Chapter 12
Saving More
Souls
How then shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed?
And how shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heard?
And how shall they hear without a preacher?
— Romans 10:14 (NKJV)
Missionary Aid
Read the Bible. Work hard
and honestly. And don’t complain.
— Billy Graham
When I received e-mails from many of my first Rushmore University students, I was delighted to
find that many of them were foreign missionaries, pastors of evangelical
churches, lay leaders founding Christian schools, and businesspeople who wanted
to establish new business models built around Christian principles. I felt
blessed by those opportunities to learn from the experiences of these fine
people as they sought to do God’s will.
My education often included
learning that I didn’t know very much about how those with such vocations go about
what they do. For instance, I had a student who was a missionary pilot in Africa who kept explaining to me that there was a 2,000
percent opportunity in better scheduling flights to visit missionaries. For the
life of me, I couldn’t figure out what he could be talking about. After all, a
small plane is only going to hold so many people and so much in supplies. Even
if you optimally combined two or three sets of visitors, that wouldn’t be a 20
times improvement in performance.
Realizing that this student was
trying to tell me something I didn’t understand, I kept asking questions.
Eventually, he explained what he meant in more detail.
He was appalled to find that he
was flying day after day to the same missions with a different educational or
aid group. Often, the education was similar to what the mission had received
just a few days earlier. The missions were primarily looking to accumulate as
much aid as possible and were willing to undergo extra training and education
if enough aid could be gained in the process. At the same time, other missions in
the area hadn’t received an educational or aid visit in many years.
How could this feast or famine
condition happen? It turns out to reflect poor communications among the various
Protestant churches. The people who arrived at a mission on Friday didn’t
realize someone had been there with a similar program on Tuesday. However, the
missionary pilot knew because he talked to his passengers every day and had
flown in both groups.
I was excited to see what solution
the student would propose. He came back with an excellent plan to involve a
friend in a religious organization to develop a coordinating Web site for major
churches to use so that they could monitor each others’ missionary support
activities by site. I was acutely aware that there is a wide distance between
proposing such a fine solution and enlisting the appropriate people to
participate. I told the student that I wouldn’t grade his paper until the
program was implemented. That was more than two years ago, and I’ve heard no
more about the project.
Similar experiences with other
Christian students made me realize that while many feel called to make
important improvements in the name of Jesus, they often lack the staying power
to turn those calls into practical results. I must admit that much of my
initial enthusiasm for working with these students was tempered as almost all
disappeared one by one without accomplishing the wonderful dreams they had
initially shared with me. In most cases, they didn’t even get started on their
dreams.
I was puzzled. What was this lack
of follow-through all about? Finally, one student told me that he had been
intimidated by my enthusiasm for his dream. He shared with me that he felt
unworthy of taking on such a challenge. To me it seemed clear that God wanted
this man to accomplish the challenge.
The student’s reluctance didn’t
surprise me. The Bible is full of great leaders who didn’t feel up to the task
that God assigned. Moses, for example, told God that God should pick Aaron to
lead the Israelites because he, Moses, was such a poor speaker. God often
chooses those with limited skills and experience to perform miracles so it will
be clear to everyone that He deserves the glory rather than His servant.
Enlisted into My Special Task
My faith is the grand drama of my life.
I’m a believer, so I sing words of God
to those who have no faith.
— Oliver Messiaen
In the summer of 2006, I began to see how the 400 Year
Project could be brought to a successful conclusion. Realizing that perhaps I
had devoted too much of my attention to this one challenge, I began to seek
ways to rebalance my life. One of those rebalancing methods was to spend more
time communing with God through prayer, Scriptural studies, attending services,
and listening to the still, small voice within.
For several years I had been
enjoying the devotionals sent to me daily over the Internet by evangelist Bill
Keller. I liked many of the devotionals so much that I asked Bill if I could
copy them into my blog, and he kindly gave me permission. In those days, he
didn’t keep an online archive and I felt like many people would want to look up
various subjects.
One of those devotionals speared
me like an arrow that summer. The evangelist reminded his readers that our responsibility
as believers is to share the Gospel with others through our example and our
words. Not feeling well equipped to do more than try to be a good example, I
began to pray about what else I should be doing.
