Share It All

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Share It All
Chet Phillips

Transcript

Good morning. My name's Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. As we get started this morning, I want to give an update on our gift project. Every year, towards the end of the year, we do a gift project where we're able to, we try to raise financial support for some sort of specific need, some sort of specific work. We've raised money for church plants before.

We've given gifts to children in local areas before. We've done some different things. This past December, we were raising support for some missionary work and for some church planting happening in Minya, Egypt. Our goal was $15,000, which, just so y'all know, the most our church has ever raised for a gift project is like $7,400, $7,400. So our goal was twice what we've ever raised.

And we were just like, let's go for it, because that's what they said they needed for a whole year to be able to buy. They took some transportation and to be able to have their budget for the whole year. And so we, during our church family, during the month of December, we were able to raise about $11,500, which was very exciting. At the same time, a local church, New Spring Church over in the Columbia area, said they were praying that they had had a surplus or that they're blessed financially and that they had heard about us and they wanted to just support us and show us that they love us. And so they wrote us a check for $3,500.

And so the pastors got together and just, we started praying, asking the Lord what he wanted us to, first of all, let me say, we got together and started talking about what we wanted to do with the money. And then we were like, maybe we should pray and ask the Lord what he wants us to do with the money. And, you know, it took us a little longer to get there than it should, but we did get there. And so I just want y'all to know, you should be very proud of us. So we prayed about it and we asked the Lord what he wanted us to do with it and felt confirmed and united in that we were supposed to give that to the work in Minya, Egypt.

We had someone in our church family say that that got us close enough that they'd pay the difference. And so we actually were able to raise $15,000 for the gift project. And super excited. The Lord knew we didn't have enough money, so he told another church to give us some so that he can go to Egypt and we're excited in how he does that and just blessed to get to be involved. Grab your Bibles, go to John chapter 1. We are in our Multiply series where we are talking through this call that the church has to make disciples.

And so we're discussing what that looks like and how we ought to respond to that, that we're called to share the gospel, to see people believe in Jesus, be baptized, and then to teach them, to train them in what it looks like to follow Jesus. And so as we've been talking through this today, we're specifically coming to how do we share the gospel? How can we go about pointing people towards Jesus? And we're going to look at several different ways this morning. We're going to look at several different kind of some methods and some different ways that we can go about pointing people towards Jesus.

So in John chapter 1, we're going to start here in verse 43. John 1 verse 43. It says, The next day, Jesus decided to go to Galilee. He found Philip and said to him, Follow me. And that is primarily what being a disciple is. It's someone who follows Jesus, who learns from him, who in this time, and this very practically was, Jesus got up and went somewhere.

You walked behind him. You followed him. You saw what he was teaching, what he was doing, how he acted, how he treated people. There were times where he would stop and just explain something. And this is what has carried on from then on is that as followers of Jesus, we try to learn who he was, what he taught, what he did, how he treated people. And then we collectively walk together.

And that's a disciple, a learner from Jesus, someone who practices following Jesus and who he was and what he did and what he cared about. So he says, Follow me. Now, Philip was from Bethsaida, the city of Andrew and Peter. So Andrew and Peter are already following Jesus. Philip found Nathanael and said to him, We have found him of whom Moses and the law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph. So Jesus finds Philip.

Philip finds Nathanael. And this is what we're talking about today, that as Christ followers, as people who Jesus has found, who are following Jesus, that we get to be a part of finding other people and bringing them to Jesus. And what does Philip say? He says, We have found him of whom Moses in the law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph. He goes to Nathanael and says, You know, That stuff we've been reading in the Old Testament, the stuff we've been memorizing since forever, and that we're Jewish and we celebrate waiting for this prophet to come, this Messiah to come.

Found him. He's from Nazareth. His dad's name is Joseph. His name is Jesus. We found him. And you know how excited Philip is to be doing this?

How much prayer has been answered? How much hope and longing that this... And this is us if you're a Christian. Christian, the point of the universe, the hope of the world, the forgiveness of sins is in Jesus. And he's found us. If you're a Christian, he's redeemed you.

Your hope is in him. And all Philip's doing is going to his friend and saying, Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, have I got some good news for you. You know that stuff we've been longing for. You know that stuff we've been worried about. We found him. That's what he's doing.

And that's what we get to do. And so today we're going to specifically talk about how do we get to be like Philip in this passage and like some other people we're going to see as we jump around a little bit this morning. How do we get to go to other people and just say, Hey, you want this? Because it's so good. And Jesus is so good. And if you're a Christian, he is.

All the questions we have about, why are we here? What happens to us after we die? What's the point of this? What's the meaning behind this? Is my life going to count? Do I have hope?

How will I get through this? All of that is found in Jesus. And so we just get to go to other people and do what Philip said and said we found him. So let's pray. And then we'll talk through several methods, several different ways that we can go about bringing people to Jesus. And then we're going to talk about kind of a way of life, just how we get to live as these people.

