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The Gospel Is the Power of God Unto Salvation, pt. 7

Part One     Part Two     Part Three     Part Four     Part Five     Part Six

Not long ago in evangelicalism, the terminology “lifestyle evangelism” arose.  Early in this series, I wrote that the lifestyle is part of the message, but cannot replace the gospel itself.  “The gospel is the power of God unto salvation” (Romans 1:16).

In my encounter with lifestyle evangelism, I found it to mean living a life a Christian should live around an unbeliever.  From the unbeliever’s experience with that life, he wants to know what caused it, and asks.  Then a Christian can explain in a non-pressure kind of way.  I believe the words “lifestyle evangelism” originated in the 1976 book by C. Bill Hogue, titled:  Love Leaves No Choice:  Lifestyle Evangelism.  Many characterize this lifestyle as “nice.”  Be nice to people.  They want you to be nice to them.  Then when they ask what’s different, you connect it to the gospel.

Instead of “Lifestyle Evangelism”

In a technical sense, I do not see lifestyle evangelism in the Bible.  The life surely should accompany the gospel.  It should not contradict the gospel.  Salvation comes through the gospel, which means preaching it.  That is what I see in the Bible.  Many do not think you are “nice” when you preach the gospel to them.

You want to preach the gospel, because it is the power of God unto salvation.  Salvation will not occur without the gospel and it comes through preaching.  That does not mean that you keep preaching the gospel to those who refuse to hear it.

Based on Romans 1:16, getting the gospel out to people is getting the power of God unto salvation out to people.  What the lost need for their salvation stays away from them, sometimes with the reasoning of lifestyle evangelism.  They think they do not want the gospel.  Usually they cannot know what they need and that they need the gospel, because they do not have the gospel.  The gospel gives the power that begins working toward a desire for salvation.

The Effect of the Knowledge of Romans 1:16

When I get up in the morning, I begin thinking about preaching the gospel.  Do I mean going door-to-door?  I could mean that.  I could ring a doorbell, wait for someone to open the door, and start to try to preach the gospel to someone.  What if I do not go door-to-door, does that remove the possibility of preaching it?

I think it is easier to get into the preaching of the gospel by going door-to-door.  It ensures I will do that. However, in very cold weather areas or during very cold weather times, not everyone will open the door to listen to you preach.  I am not attempting to discourage you from preaching in the Winter in cold weather areas.  What if people do not open the door because it is so cold or during a certain time of the year, you will not ring door bells or knock on the door because of the cold?

You have to look for and pray for opportunities to preach the gospel.  I call this being aggressive.  If I do not go door to door and I want to preach it to someone else, I cannot stay in my house.  I have to leave the house to see that happen.  I still must go to where people are, and then I give attention to possible opportunities.  If it is even possible, I must take that opportunity.

Taking the Opportunity with the Gospel

My wife and I right now are living in a small studio apartment.  We have no car, so we walk for what we need.  We have a very small refrigerator, so we have to go there more often.  As I get old (yes, I’m getting old), I have to stop more often.  Sit.  Rest.  That might mean getting a hot beverage somewhere.

It has been very rainy, cloudy, and dark where my wife and I are.  It was sunny yesterday for the first time in I don’t know how long.  We both got a coffee and we sat outside of the coffee place in the Winter across from a man, who sat outside.  I began talking to him and that turned into a gospel conversation with an explanation of the gospel.  Opportunities are there for the one looking for them and taking them.  I grabbed it, like reaching for something that I want and taking it off the shelf.  I just did it.

When I preached the gospel, it was not forced.  It is normal for me to bring the gospel into a conversation.  I wasn’t going through the motions, like someone who must just get this done.  No, I want to give the gospel, that is, to take opportunities.  I do, because the gospel is the power of God unto salvation (Romans 1:16).  I assumed that man across from me was lost and nothing was more important to him than salvation, and so, the gospel.

Know How To Start the Gospel

If you are going to preach the gospel to people, you will need to know how to start.  At first, you need to plan that.  You prepare for it.  You think about that first sentence you will say and the direction you will take.  The goal is to get from starting a conversation to preaching the gospel.  All of this relates to the gospel being the power of God unto salvation.

Before you ever get to how you start a conversation that leads to the gospel, you must think about how you will encounter people.  You will not preach to anyone if you do not see anyone.  You have to leave the house to do that.  Before you plan on how you begin a gospel conversation, you plan on where you will go to see people.

You may see people all the time.  People have many different realms in which they meet people.  How do they bring Jesus into those contacts?  Very often it starts with the trouble for everyone without the gospel.  People know they’re in trouble, which is how Paul begins the gospel in the book of Romans.

The gospel conversation could start earlier than the trouble of the lost person.  It could begin with the true nature of mankind.  He is not an accident.  God made him for a purpose.

I like to say to someone, “When Darwin looked at a cell, he saw a blob.”  Today when we look at a cell, we see irreducible complexity.  Even on a cellular level, life did not arise from an accident.

More to Come

What Is Illegal in Door-to-Door Evangelism in the United States?