The next day, my answer came: I
was to launch a global contest to locate the most effective ways that souls
were being saved and be sure that information was shared widely. This sharing would
be a blessing for those who wished to fulfill the great commission to spread
the good news of Jesus. Fortunately, I had been studying for several years about
how such contests had been run by secular organizations to generate
improvements. I decided to announce the contest in my blog,
http://www.livespirituallybetterthanabillionaire.blogspot.com, on August 26,
2006.
I didn’t want to presume that
someone already had good answers or ways to find such answers: I decided to
offer free e-books of The 2,000 Percent
Solution and The 2,000 Percent
Solution Workbook to anyone who enrolled in the contest. It occurred to me
that this sharing might also stimulate some good ideas to arise sooner. In pursuing
this task, I recalled many conversations with Peter Drucker about how sharing
secular knowledge with pastors had been helpful to the development of some Protestant
megachurches.
I also wanted to share whatever else
I could to help make the contest a success. As a prize, I offered the chance to
be included in one of two books about great ways to save more souls. I would
coauthor both books and cover the launch expenses, and the proceeds would go to
support the best ideas. Presumably winning such a contest might also help with
getting publicity, attracting volunteers, and gaining donations. My assumption
was that most people who are great at saving souls have been working on that
rather than writing about what they do and seeking publicity to alert others to
the opportunity. My experience in writing, producing, and promoting such books
could possibly be of help to such effective leaders.
I doubt if many people could have
been more daunted than I did by the task. I felt like my role, at best, was to
be a conduit for God’s will. At worst, I might insert myself in ways that
harmed the process. I can’t quote Scripture, didn’t attend a Bible college, and
find myself with more to learn about my faith than answers. But I do have lots
of faith and as a result felt confident that God would find a way for His will
to succeed regardless of my blunders.
Helping Hands
Only the mediocre writer is always at
his best.
— William Somerset Maugham
Fortunately, the spirituality blog had developed a following
before I announced the contest. Within just a few days, people sent e-mails with
observations and questions about the contest. I appreciated and benefited from
all of the comments I received.
Some feared for my soul: To them,
this contest looked like I wanted to replace the Holy Spirit’s role in
salvation with my thoughts and actions. Others were concerned that I was trying
to buy my way into Heaven. I took those concerns to heart and asked people to
pray for me so that I wouldn’t fall into such traps.
A few people sent me useful
Scriptures that spoke about the proper ways that salvation might be gained by
unbelievers following activities done by believers. I learned from those
references and paid careful attention to them.
Many people were concerned by
what they saw as ineffective evangelical efforts in the United States. Many different
descriptions expressed those concerns, but a fair paraphrase would be to say
that too much evangelism was aimed at those who had accepted Christ and too
little at those who aren’t Christians. In particular, people were concerned
that evangelism had become something mostly pursued by a few superstar pastors
and ministers while the bulk of Christians did little in this regard.
Other people still saw the
biggest opportunities for evangelism in places outside the United States where few had heard
of Jesus. They told me fascinating stories about successful experiments in underdeveloped
nations, including even hard-core Muslim countries where sharing God’s word
could lead to death.
Occasionally, I was contacted by someone
who seemed to know more about how to work with the Christian community than I
did. When that occurred, I asked how to attract more contest enrollees. The
advice I received was to simply let Christian leaders know about the contest,
and the leaders would pass along the information to their congregations and
readers. That seemed to me like a suggestion easier said than done. However, I felt
encouraged by all of the care, concern, and advice that I received.
A Christmas
Gift for God
We praise
Him, we bless Him, we adore Him, we glorify Him,
and we wonder
who is that baritone across the aisle and
the pretty
woman on our right who smells of apple blossoms.
— John Cheever
Christmas can be a disturbing holiday as the challenges of
gift giving, card sending, and entertaining weigh heavily on our time, our
minds, and our bank accounts. It’s easy to lose sight of the reason we
celebrate Christmas: to honor the birth of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. I
find that if I’m not careful, my Bible reading time diminishes rather than
increases just before Christmas, despite my desire to do the opposite. My only
remedy has been to devote much of Christmas Day to reading Matthew, Mark, Luke,
and John.
