It got me thinking the other day: with so many churches and obviously so many people going to these churches, who is left to reach out to? I think many people around these parts (I call where I live "Christendom" or "The Holy Land") think the same thing: since there are so many churches, everyone around here must go to church. Which can obviously lead to the thought of "why do we need to reach out?"
But last week while I was driving I noticed one church that was actively trying to reach out to their neighbors...unfortunately I thought they were doing it all wrong. Now I don't have all the answers, in fact, I have very few. But when a church puts a banner up in their front lawn that says "Outreach Car Show: Come for the Food, Fun, and Fellowship" I have to disagree with their technique. Their heart is obviously in the right place (wanting others to know the love of Christ) but their strategy is just plain wrong. One cannot effectively "reach out" simply by staying within the walls of your church, placing a sign in the front lawn, and hoping people will walk through the door. To reach out, you have to actually "go out." Go out to the neighborhood, to your places of work, to the malls, movie theaters, where you go. To your friends, dare I say to your enemies too.
So if you want to effectively "not" reach out to the lost world around you, put up a sign. Here's hoping.
1 comment:
I really like this quote from a sermon "See you in Hell".
Br. James Patrick
Jesus expects us to storm down those gates and invade Hell itself. Jesus is telling us to go to Hell to be with the drug addict and the alcoholic. Go to Hell to be with the victims of abuse, and with the abusers. Go to hell and liberate the... adulterer, the homeless man, the pornographer. In hell is where we will find the single mother and the embezzler, the pimps and the pimped, the hungry, the broken, the forgotten.
We, you and I together, should be wading into hell itself and proclaiming that there is a new way to live and a new way to love, and that new way is bringing about the justice of God.
The justice of Jesus is a personal justice. It involves sacrificial, relational love.
-- Hugh Hollowell
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