1.
BECAUSE IT’S NOT REALLY BEING EVANGELIZED!
In
Jerusalem the Christians were accused of saturating the city with the
Gospel. The authorities complained to the apostles, “Ye have filled
Jerusalem with your doctrine” (read Acts 5:17-32). This should be the
goal of people who were commanded by Jesus to “preach the gospel to every
creature” (Mark 16:15). The fact is that most cities that are labeled by
the church as Gospel-hardened are really Gospel-ignorant. In Ephesus
(read the story in Acts 19 and 20), the Gospel was spread “publicly, and from
house to house” so that “all that dwelt in [the province of] Asia heard the
word of the Lord Jesus” in two years’ time. What about your town?
Has every home received an evangelistic visit? Has the city been covered
with Gospel literature? How many evangelistic meetings were held in the
last year to which believers were actively urging the attendance of
unbelievers? Is witnessing a part of the pastor’s life, and does his
example, encouragement, and instruction help his members be soul winners?
The truth is that very little spreading of the Gospel is going on in your town,
and there is something you can do about it. It isn’t the town that’s so
hard; the problem is that the church is not really evangelistic.
2.
BECAUSE YOU ARE NOT REALLY FILLED WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT.
Our
witness to Christ is supposed to be given in the power of the Spirit of
God. The Lord Jesus made this clear before He went back to Heaven.
Remember that on the Mount of Olives, His parting words were,
“Ye
shall receive power after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall be
witnesses unto Me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and unto
the uttermost part of the earth.”
(Acts
1:8)
In
the book of Luke we are told that we must preach “repentance and remission of
sins…among all nations,” but that in order to accomplish this mission, we must
be “endued with power from on high,” referring to the power of the Spirit (read
Luke 24:46-49). Speaking of spreading the Gospel, Simon Peter testified,
“We are witnesses of these things; and so is also the Holy Ghost, whom God hath
given to them that obey Him” (Acts 5:32). The night before He died on the
cross, the Lord introduced His disciples to the new ministry of the Holy Spirit
which would begin on the day of Pentecost. He would live within them, and
would act as their “Comforter” (Helper), giving them the power to obey the
commands of Christ (see John 14:15-17). He explained His role in our witnessing
with these words:
“When
the Comforter is come, Whom I will send unto you from the Father, even the
Spirit of truth, which proceedeth from the Father, He shall testify of Me: and
ye also shall bear witness, because ye have been with Me…It is expedient for
you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you [believers];
but if I depart, I will send Him unto you. And when He is come, He will
reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment…”
(John
15:26-27 and 16:7-8)
The
Holy Spirit in believers will reprove the world and prepare lost men to receive
the Savior. With the Holy Spirit testifying to the truth as we witness
for Jesus, sinners will see their need of Jesus. In this way we can
expect to bear fruit (read again John 15:1-8).
Now
every Christian got the Spirit when He believed in Jesus (Ephesians 1:13), but
every believer, thus sealed with the Holy Spirit, is commanded to be filled
with the Spirit (Ephesians 5:18-21). That happens when we surrender to
obey the Lord Jesus, absolutely (see John 14:15-17 and 15:14). Before
fulfilling our horizontal duty to evangelize, we must address the vertical
issues we have with God, just as the first Christians in the days before
Pentecost. When we line up with Jesus and are thus abiding in Him we are
filled with the Spirit for evangelism and our witness is made effective.
Spirit-filled
Christians have power in their witness, and men will saved (look at Acts
4:31-33). God gave us all we need to meet the needs of our town (Luke
11:1-13), but the town seems hard when sins and rebellion keep us from being
filled with the Spirit. We need to get on our knees before we start
blaming our town. That’s what the first Christians did.
3.
BECAUSE SATANIC INFLUENCES ARE NOT BEING RESISTED.
Often
we fail to fix spiritual problems because we fail to take into account activity
in the invisible world. We are told,
“Stand
against the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and
blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the
darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.
Wherefore take unto you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to
withstand in the evil day…”
(Ephesians
6:11-13)
Not
every spiritual problem is caused by Satan, but there is a hierarchy of evil
powers active in this world that must be confronted by anyone who wants to do
any good for God. We must “resist the devil” for him to “flee” from us
(see James 4:7 and First Peter 5:8-11). Sometimes the problem in our town
is in the invisible world. Perhaps we are opposed in our work of
evangelism by satanic principalities and powers. Thankfully, the Lord
Jesus Christ defeated the devil and his angels (Ephesians 1:15-23), and we can
stand against them successfully in the authority of our Lord. And we must
do it in order to reach a community blinded by the god of this world. In
prayer, let’s bind them, fight them, cast them out, and bring them to
defeat. It can be done, and generally must be done before the truth can
advance.
4.
BECAUSE NOBODY YET HAS HAD THE PATIENCE TO PREVAIL.
Persistence
is an essential element in winning spiritual victories. Have you run
across the scriptures that call on us to persist and not give up (such as
Matthew 15:22-28, Luke 11:5-8, and Luke 18:1-7)? In the New
Testament, the work of evangelism is compared to the work of farming. We
plow and sow and water and reap, and it is God that gives the increase.
Farming requires patience and persistence (be sure to read Matthew 13:1-9, Mark
4:26-29, and First Corinthians 3:6-9). We must stay at it if we are to
reach our town: stay at evangelizing, stay at praying, stay at seeking the
Lord, stay at letting God lead us, stay at living for Jesus, and stay at
believing for results. When our church persists in such things, it looks
like the church in Acts! Often a town gets the reputation of hardness because
nobody has stayed at it long enough to reap a harvest. The city of
Ephesus finally saw the triumph of the Gospel only after several years of
sowing the seed in the power of the Spirit. Read the story again in Acts
19:1-20. Somebody will have to persist in the important work of getting
the love of Jesus to everyone in your town, and sticking with people until they
are made into His disciples!
It never helps to make excuses for the lack of results,
especially when the Bible promises them. Let every preacher and every
witness for Christ focus scripturally on spreading the Gospel, learning to be
filled with the Holy Ghost, standing against the powers of darkness, and
persisting in the work until we see a powerful, soul-saving work done in our
own town.
Dr. Rick Flanders
Revival Ministries
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