For a long time, I did not know why I felt so passionately about sharing the good news. Thankfully God revealed this when I attended Ozark Christian College as a Freshman in the Spring of 2013. Dr. Gary Zustiak, in Old Testament History of all things, brought our attention to a passage in 2 Kings 7. Samaria was under siege and all seemed hopeless. The people were so hungry, and munched away on their own children. In their distress, the Lord God had mercy on the people and drove the Syrians away. And the story picks up in 2 Kings 7:8-9 when four lepers decided in desperation to give themselves up to the Syrian encampment. Only thing was, it was abandoned and full of loot...
8 And when these lepers came to the edge of the camp, they went into a tent and ate and drank, and they carried off silver and gold and clothing and went and hid them. Then they came back and entered another tent and carried off things from it and went and hid them.At first glance, this story has nothing to do with telling everyone about Jesus, but an interesting parallel can be drawn. As Christians, we have been saved from death, from eternal death in hell. However, many around us are in the dark and do not realize that they can be saved! It can truly be said that these days are days of good news, but we remain silent. We are not doing right to leave the city in the dark!
9 Then they said to one another, “We are not doing right. This day is a day of good news. If we are silent and wait until the morning light, punishment will overtake us. Now therefore come; let us go and tell the king's household.” English Standard Version (ESV)
Not long after Zustiak's lesson from 2 Kings, I was reminded of a verse James 4:17 which says, "Anyone then, who knows the good he ought to do and doesn't do it, sins (NIV 84)." So not only are we not doing right, we are sinning when we refuse to spread the Gospel. When God's word revealed this to me, I was shocked. And the passion inside of me is now more than a passion, it is a necessity.
I am afraid that even these verses and a whole research paper that I did on the fear of evangelism has not completely got my body moving. Every day, it is a constant battle between mind and soul, and the majority of the time I have kept my lips zipped shut. And this is why I am starting this blog. Something needs to motivate me toward action. With further research and the support of an online community, and most importantly a God who backs up the project, I believe that my life will change. And I hope and pray that you will change as well.
So here is my question for all of you. Do you also have the same struggle? If so, are you making any headway in overcoming your fear of spreading the good news? If not, how do you go about spreading God's good news? I would love to hear back from every one of you, just leave a post below.
Ryan: You have my support! :-). I believe that in spite of your reticence you will make a great professor of the faith. Your willingness to think of the other guy, is a good thing, not a bad one. Your concern that he not be somehow hurt by your question can actually lead the charge if you let it.
ReplyDeleteMike
Thank you so much for your encouraging comment. I keep thinking, why not seize each and every opportunity? I have no excuses, only two different lists of choices I have made. Right now I could probably count on my fingers the times I have opened my mouth. The other contains miles of times that I remained silent. However, I am confident that God can change that.
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