Changing the World, One Person at a Time
I have learned over the years that Evangelism is Relational. It begins with your relationship with Jesus Christ. It spreads within the circle of relationships you have with family, co-workers, neighbors, and others that the Lord has brought into your lives. Evangelism begins not with talking to others about Jesus but by talking with Jesus about others. Over 35+ years of pastoral ministry, I have learned that very few believers pray for the lost by name. A recent Lifeway study surveyed what people typically request when they pray. The study revealed that among people who pray, more people prayed to win the lottery than praying for others who have no faith. Not only do few believers pray for the salvation of others, but even fewer are sharing the gospel with others. Billy Graham once said that 90% of the Church today has never shared the gospel with someone else. I now serve full-time with Go & Tell Ministries, which seeks to equip the Church to share the gospel using practical and straightforward evangelism and discipleship tools. One of those tools is the Go & Tell Evangelism Workshop. It is a 3-hour workshop that teaches your Church to share their faith with others. I taught the Go & Tell Evangelism Workshop at an RCA Church in Detroit last month. Their group was very engaged with the seminar and was excited to begin to pray for the salvation of others. I left the weekend very encouraged with their response, and I was praying for the Lord to raise workers for the harvest field from our time together. Last week I received a text from the pastor of the Church in Detroit. He said: “Hey Jim, we have a celebration testimony from your Go & Tell Evangelism Workshop. Talina attended the workshop, and she was able to share Jesus in the way you taught. She called me and was so excited to share that her Uncle decided to repent of his sins and profess faith in Jesus. There is more to her testimony that makes it so amazing, and I think you would like to hear from her.” I was excited to hear from the pastor, and I immediately texted Talina. I think she was even more excited to share the story with me because she responded soon after. This is Talina’s testimonial: “Hi Jim. First, thank you so much for being at Grace Church that day. My Uncle Tim lost his son two weeks ago. He was missing for over a year. He had got on drugs and finally walked out one day and never heard another word. Timmy (my cousin) was 32-years-old. Two weeks ago, my Uncle got the call no parent ever wants. They found his skeletal remains in an attic in Detroit. He had been there about a year. Of course, my Aunt Jane and Tim were beyond words. I went to them and gave them my condolences. I am close to all of them. At first, it wasn’t easy being there. My Uncle didn’t believe in God. How could God do something or allow something like this to happen? He didn’t want to hear any God stuff, so I would go over and sit, often feeling like I was taking a verbal assault for believing. But that was okay. I just listened and prayed for them. We had a quiet dinner last week when his remains came home cremated. There was not much said at the dinner table that night. But my Uncle said something that gave me hope. He said that he hoped he would see Timmy again. So I have been going over every few days, just listening to them and speaking when needed (and crying when I can’t help it). This past Monday night, I went over, and my Uncle asked me to come out to the garage; he wanted to talk to me. So out I went. He asked me if I thought he’d see Timmy again. He told me that he couldn’t imagine seeing him again. I told him my beliefs in God. And how that gave me peace in anything that happens. I told him it wasn’t God who took His son and let all these terrible things happen in the world. It goes back from the fall of man and sin. So, he started crying and asked me what I was going to do. I asked if I could pray with him. Shockingly, he said yes. I held his hand, and we prayed. Afterward, I asked him: “Uncle Tim, have you ever lied?” He said, yeah. I then asked him: “Have you ever stolen anything?” He giggled and said, well yeah. I wondered, “Have you ever committed adultery (and Jesus said lust is adultery in the Sermon of the Mount)?” He said, okay, Talina, yes, yes, I’m a sinner. I said, “Okay, so if you had to stand before God and He asked if you were to go to hell or heaven, what would you say?” He started crying and said, well, I believe I have sinned against God, I would go to hell. But if I believe what you are saying, then I’d be saved. I asked him, “And why would you go to heaven?” He sat for a minute and said God sent Jesus to die for our sins. He stopped and said, GOD SENT HIS SON TO DIE FOR ME? I said exactly. He said Talina, I get it, and I believe it! It was absolutely beautiful. I never felt or seen anything like it. If I died today, I would feel complete. I’ve never witnessed someone believe in Jesus and have hope like that for the first time. The only thing I could compare it with would be watching a child be born.” After I read her text, I was rejoicing in Tim’s salvation like the angels in heaven (Luke 15:7, 10), and I was rejoicing in Talina’s walk with Jesus as she lovingly and boldly shared the gospel with her Uncle Tim. I then shared with Talina 2 Corinthians 5:17-20: “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a
Starting and finishing lines are not the same.