Contrary to a typical criticism of door-to-door evangelism, I don’t believe that it’s the only way to evangelize.  There are many scriptural ways to preach the gospel besides door-to-door, and I would teach all of them.  However, I don’t believe a church can be obedient to the Bible without going door-to-door, because that’s the only way to preach the gospel to everyone, which God wants from us.  It is also seen in the example of Jesus and the Apostles.  Why would someone argue against that?

By my experience, which is a lot at this point, door-to-door specifically doesn’t see the most conversions.  That doesn’t mean don’t do it.  I can relate that many people can be saved through the contacts of a person who is saved through door-to-door, the contacts from one person being saved.  Those are still related to door-to-door.  But I digress from the point of my post.

The area of Oregon where we’re starting our church has many, many more “no soliciting” signs than the San Francisco Bay Area, where I started a church and then pastored it for thirty-three years.  I’m estimating at least five times more no soliciting signs here than there.  They are everywhere and they are also very inventive, long lists of things the person doesn’t want.

I’ve seen this sign at least five times:  “No Soliciting:  Seriously.  Don’t ring the bell.  Don’t make it awkward.”

I’ve been kicked out of two apartment complexes going door to door, and as I was leaving another neighborhood, someone told me I couldn’t do that and she would be taking it to the board.  Last week someone called me about a door-hanger, very insulting.  He said something like this:  “You obviously don’t read the Bible, so at least read my no-soliciting sign.”  And then he threatened me with physical harm if I came again.  I know it wasn’t me, but someone else in our new church, who had put the hanger on his door.

It’s a little worse in the coronavirus era, because people have the virus card that they carry very easily.  You’re there to preach the gospel, and they’re there to preach the dangers of the virus and the foolishness of not wearing the mask.  I don’t argue with them.  I let them spew forth their doctrine of physical safety, as I stand over ten feet away outdoors.  It is a message of self-righteousness, as they are preaching a message of physical salvation.

So I’ve had questions about the legality of door-to-door.  What is protected by the United Constitution?  People already don’t want to go door-to-door, so if there is the further layer of illegality, people will feel justified in not doing this thing that they don’t want to do.

In no necessary order, first, someone can legally kick us out of an apartment complex if it has a sign saying that they don’t allow evangelism or the like on their property.  That doesn’t mean you can’t evangelize there.  What it does mean is that the complex has the right to tell you to leave.  As long as they don’t tell you, you can keep doing it until they tell you.  When they tell you, understand that they have the right to kick you out.  It then becomes a trespassing situation.  Usually how it happens is that someone angrily calls management, complaining.  I’ve been told that it’s fine to visit someone who lives there, that you already know, but you can’t keep going cold turkey, once they tell you to stop.

Why go to an apartment complex when it might result in getting kicked out?  You already know the answer.  They need the gospel there, so keep trying until you get kicked out.  If you get kicked out, then you tried.  I would suggest put door hangers in apartment complexes where you’ve been kicked out.

Second, door hangers are not legally solicitation.  They are not.  If you see a no-solicitation sign on a door, put on a door hanger.  A door hanger has an official, legal title.  It is canvassing, and canvassing is protected by the Constitution.  It doesn’t say it in the Constitution, but rulings have been made by the Supreme Court that allow for canvassing.

For canvassing, there is a limitation.  If someone posts a “no trespassing” sign, then you could be charged with trespassing.  That’s also a ruling by the Supreme Court.  I never saw a no trespassing sign in town or the city in the San Francisco Bay Area.  I’ve seen again about five of those at least in Oregon.  I don’t go to a door with a no trespassing sign.

Three, is door-to-door evangelism solicitation?  Legally, it isn’t.  This statement was made in the decision, United States v. Kokinda, 497 U.S. 720 (1990):

Solicitation requires action by those who would respond: The individual solicited must decide whether or not to contribute (which itself might involve reading the solicitor’s literature or hearing his pitch), and then, having decided to do so, reach for a wallet, search it for money, write a check, or produce a credit card.  As residents of metropolitan areas know from daily experience, confrontation by a person asking for money disrupts passage and is more intrusive and intimidating than an encounter with a person giving out information. One need not ponder the contents of a leaflet or pamphlet in order mechanically to take it out of someone’s hand, but one must listen, comprehend, decide and act in order to respond to a solicitation.

Solicitation relates to a “contribution” legally.  The Supreme Court differentiated between the two in this recent decision.  In so doing, the Supreme Court is saying this is protected speech.

You could stand and argue with someone about the meaning of solicitation, but it’s going to be fruitless.  You would win in court.  It’s not you.  They probably mean you though, when they put up the sign.  For that reason, I honor the “no soliciting” sign to mean “no evangelism,” if it’s on an individual door.  I leave a tract or door hanger on the door and move on.  At the same time, I’ve expressed that I don’t care if you go ahead and knock on that door or ring that doorbell for evangelism.  I’ve done it many times.

What I’ve written here leaves plenty of opportunity for door to door evangelism. It’s saying that you can canvass everywhere, which means leaving the gospel on someone’s door.  The man who threatened me for a door hanger, I take him with a grain of salt.  He doesn’t know what he’s talking about.  Evangelism is not solicitation, so for sure canvassing isn’t solicitation.

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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