As a retired
former secondary school deputy head, I am always delighted to see some of my
former pupils successfully plying their trade as independent plumbers, electricians,
joiners and painters and I wish them every success in their enterprises.
As time passes,
these craftsmen and women become well known characters in the community, not
least because they carry out work repairing and improving the homes of ordinary
people.
They are however
an enigma when it comes to matters of faith. At 11am every Sunday morning very
few if any of this group are to be found in church. Indeed in my town more
adults attend primary age football games on a Sunday morning than attend all of
the church services put together. Why is it that white van men and women seem
to be out of reach of the church while remaining in plain sight in Scotland’s
towns and cities?
There is no easy
answer to this question. However we can glean some clues from the Bible.
Writing to the Christians in Rome, the Apostle Paul urged fellow believers to
share the good news about Jesus when he said: “How then will they call on him
in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they
have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching?”
The clear
implication here is that it is the duty of Christians to ‘preach’ Christ to non
believers. In our 21st century culture, we should perhaps read
‘communicating’ rather than ‘preaching’ as most people today do not like being
preached at.
Sadly the body of born again believers, whose
job it is communicate Christ, is largely middle class and the ‘church’
lifestyle is pretty disconnected from the rest of contemporary society. In an
article in ‘Christianity Today’, Caryn Rivadeneira ‘cuts to the chase’ when she
says: “Lots of folks talk about how
churches and the Christians who fill them up are known more for what we're
against than what we're for and more about whom we'd like to keep out than
who'd we want to invite in, or at least keep in.”
Herein lies the
challenge for the church.......how can the body of Christ in 21st
century Scotland begin to connect with all of society in a meaningful,
culturally relevant manner....... What practical steps need to be taken?
If evangelism is
the core business of churches which describe themselves as evangelical, here
are some starter questions which church members/leaders should be asking of
themselves and their fellowships.
·
Is commitment to evangelism a key
priority for all your church’s leaders and office bearers?
·
Does your church have a strategy
for evangelising its own locality?
·
Was the whole church involved in
developing the strategy?
·
Is this strategy regularly
discussed, promoted and reviewed?
·
Has your church identified and
commissioned evangelism leaders? (Pastor can’t do everything)
·
Does your church train, support
and motivate all members to share their faith at a personal level?
·
Does your church have a prayer
strategy to support its evangelism effort?
·
Does your church have a
support/teaching programme for new converts in expectation that locals will come
to Christ?
·
Does your church celebrate when
someone comes to Christ?
It is really
heartening that some born again Christians in Scotland do say that they want to
share the love of Jesus with people in their locality. The real challenge is:
do they love Jesus enough to move from words to deeds?
People deemed to
be ‘out of reach’ can be reached when there is heart commitment, proper planning
and real servant leadership by local Christians.
White van men and
women need Jesus just as much as everyone else. The key question is, does the
church want them?
Any answer other
than an unequivocal ‘YES’ is a betrayal of the Gospel.
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