So let's pray. God, we pray that you would bless our time this morning as we study your word and that you would send us as disciples who make disciples, as followers of yours who lead other people to follow you, that you would equip us to do that through the power of your spirit. And we love you and we thank you for how good you are. In Jesus' name, amen. So, he says, Philip found Nathanael and said to him, We have found him of whom Moses in the law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph. And Nathanael said to him, Can anything good come out of Nazareth?

So you would think Nathanael would be like, That sounds great. That's not what Nathanael says. He says, No, you didn't. That's kind of his response. It's like, No, nothing good comes out of Nazareth. Now, this is taught often, this is just a shot at the fact that Nazareth was a hick town and it was.

But more than that, he knows his Old Testament and he's saying, No, I don't think so because, you know, I went to school, I've studied this and nobody comes out of Nazareth. Like, there's no prophecy. We don't sing any songs about it. There's no, nobody's excited to be from Nazareth. Nobody comes out of Nazareth. This is actually like an informed Bible question.

He just basically says, Can anything good come out of Nazareth? So Philip goes and invites him and he just says, No, I don't, I don't, like, what do you, I don't think so. That doesn't sound right. Philip said to him, Come and see. Come and see. And this is the first thing we're going to talk about is you can just share an invitation.

That's it. One of the, one of the primary ways that we can try to bring people to Jesus is just share an invitation to something where there's a good chance they'll encounter Jesus. That's all Philip says. It's like, Okay, good Bible point. You know your Old Testament. We're proud of you.

Come see. Come meet him. You'll see. You'll see what I'm talking about. And so we get to do that. Some of us are like, I don't know enough.

I don't know all the answers. And if I come and they're going to say, Well, what about this? What about that? And you just get to say, It's a good point. I don't know. There's like 12 other people in my community group.

Come and ask them. Come and see. Let's see. His hope was that they would encounter Jesus. That Nathanael would come meet Jesus. So he says, Nathanael said to him, Can anything good come out of Nazareth?

And Philip said to him, Come and see. Jesus saw Nathanael coming toward him and said of him, Behold, an Israelite indeed in whom there is no deceit. Nathanael said to him, How do you know me? Jesus answered him, Before Philip called you when you were under the fig tree, I saw you. And Nathanael answered him, Rabbi, you are the son of God. You are the king of Israel.

Jesus answered him, Because I said, I saw you under a fig tree. Do you believe? You will see greater things than these. And he said to him, Truly, truly, I say to you, you will see heaven open and the angels of God ascending and descending from the son of man. Now, that went really well for Nathanael and it went really well for Philip because he says, We found him. Nathanael says, No, No, I don't think so.

He says, We'll come and see. And then like two seconds into meeting Jesus, Nathanael says, You're the king of Israel. You're God. And Philip's like, Told you. That's what I was talking about. He did the same stuff to me.

I was just standing there. He said, Follow me. And something was like, Yes. And then I knew he was. And it was just, That's why I wanted you here. That doesn't always work that way.

But sometimes it does. I've invited people to things before where I'm like, Just come. Just come. They showed up and it didn't go like this. It was weird or things didn't go like I had planned. But I'm not in charge of how that works.

I'm just in charge of saying, Come see. But then there's been other times where you've invited someone to your community group and they finally show up and your group gets to talking about weird stuff or gets to talking about good stuff or talks about something. Matt Freeman was telling me one time that he invited somebody over and his group just got to confessing sin and talking about some things. And he was thinking, Oh, come on guys. This is a bit heavy for this person's first time. Like, can't we just talk a little bit, like, a little higher up, not getting everybody's basement.

And then the person at the end said, Thank y'all so much. This meant so much to me. And began to confess as well and began to talk as well. And it was like, And Matt said he leaned back and was like, I'm sorry Jesus, I forgot you're in charge of this. And that sometimes it works like this and so that we just get to make an invitation hoping that they'll encounter the Jesus that we know. We don't have all the answers.

This is one of the things I love about when we do our baptisms and we have baptism videos. We want people to have the opportunity to share their story. And so many times we've had people who have met Jesus and would not trade Jesus for anything. And in their story they say, Yeah, this person harassed me. And then I kind of ran out of excuses. So I eventually showed up to a group.

And then I saw what they were talking about. And then I met Jesus. And I'm here to tell you that I'm going to follow him with the rest of my life. And there is something to just being able to say, Hey, come see. Come see what I'm talking about. Come see what my group's like.

Come see. Come hang out on a Sunday. Come. And it doesn't have to be just your community group. It can be, Hey, we're all going to be hanging out and eating a meal. But come see what I'm talking about.

What it looks like when people who love Jesus just get together and just having an invitation. Now, some of you are like, Sweet! That's what I'll do. If that's sharing the gospel, that's what I'll do. And I'll tell you that that's part of it and it does work. And you do see a lot of people meet Jesus this way.

Jordan Surratt, who's led a community group in our church family, who serves a lot. His cousin invited him to a prayer meeting. Now, if you're thinking, What should I invite my friend to? Most people wouldn't go to a prayer meeting. Jordan went to a prayer meeting. Didn't love Jesus.

