifting up that person to the Lord.
Now, I’ll admit I don’t know everything about prayer. And I understand that people have free will and can decide for themselves if they want to follow Christ. But I’m just naïve enough to believe James when he says that the prayers of the righteous are powerful and effective. I like the way Mother Teresa put it: “When I pray, coincidences happen; and when I stop, they don’t.”
Let me ask you this: who have you stopped praying for? Who did you once pray for regularly, but lately you’ve given up on? Bring that person’s face to mind—and then use this as an impetus to bring them back before the Lord in prayer.
Second, if Jesus lived in my house, I believe he would assure his neighbours that his door would always be open for questions.
I can’t think of a single incident in the Bible where Jesus put anyone down, who came to him with a sincere question. In fact, Gary Habermas has used the story of John the Baptist to make this point. If anyone knew the identity of Jesus as being the unique Son of God, it was John the Baptist. John the Baptist once pointed to John and said, “Look, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” John baptized Jesus and saw the heavens open up and heard the voice of the Father say of Jesus: “You are my son, with whom I am well-pleased.” John once said boldly and firmly about Jesus: “I have seen and testify that this is the Son of God.”
But then John gets thrown in jail. What happens when tough times come? Often doubts begin to creep in. So John sends a couple of his disciples to track down Jesus and ask him if he’s the One they were expecting or are they to look for someone else?
So how does Jesus react? Does he criticize John for daring to raise a question? No, he tells the followers of John in Luke 7:22: “Go back and report to John what you have seen and heard: The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor.” In other words, go back and tell John about the evidence you’ve seen with your own eyes that convinces you of my deity.
Now, does this poison how Jesus looks at John? On the contrary, it was after that incident when Jesus declared: “I tell you, among those born of women there is no one greater than John!”
It’s okay to ask questions. And we, as Christians, need to be ready to help our friends get answers. We’re commanded in 1 Peter 3:15: “Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect.”
Because when we’re not ready to help our friends with their questions, what happens? We shy away. Yet so often people have just a few questions that are sticking points in their spiritual journey.
The good news is that we have truth on our side! Willow Creek, the church I mentioned earlier, staged a major debate and allowed the spokesman for American Atheists, Inc. to have their best debater stand on their platform and proclaim the case for atheism. Then they had a Christian present the case for Christ, and the two debated each other—and then the church just let people make up their own minds.
They actually had people vote. Of the people who came into the auditorium that evening as atheists, agnostics, skeptics, or members of another world religion, after having heard the case for Christ and the case for atheism, more than eight out of ten said the case for Christianity was stronger. Forty-seven people walked in as avowed skeptics, heard both sides, and walked out as followers of Jesus! And not one person became an atheist!
Friends, we really do have truth on our side! I’m not saying we need to get into debates with people; instead, it’s much more fruitful to get into discussions, where we listen to their viewpoint and gently and respectfully present ours. Lee Strobel has written several books to help you learn the evidence for Christianity—such as The Case for Christ, The Case for Faith, and The Case for a Creator—and his web site, www.LeeStrobel.com, has hundreds of free video clips in which experts discuss answers to the toughest objections to Christianity. We need to be prepared so we don’t become an obstacle to people’s faith, but we become a conduit for the truth of God.
Third, if Jesus lived in my house, he wouldn’t just share his faith; he’d show his faith.
In other words, talk is cheap. Jesus didn’t just say he loved the world; he showed his love by being servant. He served the blind by restoring their sight, he served the lepers by restoring their health, and in the ultimate act of servanthood, he gave his life to pay for the sins of the world.
And when we serve others as Jesus would, when we sacrifice for others as Jesus did, and as we put our love into action in tangible ways as Jesus modelled, this opens otherwise impervious hearts to the gospel.
Jesus said in Matthew 5:16 (TNIV): “Let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.” The Greek word for “good” doesn’t merely refer to good as opposed to bad; it also has the connotation of “winsome” and “attractive.”
