By Jonathan Kindberg
I have been reading Neil Cole’s “Church 3.0.” While I find the title a
turn-off, the book itself has been inmensely challenging and thought
provoking. Each time I put it down, I find myself with this great desire
to go out and change the world. The quote that has had me thinking and
rolling over in bed at night: “The kingdom of God expands on the
shoulders of a changed life.” Neil Cole basically is saying that all you
need in order to start a movement is a changed life. But if you don’t
start at this basic level, you can’t go back.
In reflecting on my own ministry in light of this I have begun to see
how easy it is (and how I have in actuality) put the cart before the
horse. Churchplanting should begin with simple evangelism and simple
evangelism only. Instead, we start a church (gather a lot of Christians
from other churches) so that we can invite non-Christians to it and
evangelize them. This is just reshuffling the deck. It is event
organizing. Being a decent gatherer I can get usually get people in a
room, but then I have somehow expected a “service” (which from to an
outsider can easily look like a performance) to change someone. Of
course, God can use anything and he often has used a church service to
change someone’s life, but this was not Jesus’ method or Paul’s. The
Bible doesn’t command us to start churches so that we can invite people,
it commands us to evangelize, to “goodnewsize” people so that new
churches can start.
I have realized that in all honesty I haven’t done much of this
recently. Over the last two years, I have built relationships with
probably a hundred different unchurched hispanics in the Chicagoland
area and I have shown love and compassion through hours of service and
practical help. I have probably even invited (at least twice)
each of these one hundred people to my church. These are all good
things. These are all gospel acts. But they aren’t evangelism!
So this week I have gone all out. I am working on verbally sharing
the gospel every opportunity I get. This week I have done so in some way
or another 4 times in 3 days: With a janitor in the building where I
work, with one of my soccer team fellow players, over dinner with one of
the husbands of one of my congregants and with a family I recently met.
All friends of mine who I have known, but have not overtly talked about
Jesus with, though I have invited them all to church.
In all this I am praying for just one. For just one radical
commitment to faith. Just one person to rekindly my own passion and
belief in the transformative power of Christ. For just one person to
believe in Christ in the old fashioned and good old evangelical way of
confession and commitment. I am praying for just one person to say their
“yes” to Jesus outside of a church building and service, thanks in
minimal part, to my bold sharing of Jesus with them. Just one changed
life… the seed of a movement.
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