Early on in my Christian walk I had the privilege of hearing Ron Sider speak on evangelism and social action at a TEAR conference in Sydney. I was seeking a more holistic approach to Christianity and found myself drawn to this guy who was prophetically calling for exactly that. The worship after was amongst the most powerful I have ever experienced and I have been a TEAR supporter and advocate of holistic Christian mission ever since.
The following excerpt is from a magazine article by Ron Sider entitled, “Overcoming One Sided Christianity: Combining Evangelism and Social Action” and, being based on his book “Evangelism and Social Action” which was later renamed as “Good News and Good Works”, it covers much the same ground. I will let the story speak for itself:
You know, I don’t really understand how Christian people who claim to worship the eternal Word become flesh, the perfect combination of Word and Deed, have pulled apart Word and Deed in the 20th century. But we did. We had some congregations that were only concerned about evangelism and others concerned only about social action.
In 1979 I went to a conference in South Africa and later talked for three hours with a young man. He said he was burning out. I wasn’t surprised: He was a full-time activist against apartheid and a full-time university student. But then he said, “God told me that if I came to this conference I would learn something about his Son.”
I had no time to lose. I said, “Look, I believe that Jesus died on the cross for your sins. I believe he rose on the third day.” He said, “I believe all that.” But then he blurted out, “I don’t want to be like these white Christians here. They sing about heaven…and they don’t want to hear about justice until heaven.” He thought that coming to Jesus would weaken his struggle against apartheid. I told him Jesus would strengthen that—He doesn’t want to take it away.
I didn’t want to be pushy (actually, 99.9 percent of the time Mennonites are hesitant), but suggested he might want to pray. He said, “Let’s do that.” He prayed a beautiful prayer. He confessed his sins and accepted Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour. I prayed after him to strengthen him. After that I was so excited that for the first 10 minutes all I could do was walk around the room, singing praises to the Lord.
It’s a wonderful moment in my life, but notice what it says about divisions in churches. Those white evangelicals had invited him to accept the Lord, likely ad nauseam, but he couldn’t hear them because they didn’t care about justice.
Just two years later I had the privilege to speak at the thirtieth anniversary of the National Council of Churches in the U.S. There were many seminars on peace and justice, but I looked for seminars on evangelism, church planting and know how many there were? Absolutely zero. Not a single one. Those are two examples of ghastly one-sidedness.
I want that one-sidedness to end. I think it’s unfaithful to Jesus. I don’t think it works. I believe with all of my heart that genuine biblical faith, the true biblical Christ, is exactly what the world needs. Loving the whole person the way the gospels tell us Jesus did would radically transform our world.
I want to talk about six biblical foundations that will help us put together Word and Deed, put together evangelism and social action. I want to talk about sin, the nature of the person, the gospel, salvation, who Jesus is, and eschatology.
If you want to continue reading the article just click here. The question I want to ask though is, does that strike you as true, and if so, why is there still so much of a split evident within the Western church? Why are justice advocates so reticent to proclaim the gospel? Why are evangelicals so reticent to demonstrate justice? How might this change?
This post is part of a Christian synchroblog on social justice. If you’d like to check out some other social justice posts see:
Phil Wyman at Square No More
Mike Bursell at Mike’s Musings
Bryan Riley at at Charis Shalom
Steve Hayes at Notes from the Underground
Reba Baskett at In Reba’s World
Prof Carlos Z. with Ramblings from a Sociologist
Cobus van Wyngaard at My Contemplations
Cindy Harvey at Tracking the Edge
Alan Knox at The Assembling of the Church
John Smulo at JohnSmulo.com
Sonja Andrews at Calacirian
Lainie Petersen at Headspace
Adam Gonnerman at Igneous Quill
KW Leslie: Shine: not let it shine
Stephanie Moulton at Faith and the Environment Collide
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