Archive for the ‘evangelism’ Category

Older elders and younger people building the kingdom

November 13, 2011

I read the following in a newsletter from a mission agency working in country in mainland Europe

“… believers [need] to be engaged in building the Kingdom. A high proportion of the country’s evangelical pastors are due to retire over the next few years. Planting a church should strike a chord with the younger generation’s desire to do something for God and allow them to participate directly in building the Lord’s community”

The writer seems to imply that a high proportion of evangelical pastors being due to retire soon is a bad thing. Perhaps it is a good thing, since it shows that most “elders” are indeed older men – should that not be the norm?

There is also the implication that the normal desire to do something for God should lead to church planting and that this allows people to “participate directly” in building the Lord’s community. Does that leave the rest of us doing things only part-time for God and building the Lord’s community? Rather, we should be encouraged in how we can be involved in God’s work in our everyday lives – speaking and living for Him as we rub shoulders with people at work, at home and elsewhere. “And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him” (Col 3:17). The gospel spreads through ordinary people living and speaking extraordinarily – doesn’t it?

Long-term evangelistic fruit

September 22, 2011

It was a not a perfect book – but it was good. Four friends and I had read it together over the summer. I was challenged to pray more for my wife and my friends could no doubt talk about the good things they also got from it. Weaknesses? The chapter on ‘ministry’ mentioned evagelism where “four of whom made professions of faith…three of whom continue following Christ today, two in the ministry!”. Why my unease? (more…)

Living the gospel

September 29, 2010

I read the following in the report from a beach mission:

The team was super; they worked incredibly hard, serving one another with joyful hearts. The fellowship experienced on team is a glimpse of heaven and the closest I have experienced to the early church of living the gospel. We met each day for devotions where we looked at God’s word for  ourselves, we sang and prayed together before a short briefing for the day set everyone on their way into an action-packed mission day. (more…)

Headed for hell

July 16, 2010

Many of our friends, family members and colleagues are headed for hell – and all that that means. Should this keep us awake at night? How can we get on with ordinary life in the light of this truth? Section 9 of this suggests answers.

Career and gospel

April 3, 2010

I have just re-read ‘Good News to the Poor’ and in chapter seven (‘Good News to the Rich’) the author, Tim Chester, says

Some people make life choices by deciding first on the lifestyle to be adopted, then they choose a job to fund that lifestyle, then a home nearby before finally choosing a local church… [an alternative is to] see ourselves first and foremost as gospel ministers and members of gospel communities

Tim Chester then goes on to say how our gifts and passions – in the context of needs - would shape our ministry (eg, sharing the gospel with elderly people, helping the homeless  – “It could be any one of a hundred things”). We would then decide where we needed to live and how much we needed to earn to fund this ministry. Only then would we decided what  job we were to do and where we were to live.

Is this practical? Is this Biblical? It flies in the face of most of what I have done for most of my life – but that does not mean it is wrong. (more…)

John Stott: professional Christian (1)

February 23, 2010

My younger brother lent me Timothy Dudley Smith’s two-volume biography of John Stott – an ordained Anglican minister and well-known in circles in which he is well-known. I airily pronounced that I was little interested in biographies of professional Christians. But my brother responded that the biography was also inter-woven with the history of evangelicalism in the 20th century – a topic which does intrigue me.

Here are some observations: (more…)

De-professionalizing gospel ministry

February 22, 2010

Ah. music to my ears. Mrs MAWAMFC and I and four friends had come to a conference on Total Church and Steve Timmis, one of the speakers, said that one of his main aims was to “de-professionalize gospel ministry”. Given the sub-head of this blog you can see why I loved this. (more…)

What the Church of England had right

August 29, 2009

“We are convinced that England will never be converted until the laity use the opportunities daily afforded by their various professions, crafts and occupations.” Towards the Conversion of England, 1945

Click here for how this inspired work at the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity.

We can’t help evangelising

August 7, 2009

The preacher said that the Younger Son of Luke 15 never tired of telling people what a great Dad he had. I wonder if people ever got tired of hearing the story – or if they thought “Why does this young man think I am interested?”


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