Passing one jammed shopping mall
after another in the fall of 2006, I began to wonder why no one ever thinks of
giving a gift to God for Christmas. The more I thought about that omission, the
more convinced I became that some people would welcome the idea of enrolling in
the contest to save more souls as a Christmas gift to God.
Having had some success in the
past with putting out press releases, I took this route to share my idea in the
usual way. The response was muted. The secular press just didn’t seem very
interested, and the Christian media hadn’t seemed to notice the release.
After that disappointing result, I
did a little online research and found that there were outlets for press
releases that go solely to Christian media. I rewrote the earlier press release
a little and sent it out via some of those services. I was pleased to find out
that it was much less expensive to send out such a release to Christian media
than to all media.
The response was very encouraging
this time. Many Christian news outlets briefly summarized the contest, and
inquiries about the contest rapidly picked up. I was also interviewed for some
printed articles and drive-time radio programs.
Because of the long lead times
involved with some of the stories, I decided to extend the end date for entries
from January 31, 2007, to Easter 2007. That also seemed like a logical ending time
for finishing a commitment made to God as a Christmas gift in 2006.
I was delighted to find that not
only had the quantity of contest inquiries increased, but the quality of the
most recent ideas provided some real eye-openers, as well. I was equally
impressed that the ideas didn’t duplicate one another; people were finding
vastly different, effective ways to reach those who didn’t know and accept Jesus.
Not surprisingly, the tools of
mass communication appealed to some. If you can televise programs around the
world where no one is now seeing Christian messages, you can begin to create
fertile furrows in unplowed fields. One report showed that by spending $110 in Kenya
to televise an hour-long DVD, 11 people reported that they were saved and 5
others volunteered to work as evangelists. That apparently low cost per person
contrasted with some e-mails I received that estimated a cost of over $10,000
per person saved for some major evangelical events in the United States.
Radio was also described as a
possible answer. One man reported that he had found a way to establish
Christian radio stations for less than 1 percent of the usual cost. He had
several stations operating in Canada
and planned to expand to about 100 more around the world. He reported that relatively
few of his listeners had ever heard a Christian message before.
One man wanted to tap into the
tremendous flows of tourists who seek entertainment. His idea was to build a
Christian-themed multimedia experience in Branson,
Missouri where believers could
bring their friends to learn about God’s promises.
But most people had the opposite
instinct to employing mass media: They saw energizing the vast numbers of
Christians as the best way to save more souls. After all, if each Christian
would only speak to a few other people, all non-Christians would at least have
the background to consider if they felt called to become Christians.
As people wrote to me, I began to
realize that my sense of inadequacy in sharing my faith was pretty normal. In
fact, I was surprised to learn that I was actually better equipped to share my
faith than most Christians are. I have read the Bible many times. I’m familiar
with the sections of the Bible that call for witnessing our faith to others. I
try to set a good example in everything I do. I have become comfortable with
telling others that I am a Christian and inviting them to learn more. My
suggestions had helped some people begin a search for God that led to them
becoming Christians.
I began to realize that God may
have chosen me for this role of directing the contest in part because I felt
inadequate in sharing God’s love while having seen some successes come from my
sharing among seekers.
What was possible to accomplish
with evangelism? As you can imagine, there are some amazing individual
evangelists: They can walk up to anyone, quickly establish powerful rapport,
and talk easily about becoming saved after just a few general sentences. Some
of these people contacted me and shared their testimonies. One man even sent a
book describing his methods. His approach was so well thought out that it could
have been a role model for recruiting sergeants trying to find the next 100,000
U.S. Army troops.
Gradually, I began to hear from
people who had focused on taking insecure believers and turning them into
effective witnesses. What was the lesson? Directing Christians to save more
souls is an ongoing educational task of the church that deserves to be part of
every worship service. Yes, that’s right. People need to be reminded to share
their faith during each service and to receive practical training. Otherwise it
seems as though many Christians think that they can learn everything they need to
be a Christian by just waiting for God to direct them. Yet these same people conscientiously
send their children for driver’s education training and attend Bible-based
services.
What’s the biggest hurdle? Many
Christians are delighted to be saved, but don’t feel like they have an
obligation to help anyone else become saved. Without the desire to help the
unsaved, there’s little benefit gained by instructing people in how to
accomplish that task.