So Jesus is telling us: “Serve other people in a winsome and attractive way that causes their eyes to look heavenward toward the God who motivates you, against the grain of our me-first culture, to sacrificially serve them.”
When we serve the very real and tangible needs of other people, inevitably this opens up opportunities to talk to them about their very real spiritual needs that they may not even realize they have. People are more open to the gospel when we show them that we care rather than just say that we care.
So what if we all sort of got our “compassion radars” scanning our neighbourhoods, schools, and workplaces—searching for ways we can reach out to help people in need? Who knows how many spiritual conversations would result?
Finally, if Jesus lived in my house, he would be authentic in the way he related to his neighbours.
Jesus wouldn’t just communicate the gospel; he would live it out in front of his neighbours. There would be a consistency between his beliefs and his behaviour, and between his character and his creed. And the question is: is the same true of us?
If you’re a Christian, then you know your neighbours have their “hypocrisy radar” scanning your lives 24/7. What are they looking for? False piety. A holier-than-thou attitude. Hypocrisy. Saying one thing but doing another. What are they picking up on their radar screens? Because here’s the truth: few things can repel a person from God as efficiently as an inauthentic Christian.
That was especially true for Maggie. She was poisoned against God and the church because of the abuse she suffered as a child at the hands of people who claimed to be Christians. In fact, here’s how she put it in a letter
“The Christianity I grew up with was so confusing to me even as a child. People said one thing but did another. They appeared very spiritual in public but were abusive in private. What they said and what they did never fit. There was such a discrepancy. I came to hate Christianity and did not want to be associated with a church.”
Can you see how people repelled her from Christ? Well, something very interesting happened to Maggie. She read about the debate they had at the church between a Christian and an atheist. She came in order to see the Christian humiliated. But, instead, the Christian won. So she started asking questions. Finally, she got into a small group made up of two Christian leaders and several spiritual seekers who were investigating the faith. Listen to what Maggie wrote as she described what she needed the most from the Christians who led her group:
“When I came to the church and to my small group, I needed gentleness. I needed to be able to ask any question. I needed to have my questions taken seriously. I needed to be treated with respect and validated. Most of all”—now, listen carefully to this—“I needed to see people whose actions match what they say. I am not looking for perfect, but I am looking for real. ‘Integrity’ is the word that comes to mind. I need to hear real people talk about real life and I need to know if God is—or can be—a part of real life. Does he care about the wounds I have? Does he care I need a place to live? Can I ever be a whole, healthy person? I have asked questions like these. And I have not been laughed at or ignored or invalidated. I have not been pushed or pressured in any way.”
She added: “I don’t understand the caring I’ve received. I don’t understand that the leaders don’t seem afraid of questions. They don’t say things like, ‘You just have to have faith’or ‘You need to pray more.’ They don’t seem to be afraid to tell who they are. They just seem genuine.”
Then Maggie ended her letter with a poem that she wrote for the two Christians who led her group. But I think this is relevant to every Christian everywhere—because it’s the heart’s cry of someone far from God. What do seekers want and need from us? How can we best reach out to them? Listen to the words of this young nurse. Imagine she’s saying them directly to you:

Do you know,
do you understand
that you represent Jesus to me?
Do you know,
do you understand
that when you treat me with gentleness,
it raises the question in my mind
that maybe he is gentle, too.
Maybe he isn’t someone
who laughs when I am hurt.
Do you know,
do you understand
that when you listen to my questions
and you don’t laugh,
that I think, “What if Jesus is interested in me too?”
Do you know,
do you understand
that when I hear you talk honestly
about arguments and conflict and scars from your past
that I think, “Maybe I am just a regular person
instead of a bad, no-good little girl who deserves abuse.”
If you care, then I think maybe he cares —
and then there’s this flame of hope that burns inside of me
and for a while I am afraid to breathe
because it might go out.
Do you know,
do you understand
that your words are his words?
That your face is his face
to someone like me?
Please—be who you say you are!
Please, God, don’t let this be another trick.
Please let this be real this time. Please.
Do you know,
do you understand
that you represent Jesus to me?