Didn't know Jesus. He said it was really weird and it wasn't what he was expecting and then he just kept coming back. And surprise, Jordan's a Christian. Loves Jesus. Follows Jesus because his cousin said, Come pray with us. This does work and this is helpful, but what you have to understand is it's specific invitation.

Philip said, Come now. Let's go. Took him to Jesus. There's, sometimes we just do the, Hey, you should come hang out with my church sometime. Hey, you should come hang out with my group sometime. Just the same way that you look at your friend that you hadn't seen in a long time and you say, Yeah, we should hang out sometime.

And how often have y'all been hanging out? None, because sometime is no time. Sometime isn't an actual time and so that when we make these invitations, they need to be specific. They actually did some research on this, Lifeway did, because they do research on all kinds of things. And they found that 80% of people who are invited to a church or to some sort of a church thing will go, will accept the invitation if the person inviting them will walk through the door with them. So we'll set up a specific time to, Hey, let's meet here, let's grab some coffee, then let's go over there.

Hey, let's meet here, I'll meet you outside, we'll meet in the parking lot, I'll meet you at this gas station, I'll meet you there, I'll come pick you up, whatever, let's go. It's a specific invitation for a specific thing with the hope of them meeting Jesus. And that is one of the things that we can do is that we can share an invitation. Move to John chapter 8, we're going to look, John chapter 9, verse 8. We're going to look at another thing that we can do. So we can share an invitation, just hoping that they'll meet Jesus, that he'll work, that they'll see what we've seen.

We don't have all the answers, we just want to get them there. John chapter 9, we can share our story. So that's what, that's what's going to happen here is we're going to see this guy who's sharing his story. He's just telling people what Jesus has done with him, how it's worked with him. So John chapter 9, verse 8, we're going to pick up with a guy who was born blind.

The disciples are actually walking along with Jesus, they see him, and they say, okay, we want to know something, we have a theological question, who was the sinner, him or his parents, that he was born blind? And Jesus says, that's not how it works. And then Jesus heals him. And so he's a grown man who's never seen, and now he has sight. This is a beautiful day. I watched recently a video of a nine or ten month old that had never heard and they got some hearing aids and stuff and they put him in and the mom starts talking and she starts cackling, laughing, just so excited to be able to hear.

This guy's a grown man, has never seen. And Jesus, who's the king of all things, heals him so that he can see. In verse 8, it says, the neighbors and those who had seen him before as a beggar, were saying, is this not the man who used to sit and beg? And some said, it is he. And others said, no, but he is like him. And he kept saying, I am the man.

So some of them were going, I think this is the guy who used to beg. And other people were going, no, but he looks a lot like him. And then he kept going, no, it's me for real, you guys. Except for he said it like this, I'm the man. All right.

So they said to him, then how were your eyes opened? And he answered, the man called Jesus made mud and anointed my eyes and said to me, go to Siloam and wash. So I went and washed and received my sight. And they said to him, where is he? And he said, I do not know. I want y'all to know something is this guy shares his stories.

He tells in Christian circles, this is called a testimony a lot. This is his story of how he met Jesus and what Jesus did for him and how that's changed his life and worked in him. He's willing to say, I do not know. He doesn't have all the answers. He has his story. He has what Jesus has done with him.

And so, so often when we're thinking, I'm going to try to share the gospel with somebody, I'm going to try to tell them about Jesus. I'm going to try to, and this idea that they'll ask a question where we don't know the answer is terrifying to some people. Guess what? You can say, I do not know. So if you're talking with somebody at work and you're trying to point them towards Jesus or you're talking to them about church or how Jesus has worked in your life and they say, oh yeah, you believe all that mess.

What about evolution? What about, how could a good God let these bad things happen? What about this big social issue? You really believe and they'll pull something out that's this huge and you get to say, I do not know. Our group was actually talking about this this week. That's actually one of my favorite things to ever have happen when I'm talking to somebody about Jesus.

I like it most when it works like with Nathaniel and they're just like, wow, Jesus is God. That's the best one. But if they start just asking questions that I don't know the answer to, y'all don't know how excited I get. I'll tell you. Very. Because here's what happens.

If I don't know the answer, I just get to say, oh, I don't know. That's a really good question. That's really smart. Which makes them feel great because that was what they were going for, being really smart and making me look dumb. Usually, sometimes they're genuine questions. A lot of times, it's just, they wanted to just beat you.

And then guess what, you guys? This conversation is not over. I will be back. And the conversation will start right when I walk up because they gave me something to go study and to immediately start the conversation back up with. You see, sometimes the conversation kind of ends and it's really hard to get back into the conversation or it feels weird to get back into the conversation, but not if they stump you. You just go, that's really good.

I'll go look into it. And then you just go walking back in and go, so you were asking about dinosaurs. Well, guess what about Jesus? And you just get to jump right back into the conversation. And they have no choice. They're on lunch break.

You know they can't leave yet and you just get to talk to them. So he gets to say, I do not know, but he keeps going and here's what he leans into. He's just telling his story. It says, they brought, they brought to the Pharisees the man who had formerly been blind. This is verse 13. Now it was a Sabbath day when Jesus made the mud and opened his eyes.

