SHARING THE JESUS YOU KNOW
by Mike Chong Perkinson
So much emphasis has been placed in our evangelical culture on witnessing. On one hand, we wholeheartedly endorse it. While on the other hand, we are not sure that trying to get people saved is the same as living out the incarnation. More simply, living out how Jesus has impacted our lives – living and sharing the Jesus we know. What seems to happen is that we find it necessary to share about a Jesus we don’t know, memorizing facts, details, all in the pursuit of leading someone to Christ. As a result, we may share about a good and right Jesus, but it is a Jesus we do not know. For example, as a pastor I might be tempted to share the Jesus that Rick Warren or a Bill Hybels know. It is a correct Jesus but one that I have not experienced. As a result, I try to copy their systems and models that are predicated on the Jesus they know. The focus of such a practice leads us away from incarnating Jesus in our everyday lives. Instead, we share from knowledge rather than from a heart that has been transformed.
The man born blind (John 9) illustrates this rather dramatically for us. Jesus heals him of his blindness. The man is brought to the religious leaders after he has been healed and questioned about this Jesus that has healed him. The Pharisees ask him what he thinks of Jesus. They are of the opinion that Jesus is a sinner and not from God and should not be able to do these kinds of things. They were demanding that the blind man give glory to God and not to this sinner, Jesus. The blind man responds with all that he knows about Jesus, “Whether he is a sinner I do not know. One thing I do know, that though I was blind, now I see.” (John 9:25, ESV) The blind man later discovers Jesus’ true identity as the Son of God (John 9:35-38).
The blind man answers just as we should. He only tells of what he knows to be true, sharing what Jesus had done for him. Too many people try to answer all the questions of life: Why did God allow Katrina? Why pain and suffering? Why this? Why that? It might behoove us to answer more truthfully, “We don’t know. However, what we do know is that God is good and kind and I trust Him because of what He has done in my life. After all, I was blind and now I see.”
If we are going to be effective witnesses for our Lord then it would help us to understand just what a witness is. A witness is someone who testifies to that which he/she knows through direct knowledge or experience (I John 1:1-3; John 9:24-27). We can only testify to that what we know, have seen, heard, and experienced. Any other presentation is a second hand account. As Don Smith says, “I know God is doing well because I just had breakfast with Him.”
No one can tell your story better than you. You are the expert to the activity of God in your life. As witnesses, we are to live our lives in such a way that our way of life, speech, conduct, gives testimony to the hope within (I Peter 3:15). Our lives are lived so loudly that people ask us about the hope that is within (I Peter 3:15, ESV, “always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you”). Think about it! When was the last time someone asked you about the hope that was in your life? Nothing wrong with sharing offensively, Peter is encouraging us to do precisely that, sharing offensively by our lives, then with our words.
What the enemy of our souls would love is to have the people of God no longer share their stories of how Jesus has saved and healed them. The book of Revelation makes it quite clear that the early saints overcame the evil one by these things:
And they have conquered him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, for they loved not their lives even unto death. (Revelation 12:11, ESV)
One of the reasons we have lost our way or our impact in our culture today is that we have moved away from incarnating the Gospel to peddling the gospel. Instead of coming from our lives it tends to come from without, creating a religious system more than a spiritual life that continues to be transformed into the Image of His Son as it communes with the Father daily.
All of this to say, share the Jesus that you know. Tell people about the Jesus that saved you and continues to save you. You may not know the answers of life but you know Him who is THE ANSWER to life. Share the answer you know.
We can only give away that which we have received. Maybe this is precisely the problem – the joy of our salvation has been replaced by a system of propositional realities that systematize and organize our Jesus and domesticate our all powerful God. Systems and propositional realities do not bring the kind of comfort that comes by way of the presence and love of God. The apostle Paul writes, “who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.” (2 Corinthians 1:4, ESV)
And so, we invite you to live out the Jesus you know. Give away the comfort that you have received. Tell your family, friends, neighbors, co-workers what God has saved you from. Be a witness to what and Who you know. Tell your story!!!
Tell me what you think. Let’s talk about it.
Thursday, September 14, 2006
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2 comments:
Peter:
I am so glad to hear that you are pressing on with the heart and lived expression of Jesus, giving life that you have received and incarnating the very real presence of our incredible Savior.
May the Lord expand your ministry and influence as the Jesus in you touches those in your care and beyond.
Keep on loving Him, loving people and making disciples as you live life -- may the revolution continue as God moves His bride, the Church, to be all it was meant to be.
Dear Mike, this is Daniel Jordan. I attended the Crossing last year. I appreciate you and believe you love the Lord and have the best of intentions, but I want to reflect biblically on your post. You say that you are “not sure that trying to get people saved is the same as living out the incarnation.”
But aren’t you setting up a false dichotomy between, “being incarnational” and “trying to get people saved”
Let me ask you: How much Jesus do you have to experience before you can share Him?
Jesus said to preach the gospel to every creature. Mark 16:15
And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations and then the end will come. Matt 24:14
The gospel means “Good News”. Evangelism literally means “good news telling” If it’s not told, its not biblical evangelism. It was through the preaching of the truth that Paul established the church.
I am not ashamed of the gospel because it is the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes: first for the Jew then for the Gentile. Rom 1:16
The power is in the message itself--not in what a winsome or powerful a Christian you might be. In fact, Paul demonstrated plenty of power in Acts 14 , but instead of people coming to Christ, it had the effect of causing the onlookers to worship him and Barnabus!. It was only through an EXPLANATION of the TRUTH that they were persuaded.
The Gospel is a precise message, and we do not do people favors if we hedge on the message in the name of “relationship” or “experience”. There are many more people that need to hear the gospel than we have time to build relationship with.
For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures 4 that he was buried that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures5 and that he appeared to Peter and then to the Twelve.
After sharing the story of the blind man in John 9 , you say “The blind man answers just as we should. He only tells of what he knows to be true, sharing what Jesus had done for him.”
Surely, living in the dispensation of the Holy Spirit, we can answer beyond our own personal experience. The apostles did not experience the prophets, yet they argued persuasively from them. Paul told Timothy to preach the Word, not just what he had experienced. This exaltation of “experience” feeds into the spirit of this age that is skeptical of truth.
Again I am not decrying experience, just saying that it is not a biblical necessity. I am not knocking relationship and believe that we need to build relationship wherever appropriate.
It is a matter of content and context. We should always strive to have the context of our sharing be loving, genuine, and powerful. Yet content is king, because as Paul and Barnabus found out in Acts 14,,genuineness and power, without the facts of the gospel, do not and cannot save. Which is why you always see Paul persuading from the scriptures. (Acts 18:4)
Our gospel is reasonable, not just experiential.
You use rhetoric like “peddling the gospel” to describe the gospel shared without an experiential context. This is not really helpful. Is sensitively sharing the gospel facts with a stranger now to be seen as “peddling”? Then, thank God for the “peddler” in my life who first introduced me to Christ on the streets of New York.
How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? 15 And how can they preach unless they are sent? As it is written, "How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news!" Rom 10:14
I understand the need for personal incarnation. Let’s not sell short the power our message is seeking to incarnate the gospel.
Love and Blessings!
Daniel
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