Take It Step by Step
Talk to him of Jacob’s ladder,
and he would ask the number of steps.
— Douglas Jerrold
While many people focused on one evangelism approach or
another, I was impressed to learn about the bigger vision of Jim Barbarossa, an
Ephesians 4 evangelist at Jubilee Worship Center
in Hobart, Indiana
(http://www.jubileeworshipcenter.com), and head of Step by Step Ministries in
Porter, Indiana
(http://www.step-by-step.org). Jim has developed a process for energizing and
directing a church’s congregation toward local, national, and international
evangelism while serving as an example that other churches can emulate. Jim’s
background was in business before finding Jesus later in life. Once having been
saved, Jim immediately began witnessing enthusiastically with others. If you
ever get a chance to meet him, you’ll see that he’s a natural for his spiritual
calling.
At the time I met Jim, here’s how
the step-by-step process worked. Jim had signed on with his wife, Carla, as an
evangelist for Jubilee
Worship Center.
Now, if you are like me, you probably haven’t ever been to a church with
evangelists on staff. Jim’s view is that the first full-time pastoral employee
a congregation should hire after a pastor or minister is an evangelist. This step
should occur when the church has around 70 members.
Why does such a small church need
an evangelist? Jim’s view is that most ministers and pastors are overwhelmed
with other responsibilities, especially if the church is just starting up and
growing. In such circumstances, evangelism is usually limited to altar calls
among the mostly saved congregation.
Jim’s pastor, Dale Combs, asked
Jim what resources Jim needed to succeed. Jim asked for five minutes out of
every service; otherwise, Jim felt that he wouldn’t be able to make
steady-enough progress. At first, this time was devoted to creating a desire to
witness. Church members were initially very resistant. However, Dale and Jim
were firm in their commitment, and progress was slowly made in creating a
desire to witness among the congregation.
Yet, even after creating a desire
among congregants to witness, many admitted that they felt afraid to do so.
Some were concerned about saying the wrong thing and harming someone. Others
didn’t want to face rejection. How could those fears be overcome?
Then Jim was inspired to ask each
person in the congregation to provide a written personal testimony that could
be combined into a book. Editors and typists helped parishioners with this
writing. In many of the testimonies, people describe their lives before they
accepted Jesus as their Savior and go on to explain how much better life has
been since then. The stories are very powerful and interesting to read. I
suspect that many churches don’t know what good works God has done within their
congregations. Certainly, those who haven’t been saved don’t know what a
wonderful experience this is. Each person also provided a photograph for the
cover. Over time, most church members chose to share their testimonies.
Each person in the church was
then asked to take seven copies of Real
Life Stories a week and to hand them out to friends, neighbors, strangers,
bank tellers, grocery clerks, wait staff, and anyone else it occurred to the church
member to talk to. The books don’t look “churchy” in Jim’s view, and recipients
are impressed to receive a book from an author whose picture appears on the
cover. Church members are encouraged to inscribe the books to the recipient as
though performing a formal signing at a major bookstore, noting on what page
their testimony falls. Not surprisingly, many people took the books, looked at
the one- or two-page testimony of the giver … and kept reading.
This approach meant that
congregants could be sure the right message was being shared and the perceived risk
from their offer to witness was minimal. When a conversation ensued, the
witness could fall back on describing a well-prepared personal testimony that
would be interesting to most people.
In quantities of many thousands,
these paperback books are inexpensive to print and bind. Where do the funds
come from? The church has a special box on the floor near the altar where
members are asked to drop extra donations (above their normal tithes and
offerings) for the purpose of evangelism.
As a result of continuing with
the book program, about 40 percent of the church’s members are out sharing the
Gospel every week through handing out these books or tracts based on the
testimonies. To me, that was very impressive.
Before the church had these books
containing members’ testimonies, Jim had a few tracts printed up that contained
practical messages about peoples’ problems and how Jesus could be the answer.
The tracts concluded the last page with the sinner’s prayer and a way to
contact Step by Step Ministries for discipleship. From the beginning, the most
enthusiastic church members used the tracts to introduce people to Jesus.
Soon, Jim and Carla were hearing
about copies of the tracts and books that had reached people all over the United States
and dozens of countries around the world. Jim began to think about what else
might be done.