Sabbath was a big deal to the Jewish people that you were not allowed to work. It was a very big deal to the Pharisees. This was their Mark of what made them faithful Jews, faithful to God. And Jesus runs around healing people all the time on the Sabbath. If you read the gospel accounts, it seems like he only healed people on the Sabbath. I'm assuming he did it a lot other times, but these are the ones where they got really annoyed and became a big deal.

So the Pharisees again asked him how he had received his sight and he said to them, he put mud on my eyes and I washed and I see. Some of the Pharisees said, this man is not from God for he does not keep the Sabbath. But others said, how can a man who is a sinner do such signs? And there was division among them. So they said again to the blind man, what do you say about him since he opened your eyes?

And he said, he is a prophet. Verse 18 says, they don't believe him. They keep, they eventually call his parents. They make his mom and dad come down and they're like, is this your son? They're like, yes, that's him. Was he born blind?

Yes, he was. And then they say, who healed his eyes? And his parents are afraid to say Jesus because they're afraid of the Pharisees. So they don't answer. They just, they say, well, he's old enough. Ask him, but that definitely is our son and he did used to be blind.

Verse 24. So for the second time, they called the man who had been blind and said to him, give glory to God. We know that this man is a sinner. And he answered, whether he is a sinner, I do not know. One thing I do know that though I was blind, now I see. And all he's doing is saying, I know what he did for me.

I know what he's doing. I know, I know what he did. I know I was blind. I know, now I see. And this is one of the ways that we get to share the gospel is just share our story. I don't know the answers to all that, but I know what he's doing to me.

I know that he's changed my heart. I know how I respond in anger now. I know how he's fixed my anxiety. I know how he's gone to work in me and my selfishness. I know what he's done in me. I don't know all of those answers and I'm willing to look them up and I'm willing to walk with you in it.

But I do know one thing. I was blind and now I see. And that's a beautiful way to point to Jesus. You can share an invitation. You can share your story. One of the things that happens that I want to just address here is that sometimes people think, well, I became a Christian now, but I used to be terrible.

I used to hang out with all these people and do all these things that I shouldn't have done and that I'm ashamed of now. And then they think, and I can't go back and tell them about Jesus because I look like such a hypocrite. I've heard this before. I thought this before. I just want to help you out. That's incorrect.

Does this man look like a hypocrite for seeing, even though, because he used to be blind? No. He's just saying, Jesus is great. I used to be blind and now Jesus has made me be able to see. And so if you go back and talk to all your friends about Jesus and they say, you, you, you coming to tell me about Jesus? I know how terrible you are.

And you'd be like, no, you don't. You don't know the half of it. I was way worse than what you think. I just, you only know about stuff I did with you. I did other stuff with other people that was way worse. I'm here to tell you that I'm terrible and that Jesus is great.

That I was blind, but now I see because Jesus did work. And I'm here to tell you that you can have hope in Jesus. I'm not saying come be a good person like me. I'm saying, come to Jesus. I actually know a guy who planted the church in his hometown for that very reason. It's a little podunk town.

Nobody cared much about it. It wasn't that big a deal. And people ask him, why are you planting there? And he's like, oh, because I was the worst. I'm very well known in that town for being a terrible person. So I just want to go back to that town and tell people about Jesus because no one will believe that I am a pastor and that I follow Jesus.

And if I don't do this in my own town, they just won't believe it. So I'm going back there and starting a church. And you get to do that. You get to share your story. Some of you are like, yeah, okay, well, I became a Christian when I was five, so I don't really have that kind of story. Yeah, you do.

Because even though you became a Christian when you're five, Jesus has continually been a good savior to you who is a sinner. And he's continually opened your eyes and helped you grow. And so you get to talk about how the gospel is good news right now for your soul that would run from him so fast if he didn't have a death grip on you. For you who's continually needing to grow and continually needing his hope and continually needing his light in your darkness. And you absolutely can share the gospel even if you've walked with Jesus most of your life. You can say, let me tell you what he's doing in me.

I can't answer all the questions, but I can tell you how he changes my heart. So you can share an invitation. You can share your story. And this third one is that you can share the gospel. And ultimately, the goal is that you would share the gospel in all of these, that the gospel would be clearly, explicitly said. But what we're really talking about here is that you can open your mouth and just tell them the facts about the gospel.

It doesn't have to involve you. It doesn't have to. It's just here's what Jesus has done. Go to Acts chapter 10. There's a lot of examples of this. Acts 10 is one of them.

There are plenty throughout the book of Acts, throughout the gospels. But this is where Peter was praying and God told him, hey, some people are going to come and I want you to go with them. At the same time, there was a man named Cornelius who was a Roman centurion. He had been praying and God said, hey, I'm sending some people to you. I want you to listen to them. And it's a really cool picture about how in prayer God prepares people to hear the gospel.