It can be devastating when you first hear that poem, because you think of all the times you have been too busy or too preoccupied to be like Jesus would be if he lived in your neighbourhood. It’s convicting.
Lee was both convicted and encouraged when he read Maggie’s powerful poem, and wanted to read it to the entire church to encourage them to reach out to others. So he called Maggie and asked for her permission.
She said, “Oh, Lee, haven’t you heard?”
His heart sunk. He thought, “Oh, no! What inauthentic Christian has she encountered that has repelled her again from God?”
With discouragement in his voice he said, “No, Maggie, I haven’t heard. What happened?”
“No, Lee, it’s a good thing,” she replied cheerfully. “On Tuesday night, I gave my life to Christ!”
Lee couldn’t believe it! He was thrilled. He said, “Maggie, I’m just curious: what got you across the line of faith? What facts did you learn that convinced you this was true?”
She said, “It wasn’t like that with me.”
“Then what was it?” Lee said.
She seemed almost embarrassed. She sort of shrugged over the phone and said, “Well, I just met a whole bunch of people who were like Jesus to me.”
What a lesson for all of us! You know what? We don’t have to have doctorates in theology to reach out to the Maggies in our lives. We just need to have contagious hearts. Ones that long to be used, and that lead us to do what we can do for others—what Jesus would do. We can pray for people who are far from God. We can dialog with our seeking friends and help point them toward the truth of Christ. We can find ways to serve others so that the door might be opened to spiritual conversations. And we can simply be authentic about who we are—sinners saved by grace.
Before we end, let me urge you to be sure to be here next week, as we take the next step in “Developing a Contagious Faith,” and talk about how we can build and deepen what we’ll call “Contagious Relationships” with the Maggies of our lives. And be thinking and praying about who you’ll invite for the final weekend of this series, on [date]. It’ll be an outreach weekend designed especially for the friends and family you’ll bring.
If you are a Maggie, and you’re here figuring out what to think of Jesus, the Bible, or the Christian faith, I want you to know we’re so glad you’re here, and we’d enjoy meeting you and talking about any questions you might want to discuss after the service. Just go to [give details about where they can meet you or your team].
Finally, be sure to attend your small group [or Sunday school class] this week, where you’ll be in session two of the Becoming a Contagious Christian course. You’re going to be really encouraged as you discover ways that you can share your faith that fit your personality and your natural communication style. It’ll be liberating to you!
Let’s close in prayer …

Thursday, August 20, 2009

developing a contagious faith

Without pretending to be a mind reader, I can make an educated guess as to what many of you are thinking about as we embark on this series entitled “Developing a Contagious Faith.”
I know some of you are delighted; you’ve been waiting for a series like this for years! You are eager to improve your personal evangelism skills and to learn some new approaches. Others of you are rather neutral on this subject, because you really don’t know what to expect. You are open to the Word of God and you’ve decided to approach this series with a teachable spirit and a willing heart. But school is, as they say, still out for you. And still others of you are dreading this. Just hearing the “E word” strikes terror in your heart! You have feelings of fear and pressure and maybe some guilt in the mix too.
Friends, I want to assure you at the beginning—especially those of you who might feel a bit fearful—that I have no desire to increase the burden or to fuel any pressure that you might already be feeling. But I am confident you can grow and learn how to become more effective in this area, despite what experiences you may have had. I have high hopes for what God might do in every one of our lives as a result of focusing today and during the next five weeks on this series.
But today I want to start by asking the why question. What motivation is there for putting energy into communicating our faith? I want to jump right in and offer you four reasons why every one of us should be motivated and stay motivated in his or her own mission of spreading the faith to the people around us.
The first motivation for developing a contagious faith is what I call the “Stockpile Factor.”
This comes from an Old Testament passage in the book of 2 Kings 6:24 (NASB), where it says: “Now it came about after this that [the King of Syria] gathered his army and went up and besieged Samaria. There was a great famine in Samaria; and … they besieged it until a donkey’s head was sold for eighty shekels of silver and a fourth of a [pint] of dove’s dung for five shekels of silver.”
