Follow Jesus: See & Tell

John the Baptist: I have seen and testified that this is the Son of God. (1:34)

Andrew: The first thing Andrew did was to find his brother Simon and tell him, “We have found the Messiah” (that is, the Christ). And he brought him to Jesus. (1:41)

Philip: Philip found Nathanael and told him, “We have found the one Moses wrote about in the Law, and about whom the prophets also wrote—Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph. (1:45)

Samaritan woman: “Come, see a man who told me everything I ever did. Could this be the Messiah?” (4:29)

Man at the Pool: The man went away and told the Jewish leaders that it was Jesus who had made him well. (5:15)

Those living in darkness were seeing a great light, and their response was to tell others, and bring others to that light.

Sometimes we complicate things, you know? We make Christianity about us and ours. Our church. Our doctrine. Our style of music. Our programs. Our ministry. Our ideas and preferences and need to do things our way.

I think some of us just need to tell someone about Jesus.

Do we still believe that there is power in the gospel? That the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God? (1 Corinthians 1:18) 

Do I believe it? Do I believe that the gospel that comes forth as I share my testimony has the power of God on it? Or have I, we, become far more comfortable inviting people to church, or to an outreach event, than we are inviting them to know Jesus through our own story?

Bringing someone to church isn’t bringing them to Jesus. I will stand by that statement, as offensive as it may sound. Inviting people to come to church isn’t wrong, or a bad thing. But it isn’t the model we have been given in the scriptures. The picture we have is that people encountered the Messiah, and then went to tell someone what they had seen, often bringing them back to Jesus. And when Jesus left the earth, we see the disciples going out and doing the “greater things than these” that Jesus spoke of in John 14:12-14. And all those people who believed in the Jesus they were being told about, became the Church. Today, those who believe in the Jesus we’ve seen and tell them about, become the Church.

People were seeing and telling long before Jesus told them to go make disciples of all nations. But we’ve made that great commission our flagship scripture for so long that “missions” is now where people are told about Jesus. Why tell my neighbor about the life changing encounter I had with Jesus, when I can invite them to an outreach event at church instead. Something safe. Unintrusive. Non-threatening. I wonder. If we truly believed our theology of heaven and hell, would we care about being unintrusive? I wonder if it’s time for the Church to get intrusive. Become threatening to the schemes of the devil. Walk in the power of the Holy Spirit to be His witness as we go, everywhere we go.

We have seen. We have seen Him in our lives. So let’s be followers of Jesus and tell someone. Let’s invite them to Jesus before we invite them to church.

3 Comments

  1. David's avatar David says:

    Spot on Karla. But how I long for a church I would be able to consider taking someone to should I have a conversation that leads to a ‘take me to church with you’ request. To be honest, I can’t remember when I last had a conversation with a non-believer about Jesus. I see people every day when out walking the dog, but most encounters are brief (particularly if the dogs don’t get on).

    I have a book called Permission Evangelism by Michael Simpson that I need to read again – when to talk and when to walk.

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    1. “To be honest, I can’t remember when I last had a conversation with a non-believer about Jesus.” Same here David. I feel God stirring in me on this topic, but I also feel the trepidation that comes from now having to do something with that stirring! I’m so sorry that you are in what sounds like a spiritual desert, as far as churches go. That has to be hard.

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      1. David's avatar David says:

        It hasn’t been good Karla. Seems as if a certain denomination over here has a problem with pastors and integrity. For us it started in 2016. The church is now a shadow of its former self with mainly elderly remaining (we try not to include ourselves in that category). We’ve been back to church online since June – except for still being part of a home group, which I more church than what happens on a Sunday.

        I’ve been in person when visiting my Dad – I try and go down for the weekend when he is preaching (at 92 years old!). One problem is that we live in a very rural county – one small city surrounded by a few ‘market towns’ and many villages. You have to travel to church. I worry that church has become a Sunday club and many are losing children, teenagers, young families.

        God is stirring much in my heart too. I can’t stop thinking about the early church and how different church is now in the West. I also find myself challenged about getting to know Jesus better. I’ve been stuck at the wedding in Cana for a few weeks now!

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