And so one of the things I would tell you is that in any of these, in all of these, you might be praying. I'll tell you specifically three things to be praying for. You want to pray that God would send you to receptive people. That God would prepare them beforehand. That he would work in their lives. That he would work for this moment to be the right moment for you to share the gospel.

That he would send you to receptive people. That he would make you sensitive to the spirit. Sometimes we're around receptive people but we're not sensitive to the spirit. They're sitting next to us at work and they're going, man, nothing ever works out for me in life. God's prepared them to hear the gospel and we say, yeah, tell me about it. I'm going to go to the drink machine and you want to go to the mountain too.

And we need to be leaning in and listening to the spirit that we might be prepared. And thirdly, that he would give us boldness. That he would lead us to receptive people. That he would make us sensitive to the leadership of the spirit and that he would give us boldness to speak when it's time to speak. But that's what happens here is that Peter's praying.

He's sensitive to the spirit. When the spirit tells him to go do something, he goes and does it. We're going to pick up in verse 30. Cornelius said, four days ago, about this hour, I was praying in my house at the ninth hour. And behold, a man stood before me in bright clothing and said, Cornelius, your prayer has been heard and your alms have been remembered before God. Send therefore to Joppa and ask for Simon who is called Peter.

He is lodging in the house of Simon a tanner by the sea. So I sent for you at once and you have been kind enough to come. Now therefore, we are all here in your presence, in the presence of God to hear all that you have been commanded by the Lord. He is very prepared. An angel actually told him, I'm going to send somebody to you so you can hear this. And this is miraculous, but the truth is it's no less miraculous how he does this all the time now.

That somebody has not walked with Jesus, doesn't know Jesus, but has God's been preparing their heart to be able to hear, to be ready for this, to be able to acknowledge him through life circumstances and they're in the right spot at the right time with the right person and God opens the window and tells somebody to speak and here's what it says. So Peter opened his mouth and said, that's the third method is that we would actually just share the gospel, that we'd open our mouth and say, which means that we would know the gospel, we would know the foundational core parts of the gospel. And so let's read what he says. It says, truly I understand that God shows no partiality, but in every nation anyone who fears him and does what is right is acceptable to him.

As for the word that he sent to Israel preaching good news of peace through Jesus Christ, he is Lord of all. You yourselves know what happened throughout all Judea, beginning from Galilee, after the baptism that John proclaimed, how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power. He went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil for God was with him. And we are witnesses of all that he did, both in the country of the Jews and in Jerusalem. They put him to death by hanging him on a tree, but God raised him on the third day and made him to appear, not to all the people, but to those who had been chosen by God as witnesses who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.

And he commanded us to preach to the people and to testify that he is the one appointed by God to be judge of the living and the dead. To him all the prophets bear witness and everyone who believes in him receives forgiveness of sins through his name. That is all true, but God has to work on somebody's heart for them to believe it. But there are times when we are led by the Spirit and ought to just tell somebody, open our mouth and say, here's what's true. Jesus Christ was good and holy and he was murdered on a cross and he died in that to save us from our sins and he rose from the grave so that we might have hope and there is forgiveness in his name and salvation in his name.

And that's good news and God prepares people to hear it. And the circumstances around it are interesting. My uncle and his friends when they were in college were riding around sharing the gospel with people and they had practiced a certain method where you have kind of certain little lead-in lines that you kind of open up with or whatever. So three of them are in a car and they're riding and they see a guy who's hitchhiking and they just go to pick him up. He hops in the backseat of the car and they're riding around sharing the gospel and so this is like, hey, God just sent like a hitchhiker here, somebody ready to hear.

So the guy sitting in the backseat with him uses the opening line they'd learned and he leans over to him in the backseat and he says, if you died tonight, do you know where your soul would go? And the guy just looked at him and he says, deep in thought. And they pull up to a stop sign and that guy opens the door and takes off running as fast as he possibly can. And they were like, oh, you know, now that I think about it, that probably wasn't the best opening line given the circumstances. Sometimes people aren't ready. I mean, I think you probably could have done that a little better, but sometimes it's not the right moment.

God hasn't prepared. It's not, we're still supposed to open our mouths. We're still supposed to share. I was in college coming out of a study hall and one of my friends I played football with said something about death. And I just asked him, I was like, man, do you think about death? And we just got to talking about what happens after you die.

And I asked him, do you know what would happen to you after you die? And he's like, no, how can you? And I was like, well, the Bible says you can. And we just started talking. I shared the gospel with him and he said, I said, do you want to follow Jesus? He said, yes.

He committed his life to Jesus, standing out under a street lamp on our way back to our dorms. I didn't follow up well with him, didn't do discipleship stuff well with him. If you're in my community group, that makes sense to you because that's how I usually do stuff. I'm very excited about people who don't know Jesus and once they believe in Jesus, I'm like, cool, figure it out, see you at the end. That's why we're working on some of these things. But I talked to him recently and he said, hey, you know, it's about two weeks away from anniversary of me committing to follow Jesus.