You heard it right! We’re talking about a serious shortage of food in this city. Inflation is skyrocketing and there is very little food left because the enemy king has laid siege to the city. It’s so bad that verse 28 indicates that some of the people were actually resorting to cannibalism. This was clearly a disastrous situation in Samaria.
Now, look down at 2 Kings 7:3–5: “There were four leprous men at the entrance of the gate; and they said to one another, ‘Why do we sit here until we die? If we say, “We will enter the city,” then the famine is in the city and we will die there; and if we sit here, we die also. Now therefore come, and let us go over to the camp of the [Syrians]. If they spare us, we will live; and if they kill us, we will but die.’ They arose at twilight to go to the camp of the [Syrians]; when they came to the outskirts of the camp of the [Syrians], behold, there was no one there.”
Second Kings 7:6–8 says: “For the Lord had caused the army of the [Syrians] to hear a sound of chariots and a sound of horses, even the sound of a great army, so that they said to one another, ‘Behold, the king of Israel has hired against us the kings of the Hittites and the kings of the Egyptians to come upon us.’ Therefore, they arose and fled in the twilight, and left their tents and their horses and their donkeys, even the camp just as it was, and fled for their life. When these lepers came to the outskirts of the camp, they entered one tent and ate and drank, and carried from there silver and gold and clothes, and went and hid them; and they returned and entered another tent and carried them from there also, and went and hid them.”
Do you see what’s going on here? These lepers had figured out that they were as good as dead. So they went out to the enemy camp, gambling everything in the hope of getting some food—but it was deserted because God had made noises in the night that confused the enemy into thinking they were being attacked! And so these lepers stumbled onto all of this provision in the middle of the enemy camp! They are half-starved to death and they go into the first tent and they find more food than they can put into their mouths! So they go into the next tent, and they find food and provisions there. And the next tent, food and provisions there! They are just stockpiling all of these provisions. They can’t believe it. It was like winning the lottery!
Then they said one to another in 2 Kings 7:9: “We are not doing right. This day is a day of good news, but here we are keeping silent; if we wait until morning light, punishment will overtake us. Now therefore come, let us go and tell the king’s household.” So, in verse 10 they went back to the gatekeepers of the city and announced that there was no one in the tents, that the Syrian army has deserted the camp, and all of the people came out and found food and provision—and the city was saved.
But what I want you to focus in on is that it was the abundance of the provision that led them to go back and make the announcement to the people back in the city. It was the fact that the provision was so large, the miracle so exciting, the news so wonderful, that they just said, “We’re not doing the right thing by keeping silent about this miracle: let’s go tell the others the good news.” Silence was an unthinkable crime at that point.
While running errands one day, a pastor ran into a man from his church who wanted to share something with him. The minute the guy began talking, he started tearing up. He said, “God did something in my life over Good Friday and Easter that was so rich, so cleansing, and so powerful in my life. I feel like I am just about ready to explode!” What he was really saying was that we have a spiritual stockpile that is so huge and so wonderful, it can hardly be contained.
When mature believers have a proper understanding of their spiritual inheritance, they can’t stop themselves from spilling over into other people’s lives! One of the most effective ways to develop a contagious faith is to stay mindful of the extent of our inheritance in Christ, the wonder of the character of the God we worship, and the magnitude of the miracle of transformation that has taken strangers and converted them into sons and daughters of God.
When you are living with an awareness of the size of your spiritual stockpile, you will find yourself saying to people outside of God’s family: “I don’t know about you, but I know that as for me and my house, because of who God is, because of how wonderful he is and because of how benevolently he treats me, I’m going to serve the Lord!” That has a way of finding a responsive chord in the lives of unbelievers.
More and more these days, I’m finding it difficult to watch people go from bar to bar, toy to toy, fun-fix to fun-fix, lover to lover, fad to fad, trying and crashing and then trying again and crashing again! I feel like telling every “scavenger” I meet out there: “Stop picking at rubbish piles! There’s a stockpile in the kingdom of God. There’s plenty of God’s grace, there’s plenty of his favour, there’s plenty of his love. It’s spilling over in my life and you could probably live happily on just the overflow, if you’d open up your life!”