This past weekend, I was in the Boston area to teach the Go and Tell Evangelism Workshop and preach at Fairlawn CRC church. I flew into Logan Airport in Boston and was happy to meet my church contact, Brandon. We had a great lunch together and talked about the Boston area. As we were driving to the church, he told me that we were near the starting line of the Boston marathon and asked me if I wanted to see it. I was excited to hear this and told him I would love to visit this famous landmark. I was excited to stand on top of the starting line of the world’s oldest and best-known marathon. As I stood on the starting line, I thought of the passage in 1 Corinthians 9:24-27 “Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever. Therefore, I do not run like a man running aimlessly; I do not fight like a man beating the air. No, I beat my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others. I myself will not be disqualified for the prize.” Brandon told me that he had run in the race five times and talked about the training, hard work, and joy in completing the race. The Boston Marathon usually is in the spring on Patriots Day. Due to covid, the race was held in the fall this year. I shared that I have a friend who ran in the Boston Marathon just a week ago. I shared how proud I was of this former college student who attended my church when she ran track in college. I told him that Felicia is now a kindergarten teacher in Michigan. When she ran the Boston Marathon, I followed along with her race progress on the official website. On the Boston Marathon website, you can write an encouraging note to the runners. I was blessed to read the messages from her students and school: “We are so proud of you! You are amazing! You’re doing great! Keep going-we are watching!” After the race, Felicia shared how awesome it was to receive so much support and encouragement to spur her on to finish the race. I thought of the passage in Hebrews 12:1, which says, “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.” I was able to stand on the Boston Marathon finish line the following day. As I reflected on standing on this great race’s starting and finishing line, I realized something. One of the problems in the church today is when people profess faith in Jesus; they think that the starting line and the finish line are the same spots. When we profess faith in Jesus, that is when we start to run the race for God’s glory. I think many Christians think that their salvation date is also the finishing line. They believe they are saved, and eternal life is secure, but they neglect to run the race that is marked out for them for the glory of God. They live life in the way they want, but that’s not the race the Lord has for us. We are to live for the glory of God, and we are to run this race for Jesus. After we profess faith in Jesus, we are to live our life for the glory of God. The Boston Marathon is exactly 26 miles and 386 yards, but we do not know how long our race for Jesus will be. It might be a race of a year, five years, ten years, or fifty years but we have a race marked out before us. The Scriptures tell us that there’re going to be people who will try to discourage us from running this race. Galatians 5:7-8 says, “You were running a good race. Who cut in on you and kept you from obeying the truth? That kind of persuasion does not come from the one who calls you.” The Bible warns us that people will seek to hinder us from running the race and get us off the course that the Lord has for us. I just read a heartbreaking story about getting led off the racecourse recently at the Quad Cities Marathon in Moline, Illinois. The two marathon front-runners were about halfway to the finish line when they spotted a marathon volunteer cycling through the route. They both followed the marathon volunteer, who mistakenly led both runners off the course. They were both automatically disqualified from the race, which is also a Boston Marathon qualifier event. I want to ask you if anyone is seeking to dissuade you from running the race the Lord has marked out for you? Are people discouraging you from reading the word of God, praying for others, praying for the lost by name, sharing the love of Jesus by your deeds and words, or discouraging you from meeting with other believers? The Bible warns us that the enemy will seek to keep us from finishing this race. Over the years, I have seen many people be led off the Lord’s course laid out for them. Are you running the race the Lord has for you or has someone led you astray? I do not know how long I must run this race of life for the glory of God, but I do know that I want to finish the race well. As Felicia ran the Boston Marathon for the first time, her friends, students, and family encouraged her to
Pray for the lost by name.