And I was like, dude, first of all, I didn't know when that happened and second of all, I'm so glad to know that you do. And so, sometimes God prepares people. Patrick Harden, who's a part of our church family, is a part of CEO's Campus Outreach and they go to Myrtle Beach every year and they send all these college students up and down Myrtle Beach to while people are vacationing on the beach to share the gospel with them, to go tell people about Jesus. They have different methods they try. They do start a conversation and just lead them to Jesus just to get there. They do four spiritual laws, I think, is one of them where there's like a set way that you kind of start talking about this and you move to this and you move to this.

That's kind of the thing where if you die tonight, like it's this startup conversation. They have a couple of different ways. They share their story. They have a couple of different ways. And if you were to pick the people that you think who's most likely to want to follow Jesus, I would say people vacationing at Myrtle Beach. They want you to come talk to them about Jesus.

Like if I'm sitting out on the beach enjoying the beach, I want four college students to come over and be like, hi, do you know you're a sinner? It's like, yes, I do. I'm a pastor. Keep going. Guess what? Every week, every day, regardless of the method, people commit to following Jesus.

People are ready and want to hear the gospel. And guess what? Every week, every day, regardless of the message, some people say, I don't want to hear this. But some people are prepared and there just needs to be some people who go and open their mouths. That we have good news to share and that God is at work in the lives of people to prepare them for these moments. And I think sometimes we're in the habit of making fun of someone who would just go around and tell people about Jesus and that's really cute of us to make fun of people who would go around telling people about Jesus when we haven't sat down and told anybody about Jesus in who knows how many years.

And the truth is, God is at work. The message is good. And I don't care if we share an invitation. I don't care if we share our story. I don't care if we just walk up to people and share the gospel. We've got to be active in doing what Philip did, which is trying to grab somebody and saying, come see Jesus because he's so good and all the hopes and all the prayers and everything's been answered in him.

And all your fear and all your doubt, it's in him. Some of you are here this morning because someone invited you. And I want to just tell you something. They just want you to meet Jesus. They want you to have what they have. They want you to check out what they're checking out.

They want you to see if you're seeing what they see in Christ. They care about you. They're really nervous because they're like, please don't say anything weird or let's not do anything weird today because it's just like, and we don't usually do anything weird, but they're just thinking maybe today would be the day we do something super weird. People get nervous when they bring people around churches. And I just want y'all to know that it's your first time here. We're so glad you're here and we don't want you to feel uncomfortable.

And I know churches do some things maybe you're not familiar with. And in a minute, when we pass by the bucket full of snakes, people think because it's their first time they have to take a snake. You don't have to take a snake. Just pass the bucket. Just kidding. We're not going to do that.

You guys, we don't ever do that. We just want you to know Jesus. And here's the thing. This is ultimately, like I said, we're going to have a couple of different methods and really just share your life is the last one. That you would so know and love Jesus that you would just share your life, that you would be a person so impacted by the gospel that you would just be around people and you would be a gospel person. So this is Mark 12, 30 says this.

This is Jesus talking and he says, this is the greatest commandment. He says that you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength. That God and ultimately revealed to us in Christ would be so primary to us that every part of our life would be saturated by this gospel. And so then we just get to know people at work. We just get to know our neighbors and we're gospel people. One of the ways we talk about this is that the concept of gospel fluency, that if you're a Christian, that how you receive the world, how you understand the world is through the gospel.

Fluency is the idea that you would speak a language fluently, that you could dream in it, that when you think, you speak English fluently, most of you speak English fluently so that you're not having to translate what I'm saying right now, pink elephant. You're able to just kind of take in whatever is said. Your brain processes it without you being able to control that flying giraffe. Like you just, whatever is said, just you can't help it. You understand that you're fluent. Now, that's not the case for us if we go to another place.

I got to go on a trip one time to a mission trip to Romania and I learned some phrases in Romanesti. And honestly, I know what the phrase means, but they're just noises I memorized. I know that means, may God bless you. I don't know which part means what and what order it's in because I just memorized the sounds. So that's the way I am with, I know a little bit of Spanish, but all I'm really doing is taking the Spanish word and go into the little Spanish dictionary in my brain and trying to say, I think that word means this word in English.

I'm just really trying to get it to English. I'm not fluent. But the goal for us as Christians is that this would be true, that we would love God so much with all our heart, with all our soul, with all our mind, with all our strength, that it's how we see and understand the world, that the gospel is how we think about everything so that you can't talk to us about marriage, you can't talk to us about money, you can't talk to us about relationships, you can't talk to us about savings, you can't talk to us about death or life or hope or the future or sadness or anything without us, the gospel just coming out. Here's the thing, some of us have this down when it comes to our groups.

One of the things we've talked about over and over again is that we would be, we'd give the good news before we give good advice. We have it down. We're gospel fluent. We have a gospel accent. It pours out of us when we're in church family. And as soon as we get around our neighbors and as soon as we get around our coworkers, we go TV newscaster on it.