Now, a word here: understand that Satan will do everything in his power to convince spiritual princes and princesses that they are, in fact, spiritual paupers. You see, if believers walk around unaware of the scope of their stockpile, unappreciative of the wonder and the glory of our God, and unaware of the extent to which they have been transformed and received a new identity in Christ as sons and daughters and saints and heirs and stewards—then they will walk around like fellow scavengers, instead of walking as spiritual prince and princesses should walk.
That’s why it’s so important to worship God regularly, worship him privately, and worship him publicly. List his attributes and thank him each day. Say, “Again this morning, I am living in a miraculous relationship with the God of this universe! I’m a child! I’m a saint! I’m an heir! I’m blessed! I’m saved, I’m adopted, I’m being sanctified, I have a spiritual gift. I have a wonderful future, I have heaven waiting for me!”
Every time I go over my stockpile I find myself living filled to the brim with this sense of spiritual wonder. And when we live this way, it makes for very easy evangelistic opportunities, because we just operate with the mindset that says, “How can you not want to be in a wonderful relationship with a God like the One we serve?”
So, please, friends, one of the best forms of motivation is for you to have that sense of wonder and gratitude about your spiritual stockpile. Protect it, work on it, preserve it at all cost.
The second motivation for developing a contagious faith is “the honour of being an agent of God!”
This comes out of the passage in Acts 1:8 where Jesus said, just before his ascension: “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria and to the ends of the earth.”
We, as God’s witnesses, as God’s ambassadors, or agents, are “PLAN A” in his strategy for reaching the world. He chooses to use individuals like us as spokespeople for him. And God doesn’t even have a “PLAN B”! I’m “PLAN A” and you are “PLAN A.” In the middle of your uniqueness, your personality, your gifts, talents, abilities, and your particular arena of responsibility, you are called to be God’s spokesman, God’s spokeswoman, to speak on behalf of him to lost people who matter to him, but who need one of his agents out there in the marketplace.
I find that to be very motivating because someday I want to stand before the Lord and hear him say to me: “Well done, good and faithful agent of mine! You know, I carved out a group of people who desperately needed you. They needed your life, they needed your personality, they needed your witness, they needed your age factor, they needed your sense of humour, they needed you. I needed you, I filled you with my Holy Spirit, I commissioned you to be my spokesperson and you were a faithful one. Well done, good and faithful agent.”
I find it enormously motivating to go through my day, trying to figure out what serendipitous kind of occasion is going to surface in which I can be used by God to be a spokesperson for his kingdom. I try to pray every day: “Lord, I don’t know where you are going to put me today, what opportunities you are going to orchestrate for me to tell somebody that they matter, but, God, I want to be a part of it. I really do! And, if you don’t have any big plans to use—you know, Agent double-0-whatever my number is—today, that’s okay. I’m not pressing you, but I’d sure love to be used.”
And keep in mind; Jesus said that you are going to receive power. You’re not on your own. The Holy Spirit is going to make you an effective witness. I have found in my own life that when I’m humble, pure, in tune with the Holy Spirit, and living with a spirit of anticipation about being an effective agent, I have many opportunities to be used! But when I am a little off-base spiritually, not so tuned in to the Holy Spirit, when I am grinding out my own agenda and saying, “Lord, I’m sorry, I’m really not that concerned about what you have for me today, because I’m overwhelmed by what I have to get done,” then I find myself going for weeks at a time without having any opportunities to be a spokesperson.
So, my effectiveness as an agent is almost always tied to my being surrendered to the work of the Holy Spirit in my life—which I try to handle each day as I pray. I say, “Lord, I want to be an effective agent for you today.” I believe it’s an honour to be an agent. I’m motivated to think that God would entrust his great message to somebody like me for the purpose of spreading it to others!