He decided to add audio tapes
that could be shared. The power of the voice is often greater than the printed
word, and such tapes are also helpful to people who cannot or don’t have the time
to read but want to learn about God.
In the system to provide these
simple messages (via tracts, tapes, and books), Jim also realized that his evangelistic
efforts could support foreign missions without the substantial expense involved
of sending missionaries from the United States. Instead, Christians in foreign
nations who wanted to share God’s love could use Step by Step tracts, tapes,
and books to do so. After the tapes, tracts and the books provided by a
volunteer, the idea is to visit again in three days to see if the recipient
wants to talk about the material. In many cases, the unsaved said they wouldn’t
read or listen the material when offered, but took the materials anyway and
later read or listened to them.
After a large-enough new congregation
is established in a foreign land, local versions of the testimony books can be
created from their experiences. In addition, it was often cheaper to translate
and print the tracts and books or duplicate the tapes in poor countries than in
the United States.
By seeding these non-U.S. Christians with the tools and the witnessing process,
the foreign Christians were able to save many souls and create communities of
believers who can hopefully raise the funds to become financially self-sufficient
in their evangelism.
For months, one of my daily
pleasures was to receive e-mails from Jim that contained reports of evangelical
efforts in various countries. The most exciting of these reports would show
dozens of individual photographs of smiling new Christians after emerging from their
water baptisms. Other e-mails contained the happy testimonies of these excited
new members of the faith.
In 2006, Jim and Carla realized
that they could teach others to play the evangelist roles in their churches,
and a conference was organized to provide this education. Plans are underway to
do this again each year in the future. DVDs of this conference are available and
are sent to foreign nations to train church-connected evangelists in those
countries.
I look forward to keeping in
touch with Jim and Carla and their pastor, Dale, to learn what steps they will
add to further improve this process. If you pay attention to the steps you take
to serve God, each single step can take you further toward God’s will for your
life and our world.
The biggest surprise of all was
to realize that by God directing Jim to me through Dale’s wife, Lisa, I had
uncovered another 2,000 percent squared solution. This approach used by Jubilee
Worship Center and Step by Step Ministries to sharing the Gospel involves a 20
times higher percentage of congregation members witnessing than the typical
church and support for foreign evangelism has cost a mere 25 cents per person
saved, way less than 4 percent of what traditional methods cost.
Hearing the Call to Discipleship
Talk to me about the truth of religion
and I’ll listen gladly.
Talk to me about the duty of religion
and I’ll listen submissively.
— C. S. Lewis
New Christians often need a lot of support after accepting
Jesus as their Savior and repenting their sins. Many converts don’t yet know
what it fully means to be a Christian, and most will want to learn more. For
that reason, those who come to an altar call in church are usually given briefing
materials and encouraged to take classes to pursue their new faith.
Many people asked me what would
come next after the contest was over and the books were published. Some
suggested that perhaps the contest could be repeated from time to time (much
like Carol Coles, Robert Metz, and I encourage people to repeat the 2,000
percent solution process on the same issue).
I don’t know if that’s right or
not, but it may well be. Recently my mind has been very focused on concern
about what could happen to lots of new believers if they aren’t discipled well
by more experienced Christians to learn more about their faith. I suspect that
the numbers of people who have paid a lot of attention to what to do after
salvation are much larger than the people who have looked for more effective
ways to share the good news about Jesus and salvation. Is discipleship an area
where there should be another contest? Or should some other activity be
initiated?
I’m sure that what to do next
will be much clearer after the contest to identify and publicize ways to save
more souls ends. Naturally, if God wants me to do something else, He’ll let me
know.
My sense right now is that I’m
supposed to focus on finishing this book. Why? I certainly don’t recall ever
having written a book with less advance thought or with such speed. It’s
literally racing off my fingers each day. In addition, most of the normal
distractions that I’m subject to have disappeared since I began writing Adventures of an Optimist. It’s as
though God has granted me a writing holiday at a remote retreat without my
having to go away.
I leave this subject of saving
more souls for now. Please realize that the full story of this contest to save
more souls won’t be written and understood for several years. Time is needed
for the ripples of this contest to move forward in my life and across the lives
of others to do God’s will. God knows where it’s all going, but I don’t.
Copyright © 2007. 2012 by Donald
Mitchell.
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