My wife and I got to go, my parents won a trip to Jamaica through his job, my dad's Job. They weren't able to go and we got to go for free and I would absolutely recommend that to you. If you ever get to go on a free trip to Jamaica, you should go. It was very enjoyable. While we were there though, we were watching some TV and I don't know how they worked out this deal, but they just had channels from all over the place. And so we were watching.

Well, the funny thing was, if you watched any local news, you couldn't tell where they were from because they all had newscaster voice. They had this same little dialect that they all speak. The severed limbs were found in the elevator shaft. Good news for egg lovers, like whatever, like they just have this same tone, same voice, whatever. So we ended up realizing we were watching one that was from Miami, one that was from Canada.

They sounded the same as the people in Columbia, South Carolina, because they've all trained to just, if you're going to do the news, you just got to cut that out. And that's what we've been taught by our culture. If you're going to be a Christian, that's fine, but when you go to work, you just got to cut that out. You just can't sound Christian at work. You just got to, or you can be Christian light. You can say some things about God or whatever, but let's not talk about Jesus and let's not talk about, we just cut it out as soon as we get outside.

We put on our little newscaster voice. I'll give you an example of this. If your group, one of the questions in your community group was, what would you do if you won the Mega Millions jackpot? Most of us, if we really had to think about that in our Christian world, I got to know my answer, I'd be terrified because I think me having a billion dollars is probably not good for my soul. I really probably should keep going to work. It's nice right now that I can't own everything I would like to own.

There's something good about when God says you can't serve God and money. It's really nice that I don't have a billion dollars saying serve me. It's nice that I don't have much money and I go, you're right God, that sounds brilliant, but as soon as you gave me a billion dollars, I'd be like, well, I don't know, maybe some jet skis. The lake starts looking real good on Sundays. Like, you know, whatever. And so I'd be like, well, I think I'd probably have to give a lot of it away.

I'd probably have to get a whole bunch of people involved, maybe set up a trust, maybe spend the rest of my life just handing out money, maybe just give it to the IMB and go back to work the next day and be like, that was cool. IMB is the International Mission Board. All right. That's probably how I'd answer in our group. I'd really try to think about it. I'd talk about what was real to me and what really mattered and I'd try to fit it in the concept of eternity.

And if someone asked me at another Job or another place, hey man, what would you do if you win the Mega Millions? I'd just go newscaster on it. They don't want to hear all that stuff about how I think I'm a sinner and if I got a lot of money it would ruin my soul because that's a weird thing to say to somebody. So I'd just say, I'm going to probably own a mountain with like a castle and some sort of gun turrets because that would be amazing. We just cut it out so that when somebody's dealing with real things, you see the gospel applies to every aspect of life. This is one of the things that happens in the Old Testament.

There used to be a God of the forest and a God of the rivers and a God of the rain and a God of, in the Old Testament comes along and God says, no, I'm the God of everything. I'm the God of the rain and I'm the God of the wind and I'm the God of the mold in your kitchen. I own everything. And then Jesus comes along and he says, the gospel applies to everything, every aspect and every square inch of your life. So that if someone's talking about sadness or brokenness or depression or the Mega Millions jackpot or what they're going to do with their life or what they're hoping for their future or what they're struggling with with their kids, guess what?

The gospel applies now. It's good news now and there's hope now. That's what Peter says in, nope, sorry. It's not Peter next. It's 1 Thessalonians. Here's what it says.

It says, being affectionately desirous of you, we were ready to share with you not only the gospel of God but also our own selves because you had become very dear to us that we would be such gospel people that when we begin to build friendships with people who don't know Jesus, not only do we share the gospel with them, we share ourselves with them and ourselves as a representation of what it looks like as the gospel goes to work on somebody. Not that you're perfect but that you're repentant. Not that you have it all together but that you trust someone who does. Not that you have all the answers but you have a lot of hope in the one who does.

1 Peter 3.15 says this, But in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you. Yet do it with gentleness and respect. This means that as Christians the gospel will be so real to us that it didn't matter what the objection was, what the comment was, what the... This is usually taught that you're going to be at work and someone's going to come to you and say, You are so joyous and happy. What's special about you? And for some of you maybe that happens and you ought to respond that the gospel gives you hope and that Jesus works on your soul.

That's not the context this is written in it. Most of what Peter was talking about was someone's going to come to you and say, Really? You're a Christian now so you had to break up with your boyfriend? Oh, you're a Christian now so y'all can't live together? Oh, you got this going on? Oh, and they're going to have this aggression and you're going to go, Oh, gentleness and respect.

I'm so glad you brought that up. Jesus is way better than sex. I'm so glad you brought that up. Jesus is way better than money and you have a real reason that the gospel is a hope in you and you have a real answer. That's what he's talking about. The hope would be that we would be gospel people so that whether we were sharing an invitation, sharing our story, sharing the gospel, that ultimately we'd just be sharing our lives and that's who we'd be.

That we'd be those type of people who so know and love Jesus and his word so dwells in us richly that it didn't matter what we were talking about. It didn't matter what we were doing that it just comes out of us, pours out of us and some of us need to learn how to lose our newscaster voice and go back to having our gospel accent when we're out in the world so that some people might find hope and might hear the goodness of the gospel and this sharing your life thing helps us a lot when people say, well, I can't share the gospel at work. What they mean when they tell you that at work is that you can't go around trying to proselytize everybody. You can't start handing out tracts.

