Friday, February 7, 2014

Removing Obstacles to the Gospel

If anyone would know how difficult it is to carry out the missionary enterprise, it would be the Apostle Paul. His efforts met resistance from the onset. This is not to say that he didn't have success at persuading people of their need for Jesus, but it wasn’t an easy sell. More than once he suffered persecution for doing nothing more than preaching the “good news.” Obviously, not everyone found the news good.

People are not readily disposed to being told that, unless they take by faith the gift of Christ’s righteousness, they are destined for hell. Their current belief system, confidence in their own goodness, or any one, or combination, of other such hindrances, make hearing the message about Jesus’ saving work a seemingly insurmountable mountain.

Paul appears to have understood this and made every effort to remove unnecessary impediments to having the gospel heard. We need to take our cue from him. The two most important factors (of many important factors) are the preconceptions of the one we are trying to persuade and our love for that one. The other’s preconceptions will cause them to hear what you are saying through the filter of their current understanding of things. As the gospel presents a very different view of existence than what we naturally come to, if you do not try to anticipate what the other might already be thinking, your words are not likely to be heard. Also, if we have not love for the other, the kind of love that motivated Paul, and caused Jesus to grieve when he looked upon the crowd and saw them as sheep without a shepherd, he or she will detect our disdain. A sure ear stopper!

The missionary enterprise is not an easy one. It must be said, therefore, that it requires the power of the Holy Spirit to attend our bearing witness, certainly in the heart and mind of the other, but also in our own. For, by the grace of God, “we have been approved by God to be entrusted with the gospel, so we speak, not to please man, but to please God who tests our hearts” (1 Thessalonians 2:4).