From time to time Christians tell my wife and I that โLoving the poor and homeless and your neighbors is all well and good. But thatโs really not all that important in the grand scheme of things. Getting them to heaven is the important thing. You should be telling them about Jesus so they can get saved and go to heaven. Thatโs what they really need.โ
In a sense I understand where many such comments originate. I understand the sentiment and passion behind them. However, I sense that those making the comments are repeating some stock statements they have heard somewhere, probably in church.
Figuring Out How To Sell Jesus
Do you remember the heady days of the 70โs when โpersonal evangelistsโ were โsavingโ people right and left? If you read the book โEvangelism Explosionโ or attended a two hour โsoul winningโ class, you too could be a โsoul winnerโ, whatever that term was intended to mean. If you were really good at soul winning, you could โwinโ dozens of souls every day.
Unfortunately, the vast majority of folks who tried those no-fail soul winning methods discovered the methods didnโt work for them. Their friends, relatives, and neighbors would sooner have bought the carcass of a dead dog than sign on to whatever religious idea they were trying to sell.
As a result, the emphasis shifted back to the churches, where it had been before the personal evangelism craze. As good Christians it was once again our job to convince our neighbors, friends, and relatives to go to our church. Then the preacherโs responsibility was to preach the Gospel, the Word, or whatever term you might use, which would convince these folks to repent and get saved.
This plan hasnโt been going so well either. According to recent surveys, the average congregation in the USA reports approximately one person coming to faith each year. Actually the number is slightly less than one.
Many Christians have decided that neither churches nor individual Christians are doing a good job telling people about Jesus. โIf someone would only tell people, surely more would repent. Of course many wonโt, but at least theyโve had their chance. They made the choice to go to hell instead of heaven.โ
They Already Know About Jesus And Churches
I find, however, that theory is rarely correct. Most people have heard about Jesus. Most people like Jesus. Theyโve heard about โgetting converted.โ โgetting saved,โ โrepenting,โ going to heaven and so on. They think they know what all that means. Ask them. Theyโll tell you.
They also think they know everything they need to know about churches and Christians, and often what they think they know is not complimentary. Using the exact terms I have heard nonbelievers use on repeated occasions, they believe Christians are unloving, mean, angry, hateful, bigoted, homophobic, judgmental, too politically motivated, hypocritical, and more.
Who of us would want to join up with any group that met those descriptions? Would we be interested in what they believe? Would we be interested in their religion or in their God?
I have been surprised by how many nonbelievers can almost quote Ghandiโs famous comment: โI like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.โ
Love People
Keeping all these things in mind, we try to love people and build friendships and relationships with them. That is our agenda. Weโre not selling soap, insurance, or religion. We donโt hand someone a bottle of water and say weโre with such and such a church. We donโt give out tracts.
Sound un-Christian? Perhaps, but it doesnโt work out that way. For example, weโre often asked when giving food, clothes, tarps and other items to the homeless โWhere do you get this stuff?
โWe buy most of it,โ we answer.
โWho gives you the money?โ
โWe pay for it.โ
โAre you part of some church or something?โ
โWeโre followers of Jesus. Weโre not part of an organized church. We come here to spend time with you. We bring church to you. No songs or preaching. Church is spending time with you.โ
โWell, the people down here have been discussing why you do this, and we think you do it because of your compassion. Is that right?โ
โYes, weโre trying to show the love of Jesus to our friends here.โ
Weโve had variations of that conversation with the homeless, the poor, prostitutes, bikers decked out in their leathers and chains while sitting on their Hogs and others. We take Jesus to them.
Obviously not every person we come in contact with asks these kinds of questions, but we get them regularly, often several times a week.
Almost none of these folks go to church. The church has not been kind and loving to them in their opinion. In their hour of need, be it when a family member was gravely ill or died, when they lost their job, when they lost their home, or even when they ended up on the street, the church was not there for them. The church was sitting in a building singing songs and listening to Bible lessons.
