The Mission Society provides global missionary support through missionary recruiting, missionary training and equipping church leaders and others to lead international and short-term mission trips. Based in Norcross, GA, The Mission Society was originally formed to support Methodist missionaries, but now works with a variety of Wesleyan denominations offering missionary training, missionary seminars, missionary workshops and church leadership training throughout the United States and around the world.
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Uncomplicating evangelism

Three reasons why sharing your faith shouldn't be so scary

On many weekends, our church ministry team members have the privilege and blessing of being in a local church delivering our Global Outreach Weekend. These churches have invited us in to either help ignite a passion for missions among the membership, or to assist in taking their existing missions program to a higher level. In the context of these weekends, the issue of evangelism has been increasingly raised. Most often, the comments go something like this, “I know we are supposed to be engaged in missions, but this evangelism thing makes me feel so inadequate.” One church called before one weekend event and said, “The people here are asking if this Global Outreach Weekend is for missions or evangelism. What should I tell them?” Upon further questioning, we found that if it were a missions event, the church people would come; if evangelism, they would not. The truth is that evangelism (witnessing, faith sharing, etc.) scares the socks off many Christians. I think there are several fundamental reasons for that. When it comes to evangelism, Christians generally think:

1. Closure – not process
While we want to see all people come to the place where they invite Christ into their lives, the truth is that rarely does one do that after having only one encounter with the Gospel. For most, it is a series of “God encounters” that lead to a decision point. Sometimes we may be the first to introduce the reality of the risen Lord to someone. Other times we may be one of many along the continuum. Every once in a while, God may have us present at the time a person is ready for a decision, and we may get to pray with them as they accept Christ. However, no one encounter is more important than the other. All contribute to the end result. Jesus simply calls us to be His witnesses.

2. Knowledge – not experience
Many Christians think they have to have extraordinary knowledge of the Bible, so they can recall specific verses as they share their faith. Others feel as if they have to know some formula or have a specific tool such as the Four Spiritual Laws or Evangelism Explosion to be an effective witness. While these certainly can be used, in truth, if you have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, you have the most powerful tool available. You have your story, and nobody knows and can tell your story like you. At the very heart of witnessing is relationship. When you combine relationships with non-believers and your personal experiences with Jesus Christ, you are witnessing. You are engaged in, dare I say it, evangelism.

3. Special – not common
Sometimes Christians are reluctant to talk about their experience because their story lacks the spectacular. We marvel at those Damascus Road stories where people were saved from a life of debauchery or from pending doom. The fact is that God is at work in the ordinary, the routine, and the everyday things in life. If we would be more observant, we would see His presence at work, and that would form a basis for relating the love of Christ to a variety of people in a variety of situations.

Let’s go back to the question we mentioned earlier, “The people here are asking if this Global Outreach Weekend event is for missions or evangelism. What should I tell them?” The answer is, both. The Mission Society practices and promotes holistic ministry. That is, we minister to the whole person, and we would never think of separating compassion ministries from evangelism. We are fond of saying that through compassion and mercy ministries we build bridges to people. However, once the bridge is built, we always want to carry the Gospel over it. I like the way Larry Williams, our Global Resource Team director and Agrimissions specialist, puts it. He says, “First the bread, then the Bread of Life.”

We are the Church. As such, we have been called to be His witnesses in our community, our nation, and our world (Acts 1:8). To attempt to do missions without the Gospel element is to reduce the Church to a service club. That is not something to which God has called us.

Stan Self is The Mission Society’s director of Church Ministry.

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In This Issue

Reality Check
Our nation's pundits are telling only half the truth
Russia's young survivors
A look behind the orphanage doors and inside the orphan's heart
The beauty of the impossible call
A couple's coming to their "wit's end" marks the beginning of a magnificent journey
Jesus, Lord of all
To embrace Christ's Lordship, do Muslims, Hindus, and people of other religious beliefs have to wholly abandon their culture? Methodist missionary E. Stanley Jones lends a hand.
Churches, let the little children come to you
A doable plan for congregations to care for orphans
Uncomplicating evangelism
Three reasons why sharing your faith shouldn't be so scary
The elusive bottom line
The struggle of every missionary
News: Ghana's Methodist Church mobilizes to send missionaries
The second International Missions Conference in this African Church culminated in plans to launch a first-ever Ghanaian missionary sending agency
News: Election fury
Mission Society missionaries in Kenya report on recent atrocities
The wrong question
Your calling: It's not 'If?' but 'How?'
Personnel Needs
Feeling called to cross-cultural ministry?