The third motivation for developing a contagious faith is “the reality of hell.”
You know, I hate thinking and talking about this, but the plain truth is that hell is real and real people go there for eternity!
The reality of hell was a major theme in the ministry of Jesus. We read time after time how Jesus was saddened and sometimes would even break down and weep over various evangelistic situations. Jesus grieved when the rich young ruler refused to receive spiritual wealth in exchange for temporal wealth, because Jesus knew he was walking down the road that led to hell. Jesus wept over the city of Jerusalem, because he said he could see them as sheep wandering around without a Shepherd, and that it was only a matter of time before they would go off the cliffs of eternity into the abyss forever.
Jesus confronted the Pharisees, the scribes, the tax collectors, and the politicians.
He confronted anybody and everybody with the basic message that unless you turn and put your faith in him you would die in your sins and face condemnation in eternity.
Why did Jesus teach from early morning until late at night? Why did he keep the pace he did? Why did he endure the ridicule that he did? Because Jesus knew that people were on the road that was headed toward hell. It broke his heart and it motivated him to spread his gospel of grace.
Let’s turn for a moment to Luke 16:19, which begins the well-known parable of the rich man, who lived in splendour, and a poor man named Lazarus, who was starving to death at his gate. They both died. The poor man Lazarus had received God’s forgiveness and went to heaven. The rich man ended up in hell.
In verses 23–26 we read: “In hell, where he was in torment, [the rich man] looked up and saw Abraham far away, with Lazarus by his side. So he called to him, ‘Father Abraham, have pity on me and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, for I am in agony in this fire.’ But Abraham replied, ‘Son, remember that in your lifetime you received your good things, while Lazarus received bad things, but now he is comforted here and you are in agony. And besides all this, between us and you a great chasm has been fixed, so that those who want to go from here to you cannot, nor can anyone cross over from there to us.’”
So then, forgetting about his own agony, the rich man went on to his second request—see verse 27—and said something very, very difficult to hear and to think about: “Then I beg you … send Lazarus to my father’s house, for I have five brothers. Let him warn them, so that they will not also come to this place of torment.”
Five minutes in hell turned an uncaring unbeliever like the rich man into a committed evangelist! He was motivated. He was saying, “Somebody has to warn my brothers that hell is real and real people go there!” And in a way, the rich man is crying out to us today: “People of st John’s and king’s park Church: make a like an organist, Pull out all of the stops! Do whatever has to be done to keep others from winding up here with me!”
I’ve studied this passage so many times, and every time it cuts me a little deeper. Christianity is the greatest way to live and the only way to die! it’s an honour to be an agent entrusted with the gospel message. It’s fun to be used by God to spread it.
But, frankly, part of the reason I’m as serious about serving God as I am, is because I believe in hell. I really do! I believe in it consciously and I believe in it emotionally. I’m not neurotic about it, but I’ll tell you what: it impacts me every day!
The apostle Paul said in his first letter to the Corinthian church: “If there is no resurrection, if there is no heaven or hell, then let’s eat, drink, and be merry. If there’s no judgment, why do I risk my life? Why do I take beatings? Why do I suffer in prison? Why do I do all of this?”
You know, if there’s no resurrection, no heaven and hell, let’s all just party! If there’s no hell, then why all the backbreaking service around this church? Why all the energy output? Why all the giving, the praying, the pleading with people? Why all the work? Why all the blood, sweat, and tears? Why the multiple christmas/Easter services? WHY? I mean, if there’s no hell, then let’s just pack it up!
The stakes really are sky high, aren’t they? What we’re doing in this church, all the time and especially now in this series, is serious, serious business. We all need to develop attitudes that say, “Look, whatever it takes to help people understand how to get off the road that leads to hell and get on the road that leads to heaven! Whatever it takes is worth it!”
I need to tell you, I get so upset when I feel a complacency setting in about reaching people in and through this church! It’s so easy to slip into patterns of complacency—to think that the church exists only for us. To forget that we really are on a mission, that Jesus told us to go into this, our world, and make disciples. To become preoccupied with the question of what the church has done for me lately.
