In various
places, and with varying degrees of success, Christadelphians
undertake elaborate, advertised, public gospel proclamation.
Often it seems that the degree of success —
humanly speaking — leaves us disappointed. But,
oddly enough, the one method of gospel proclamation
that outdoes all others in efficiency, which costs
exactly nothing, and which can be done by absolutely
everyone, suffers serious neglect. Personal witness
for the faith, which built up the struggling Christadelphian
body at a remarkable rate in the last quarter of the
last century, is now often passed over for the “flashier”
methods.
Yet this
is how the gospel was first proclaimed:
“One
of the two which.... followed him, was Andrew, Simon
Peter’s brother. He first findeth his own brother
Simon, and saith unto him, We have found the Messiah”
(John 1:39-41).
And then
a few verses further on:
“Philip
findeth Nathaniel, and saith unto him, We have found....”
(v. 45).
He hadn’t
really. Jesus had found him instead. But the two processes
are not to be separated. The disciple’s job
is to go and “find” his fellow. But in
his “looking” it is really God who does
the “finding”!
Paul, the
master preacher, had none of the modern devices of
publicity that we lean on so heavily. His familiar
simple recipe was:
“Faith
cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God”
(Rom. 10:17).
To be sure,
we say, a man cannot receive the gospel without a
Bible. Right enough! But that is not what Paul is
saying there. His phrase means: “Hearing comes
by the spoken word about God”, as the next verse
plainly confirms. “How shall they hear without
a preacher?” (v. 14) They can hear without an
advertisement or other clever modern eye-catcher.
But not without a preacher. Sooner or later, someone
has to do the talking, and the sooner the better.
Nor is
there any picking and choosing as to who shall hear
our good news. Who are we to discriminate and decide
before for God who is and who is not fit for His blessing?
“In
the morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold
not thy hand: for thou knowest not whether shall prosper,
whether this or that, or whether they both shall be
alike good” (Eccl. 11:6).
And because
“thou knowest not”, thou shalt not make
contemptuous pre-judgment as to which mode of preaching
is the best. Agreed, some methods seem relatively
less efficient than others, to the extent of appearing
more wasteful of time or energy or resources. But
none is to be despised, for at one time or another
the grace of God has made use of them all.
So why
don’t we bring our personal witness for the
faith into daily life more than we do? Reason number
one is: “Behold, I cannot speak; for I am a
child” (Jer. 1:6). There is a paralyzing feeling
of incompetence. “I am not quick-witted enough
to cope with the arguments people may fire at me,
not sufficiently well-acquainted with the Bible to
be able to go to the very passage that is needed,
etc., etc.”
Such a
poor attitude should be set right once and for all.
With the more conscientious, it springs out of a pathetic
line of reasoning of this kind: “The Truth must
never be let down. I am not competent to start talking
on the subject. Therefore I’d better not say
anything.”
With many
this way of thinking is quite probably an excuse,
more than a reason.
There is
a very simple way of coping with one’s inadequacy
in discussion, and that is to admit it: “I can’t
answer your argument right now, but I’m sure
it can be answered. Next time I see you, I shall have
an answer for you.” None except Christadelphians
think it shameful not to be able to come up with a
full explanation of every problem passage. Others
are highly unlikely to think the worse of us for admitting
ignorance on one point or another. Besides, that “next
time I see you” leaves the door wide open for
a point-blank return to the topic some time later!
So that is a positive gain.
On the
road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza, Philip
did not wait for his new acquaintance to ask him:
“Do you happen to know what Isaiah 53 is all
about?” Instead, he was ready with his own question:
“Can you make sense of what you are reading?”
This is a fairly obvious example of what we are talking
about. But every day a number of opportunities may
come along, to speak the right word at the right time.
We must learn to be alert to such openings. “Be
instant, in season, out of season,” exhorts
Paul. Be ready, on the alert, even in the most unlikely
circumstances, for you never know!
Jesus sat
by the well at Sychar, weary, hungry and thirsty.
But when his disciples returned with the food they
had bought, they found him alert and vigorous and
not interested in food at all. While they were away
he had a better meal than they could provide —
the spiritual strengthening of an open, inquiring
mind with which to hold communion.
He sent
out his disciples in pairs, and they set off, one
may be sure, nervous and ill at ease at the unaccustomed
responsibility he had laid on them. But the men who
returned were hardly to be recognized as the same
persons. They bubbled over with excitement and pleasure.
What was it that had made the difference?