Care About Me First, Then Weโll Talk
Weโre often asked, โCould I ask you something?โ
โOf course.โ
With rare exceptions the questions are about God, Jesus, the Bible, church, and so on, questions that somehow relate to their lives. Sometimes we spend twenty minutes or more answering the personโs questions, usually with others inching up close enough to hear the conversation, and sometimes joining in.
We hear โIโve always wanted to ask someone this, but didnโt know who to ask,โ followed by God and Jesus questions.
No building, no sermon, no songs, no flyers, no ads, no sound system โ none of those things. But most figure out weโre there because we care.
I remember that old adage โI donโt care what you think until I know you care about me.โ I probably misquoted it, but you get the idea. Another way of stating the same idea: We must earn the right to be heard. Our currency is caring and loving.
The church and Christians lost the right to be heard in many peoplesโ lives long ago. Instead of finding caring and loving, they found disinterest at best, meanness, hatred, anger, and judgment at worst.
Our friends, be they the homeless, the poor, our neighbors, or our gay friends, want to talk. They tell us their stories. We listen. They ask us questions. We answer their questions, talk with them, shake their hands, hug them, and in the case of the homeless give them some water and maybe an orange and a pair of socks, a tarp, or a warm coat.
Sometimes when weโre on the street and we answer their questions with โWeโre here to show the love of Jesus to the folks here in the neighborhood,โ they start crying. I donโt remember how many times this has happened, but itโs not unusual.
Iโve hugged a crying biker on his Hog in the middle of the street, a bank robber, Viet Nam, Iraq and Afghanistan veterans and more. I even hugged a crying city councilman. (He said โNever in all my life have I ever seen or even heard of such a thing. If churches did this kind of stuff I might be interested in going to church.โ)
We go. We care. We love. We share. They ask questions. We answer their questions. They listen intently because weโre answering their questions. Our agenda is love. Period. The Spirit works in that space.
โThank you for remembering us. We love you.โ
โWe love you too!โ
โWe know.โ
A Call to the Church
Dear church,
Awaken from your slumber.
Get out of your buildings with your comfortable chairs and comfortable sermons. Meet you neighbors. Meet the poor. Meet the homeless. Meet the people you despise. Meet the people youโre sure are going to hell.
Touch them. Hug them. Learn to care about them and their lives. Learn to love them. Be genuine. They can smell deception from afar.
Learn to share. Share your time. Share your material goods. Share your love.
Leave your theology, your opinions, your Bible verses at the door. Theyโve already heard those things from people who donโt care and donโt love, people who have been unloving to them time after time. Donโt share your opinions about anything. Listen to their stories, their opinions. Listen and hear.
If theyโre willing to share their stories and their lives with you be thankful. Youโre learning to care, learning to love, learning to share.
When they ask why you care, why you love them, itโs OK to tell them youโre sharing the love of Jesus. Then shut up. No Bible verses. No theology. Not a word about which church you attend. You โ You are the church. So donโt blow it by repeating what you believe about alcoholics, unmarried people living together, homosexuality, or whatever you think might apply to them. Hold your tongue.
When they ask about this Jesus, the Jesus theyโve been seeing in you, tell them about Jesus, not Paul or Leviticus. They already know about Paul and Leviticus. What they donโt know about is followers of Jesus who care about them and love them with the love of Jesus.
May they exclaim โNever in all my life have I ever seen or even heard of such a thing.โ
May they say as you part ways that day: โGoodbye. We love you.โ
And may you reply in return: โWe love you too.โ
May you hear the echo: โWe know.โ
Allow the Spirit a space in which to work, and then allow the Spirit to work. Donโt try to sign anyone up for your Bible study, your church, or your theology class. Some may eventually decide to participate in those things, if they find caring and loving. Many others will not. Theyโve been hurt too badly in the past and cannot risk being hurt again.
You are the church. For many of the people you care about and love you are the only church, the only Bible, the only theology, they know. For those, you are the hands, the arms, the feet of Jesus.
Awaken from your slumber, oh church. Awaken and walk among the people of this world. Touch them, hug them, love them. Share the love of Jesus with them, that they may see the real Jesus, God with us.
There is so much need in the world!
And YOU can help.
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