You can't, but you can share your life and you can be a Christian and you can, when somebody's struggling with something and you're their friend, you can say, hey, can I tell you the hope I have? Can I tell you what I lean to in these moments? Can I tell you that there's a Bible story that talks about this? And it also means that, okay, maybe you can't share the gospel at work. Maybe you got fussed out for that. Guess what?

You can share the gospel in your backyard when you have a cookout. Get to know your coworkers. That way when you say, hey, you want to eat burgers at my house? They say, that sounds like a good idea. And then guess what? Who gets to talk about Jesus at their own house all day long?

I'm going to close with this story. I have a friend named Josh Davis. I met him across the street playing at the park with his children and our kids are about the same age and we started hanging out. We had a, pretty early on, had a conversation about the gospel, which is helpful. Just so y'all know, some of you are like, I'm developing a friendship and seven years from now, when the moment's right, I'll jump out of the bushes and say, turns out I've been a Christian the whole time. It's not super helpful.

Just own it right when you start. And then if people are like, I don't want to be friends with a Christian. Okay, that person's probably not going to be Jesus right now. They're not ready. But some people go, okay, and you get that already open.

The conversation's already there. And so I had the chance to talk with him pretty early on. And one of the things Spencer's been challenging us on is just looking at people and telling them, I want you to know Jesus. I want you to believe this. So much we make it this big conflict, but the truth is, it's us trying to love somebody and trying to help somebody find something that is so good.

And so we continued this friendship and we hung out some and I just realized the next time I saw him, I needed to just say to him again, hey, I want you to know Jesus. So we were over at the park playing and we were heading back to my house and I just stopped and said, hey, our kids were playing at the park. He and I weren't playing at the park. We're on the seesaw. It was awesome. We hold hands and run to the field.

We're walking back over to my house and they were going to be there for a minute and I just stopped and said, hey man, I just want you to know I care about you. We like your family and I want you to know Jesus. So as much as we can talk about that and as much as you have questions about that, I just, I think he's amazing and I want you to know him. And he just stopped and then he said, I think I really needed to hear that. And I was just like, yes, Jesus, that's awesome. And then we talked about Jesus for the next hour or so.

He didn't become a Christian. I'm still praying for him. I'm going to keep saying that to him. I'm going to keep building a relationship with him. I'm going to keep using all these methods. I'm going to invite him to stuff.

He's coming to hang out with our group some. He's not going to do that all the time. I'm going to keep inviting him. I'm going to keep sharing my story and how Jesus is at work in me. I'm going to keep sharing the gospel with him whenever I get the chance and hopefully at some point it'll be the right moment and he'll say, what do I need to do? How do I follow Jesus?

See, our prayer for our church family this year is that every single one of our community groups would get to see somebody baptized. See, last week we said that we'd be all preachers, that we'd be all sharing, that there'd be a hundred people out proclaiming the gospel. And this week, as we talk about ways that we can go about doing that, our hope, our prayer, and we don't know if it'll work because it doesn't always work. God doesn't always lead us to the people. We don't know how his timing on all that, but our prayer this year is that every single one of our community groups would be on mission, would be active in sharing the gospel and we get to gather around the baptismal pool and see some people who on their videos say, I got tired, I ran out of excuses, and Jesus is so good.

I was blind, now I see, and I'm so thankful that somebody grabbed me and said, you need to meet this Jesus. Band's gonna come back up. As we sing this next song, we as a church family are gonna take communion. This is where we, through the bread and the cup, that we remember that Jesus' body was broken for us, that his blood was shed for us, and that we need the gospel and that in Jesus we get the gospel. That he died for our sins, that our hope is in him, that our joy is in him, that our life is in him, and so we take a moment to pray, to repent. The repentance isn't that we have to be good before we come up there, but that if we are walking in unrepentance, we are not believing the gospel, which is that Jesus saves sinners and that there's hope and freedom in the gospel.

And so we pray, we repent, we confess sins, and then we joyously, celebratorily take communion. And I pray that as we pray this morning that you would also pray for those who need to know Jesus, who need to have what you have in Christ, that we might be led to receptive people, that we might be sensitive to the Spirit, that we might be bold in sharing our faith so that more people might have the Jesus, so that we know who loves and saves sinners. Let's pray. God, we thank you that the gospel is good news and that it is hope in our darkness and that it is a bandage for our souls and that our life and our joy are in you and nowhere else.

And we ask, Lord, that you would make us effective in sharing the gospel. And we pray right now, collectively, that every single one of our community groups this year would get to see somebody baptized, we get to know the joy of sharing the gospel and of having someone begin to follow Jesus, that we'd get to be like Philip and that you'd lead us to the right Nathaniels who are ready to hear and know the goodness of your word and hope in Christ. In Jesus' name, amen. When you're ready, take communion.

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