Sometimes you see people who used to be aggressive, spine-tingling, prayerful, personal evangelists looking for lost people to share Christ with, now complaining about the noise of the children, the modern hymns or that someone is sitting in their seat. And a few years ago, these very same people would come with friends on their arm, sit and pray all the way through the service, and go out to lunch afterwards, and just look for an opening through which they could lovingly share the gospel. What’s happening in some of our hearts?
May none of us ever forget the stakes are sky high! We’re not playing games! We’re not playing church! We’re not just going through the motions of religion! It’s eternal life and eternal death that hang in the balance. And, again, I’m not suggesting we get all neurotic about this. I’m just suggesting that we don’t put it on the back burner and become complacent about matters that Jesus said and showed were the highest priority.
I think of Jesus in utter agony on the cross, in his darkest hour, feeling the full weight of the sins of the world on his shoulders, and a common criminal asks him if there is room in heaven for just one more sinner. And Jesus, wracked by physical as well as spiritual and psychological pain, is so moved to be able to snatch one more sinner from the claws of hell, he says, “Sure there’s room. Today you’ll be with me in paradise!” He was just thrilled to snatch one more sinner off the road to hell.
The reality of hell should move all of us to do whatever it takes to develop a contagious faith.
I’ll close with one final motivator: it’s “the reward of leading somebody to Christ.”
I guess all I want to say about this point is this: just one time, have one person look you in the eye and say, “You know, I was heading down the road to hell, and God used you to bring me to himself.” Just have somebody say, “You know, I needed an ambassador! I needed a credible witness. I needed someone whose life matched his message, and you were that person for me! Thank you! Thanks for being contagious with your faith. Thanks for reaching out to me. Thanks for helping to answer my questions. Thanks for putting up with my cynicism. Thanks for putting up with my colourful language! Thanks for loving me at a time in my life when I wasn’t very lovable. Jesus saved me, but you led me to the cross where I found his grace!”
Just have one person say to you, “Thank you. Thanks for all of eternity!” Hear that once and watch what happens. You will be a motivated agent; you will feel a kind of spiritual adrenalin flowing in and through you; you will walk away saying, “I may have just experienced the greatest spiritual high I’ll ever have in this life!”
Why develop a contagious faith? Why share Christ with others? Why?
Because our relationship with Christ is the best thing to come in this life, friends. He’s it. He’s wonderful and he blesses us. We have a stockpile. Live in the awareness of that and let it spill over to others. Why share our faith? Because we’ve been honoured and empowered by God to participate in this grand endeavour to bring people to faith. It’s an honour to be an agent. Why share our faith? Because hell is real! It is. Why share our faith? Because, in finally having the privilege of helping lead someone to Christ we’ll experience a fresh awareness of the fact that the angels in heaven are rejoicing and Christ is rejoicing. And what an incredible moment to have somebody say, “Thanks for all eternity for leading me to the cross!” It’s the greatest contribution you could ever make to someone’s life and the most fulfilling and rewarding thing you’ll ever do!
So I trust you’re all in!
One more thing before we pray and end the service: Five weeks from today, in what will be the sixth and final week of this series, I’m going to give a message called “God’s Contagious Love,” designed to communicate the core truths about how a person can understand and receive God’s forgiveness and leadership through a relationship with Christ. This is a service we’ll all want to bring friends and family to. So would you start now by praying and asking God to use you to reach out to and bring at least one other person? And would you also be praying that God would prepare and lead us together to make that weekend one of the most powerful, highest impact weekends that we’ve ever had as a church? Let’s ask God to be here working in a powerful way—and then let’s invite our friends, believing it’s gonna really happen!
Oh, and by the way, if you’re one of those friends and you’re already here today, we’re really glad you joined us. I hope you see that we really care about you and your spiritual journey and want to do all we can to help you consider and sort out what it means to know and follow Christ. house groups, alpha, prayer after the service
This series will continue next week with a message called, “A Contagious Heart.” Now let’s close in prayer …