https://youtu.be/mKanapgYowE One of the most important things to do before you share the gospel of Jesus Christ with others is that you need to pray for the lost by their name. You need to pray daily for the lost. You are praying for those people that God has put in your sphere of influence. You need to pray for them by their name that they would come to know Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. Trusting that the Lord will not only use you but through your prayers, He will send someone else to share the gospel with them. One of my favorite stories is how the Lord sent a believer to share the gospel with an unbeliever found in Acts 8:26-35. “Now, an angel of the Lord said to Philip, “Rise and go toward the south to the road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza.” This is a desert place. And he rose and went. And there was an Ethiopian, a eunuch, a court official of Candace, queen of the Ethiopians, who was in charge of all her treasure. He had come to Jerusalem to worship and was returning, seated in his chariot, and he was reading the prophet Isaiah. And the Spirit said to Philip, “Go over and join this chariot.” So Philip ran to him and heard him reading Isaiah the prophet and asked, “Do you understand what you are reading?” And he said, “How can I, unless someone guides me?” And he invited Philip to come up and sit with him. Now the passage of the Scripture that he was reading was this: “Like a sheep, He was led to the slaughter and like a lamb, before its shearer is silent, so he opens not his mouth. In his humiliation, justice was denied him. Who can describe his generation? For his life is taken away from the earth.” And the eunuch said to Philip, “About whom, I ask you, does the prophet say this, about himself or about someone else?” Then Philip opened his mouth and beginning with this Scripture, he told him the good news about Jesus.” When I read this text, I notice two important things: First, how God brought Phillip to share the gospel with the Ethiopian eunuch. Secondly, I wonder who the person is that gave the Ethiopian eunuch the scriptures? Who prayed for his salvation, that he would come to know Jesus Christ? It is incredible to see how God led the Ethiopian eunuch to read the exact text that talked about Jesus dying on the cross. When you pray for the lost by name, God not only will move you to share the gospel with them, but he may send someone else to answer your prayer! Two weeks ago, I met Bob at Panera Bread to visit and talk about our spiritual walks with Jesus. Bob is one of my good friends, and he is also a prayer and financial supporter for Go & Tell Ministries. As we were talking, he began to share his heartfelt compassion for his nephew. Alan is 68 years old and had received prostate cancer a year before. He was now in a nursing home under hospice care and knew he didn’t have much time to live. Bob said to me, “ Jim, you know it’s hard to share the gospel with family members. I’ve tried, and I’ve struggled, but I am praying for Alan and his salvation.” As we talked, I looked at Bob, and I asked him where Alan was living. Bob told me that he was in town, at a nursing home nearby. I looked at Bob and said, “I’ll go share with Alan. Let’s go together and visit him.” A few days later, Bob and I met Alan in his nursing home. As we talked with Alan, I introduced myself, and I asked about Alan’s background. We talked about Alan’s family, and he shared with me about his wife, Jeanne. He lovingly shared that they have been married for almost 50 years. He talked about how he worked at the same job for over 44 years and had retired five years ago. He spoke about his three sons, his grandkids, and the life he had lived. I asked him about his church background, and he shared about his church attendance. Then I asked him if I could ask him a spiritual question, and he said “yes.” I asked Alan, “If you were to stand before God, and he would ask you: Why should I let you into My heaven, what would you say?” He was taken back by that big question and said he does not know. I said, “I know it is a big question, Alan, but I know you’re facing that big question right now.” He responded by basically saying that he is a good person, tries to be good, and tried to live a good life. I said, “Alan, you know that God’s standards of goodness are far different than ours. His standard is much higher than ours, and He doesn’t grade on a curve. Can we look at God’s standards of goodness and see how well you’ve done?” He agreed, and I said: “Let’s look at God’s standards of goodness found in the ten commandments. One of those commandments is: Thou shall not lie. Have you ever lied?” He responded, yes, and I asked him, what do you call someone who lies? He replied: “A liar.” So, I explained that another command is: Thou shall not steal. Have you ever stolen? He said yes, and I asked him what you call someone who steals, and he said, “A thief.” I lovingly looked at Alan and said to him, “Alan, you just admitted to me that you’re a lying thief before a holy God, and we haven’t looked at the other commandments. If you stood before God, would you be innocent or guilty of breaking His laws?” He paused and humbly said to me that he would be found guilty