A church used
to have this as their web site address: www.transformedlives.com. It’s a church that is growing and baptizing
increasing numbers of adults into the Christian faith.
Their
pastor asks for only one report at every meeting. He asks
one
question at staff meeting, board meeting, and any other kind of meeting. The
question is: tell me one life that has been changed this week because of our ministry.
Remember
how you and I have given each other permission to put prayer
above
other priorities during this series? At that particular church, their priority
is transformed lives. They believe the main message of the gospel is that Jesus
Christ changes lives. It's what they are all about.
Jesus
certainly changed the life of the woman at the well. She
came to the well at the hottest time of day, when no one else would have been
there. Many have speculated about why she came at such a lonely time.
Maybe she
had a bad reputation for being divorced 5 times. Maybe all of those husbands
had died. Maybe it was grief. Maybe it was shame. But something kept her
isolated that day. Who knows what? All we know
for sure is she was alone that day. She would not have expected to have company
at the well at that hour.
But Jesus
was there when she got there. And he talked to her. Not just a simple "hello"
as he passed by. It was the longest of any of Jesus’ conversations recorded in the
gospels.
Jesus
started out by making small talk. He merely asked the woman for a
drink of
water. But that one request broke down barriers that had existed for centuries.
Just a few simple words between a Jewish man and a Samaritan woman violated
social and religious rules about interactions between men and women and ethnic
groups.
Once the
barriers were down, the flood waters of conversation flowed. Jesus
and the woman talked. They talked about
spiritual thirst. They
discussed her marriages. They talked politics and religion.
By the
time the conversation ended, Jesus told her he was the Messiah. The woman
was so moved by their conversation, she ran off. She went to tell her whole
village about Jesus. She even left her water jug! She forgot her original
purpose in coming to the well. She left with a new purpose. Jesus
changed her life.
This woman
once isolated herself from others. Now she went searching for people. She wanted
to tell the world about what Jesus had done for her. What had
Jesus done for her?
In other
gospel stories, Jesus did some pretty amazing stuff for people. He healed
diseases. He gave people sight. He raised the dead.
A
self-proclaimed liberal church held a class on World Religions. Their goal was
to study the major religions of the world and compare them to Christianity.
Someone in the class had a co-worker who was a Muslim man. She asked if the
class would like her co-worker to come when they talked about Islam. Everyone
enthusiastically agreed.
They
thought it would be very helpful to have a firsthand expression of that faith. One class member summed up the class' feelings
by saying, "Please invite him. Tell him we don't want to convert him, we
want to learn from him."
Kamal, the
Muslim man, did come to the class. He spoke for a while about his faith. Then
class members asked him questions. Soon, he was asking class members questions
about faith. They hadn't planned on that! By the time class was over, they had
discussed many things.
They
talked about traditional Muslim dress. They talked about arranged marriages.
They talked about why Christians pray "in Jesus' name." They
talked about how Kamal felt when people treated him with suspicion. No one seemed
to want the time to end. Then a class member said, "Could we have a prayer
together?" They all agreed. The class circled, held hands, and prayed.
When the prayer
was finished, Kamal had tears in his eyes. He told the class: "I
have never felt God's love this strongly before. I cannot wait to tell my
friends about this. We didn't know there were Christians like
you."
It was
just conversation. But it changed his life. It changed the lives of everyone in
that classroom. Just conversation! God's power can
make genuine conversation into a
life-changing experience.
In the
book we're all reading together, Unbinding your
Heart, the author's research shows what brings people to church and
what makes them stay.
What do
you think brings people to church for the first time? Great sermons, good ads,
beautiful buildings?
Nope. It's
you. Almost 60% of people who join a church came because
someone invited them. 60 percent! People
come to church because someone asks them to come.
And what
makes them come back? What makes them
want to come again? Surely it's the pastor's fabulous sermons
or the music program or the updated children's wing.
No. It's
you. The number one reason people say they return to a church is
because they received a warm welcome from the people there. Those others things
are important, but they are not the main thing. The main thing is whether or
not someone said hello to them, or remembered their children’s names, or went
out of their way to get them a bulletin. New people can tell if the
congregation actually cares about them.
Do you
think this was the miraculous thing Jesus did for the woman at the well? Just conversation?
Just caring? Yes, God's power can make genuine
conversation into a
life-changing experience.
Marta came
to church because a couple she knew invited her. She had been cleaning their
house for about a year. One day, the couple struck up a conversation with her.
They asked
her if she had any family in town. She told them she had moved here to escape
an abusive husband. She was raising her two boys on her own. Her own parents
had died years ago. On impulse, the couple invited her to their church.
At first,
she declined. She said she didn't have the proper clothes. "Oh, come
casual!" the couple said, "We do! We’ll meet you at church about
10:30. Then we’ll take you and your boys to lunch afterwards."
They
looked for her the following Sunday. Sure enough, she slipped in just after the
service started. She had her boys in tow. They joined her on the back row.
The sermon
that Sunday was on the woman at the well. Marta sat at attention through the whole
service. The couple that had invited her kept her boys busy with crayons and bulletin
airplanes. Marta was entranced.
When the
sermon was over, she turned to the couple and said, "That story was for
me. That woman at the well is me! I have been so alone!" As people greeted
Marta warmly after the service, she beamed at the attention.
Afterward, she commented to the couple who had invited her, "This is like
a family!"
You know
someone like Marta. You know people who need Jesus and this church in their
lives. You know someone who needs a changed life.
In your
bulletin you’ll find an invitation. It’s
an invitation to join us for Sunday worship and Sunday School, as well as
several other events coming up in the life of our church. We
could just put this in the newspaper. But
that wouldn't be nearly as effective as giving it to you.
All you
need to do is pray over it and wait for God to compel you to give it to
someone. Just hand it to someone. Ask,
"Would you like to come to my church
with me this Sunday? I’ll pick you up and then we can go out for lunch together
afterwards."
Yesterday,
I invited two people to our church. I
had one of these invitations with me so I handed it to a nice lady who waited
on me at a store here in town. All I
said was that I attended First United Methodist Church and to come join us
sometime. I wish you could have seen the
look on her face. She smiled and thanked
me for the invitation.
I invited
another lady and she said that she would need transportation but I told her
that we offered transportation on Sunday mornings. Who knows what a difference these little
conversations and invitations might have?
It's
really terrifying for people who don't go to a church to go in those doors with
all the weird, holy people. They're scared to death. How would you feel walking
into an AA meeting? Ever done that? It's about the same degree of threat.
Your
invitation to be with them makes it so much less scary. This
invitation and a little conversation is your ticket to
changing someone's life.
After
Jesus talked with the Samaritan woman, he preached to his disciples. He said to
them, "Look around you! People are so ready for the gospel! All you have
to do is bring them in."
Look
around you. Who are you going to invite to church next
Sunday? Will
you go and pick them up? Take them to lunch afterwards? Introduce them to a
group of friends?
This week,
talk to someone you’ve never talked to before. Or, talk to someone you chat
with all the time, but this time, talk about your faith. You
could start a conversation that
will change someone’s life.
______________________________________________________________________________
Based on the resource, "Unbinding the Gospel: Real Life Evangelism," Chalice Press, 2008
Based on the resource, "Unbinding the Gospel: Real Life Evangelism," Chalice Press, 2008
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