My disagreements with a trendy, hip pastor on missions and witnessing

So I am visiting my parents and my pet bird today in the city I grew up in, and I went to church as usual. The church in my hometown just got a new senior pastor who is one of those hip, trendy pastors. So far, my friends and I who attend this church have some concerns about him.

So the pastor two points in this sermon today: 1) we should be concerned with world missions and 2) we should be “witnessing” in non-cognitive ways. You’ll see what he means by these in a minute.

Missions

Now to be fair to the pastor, I don’t really know his full philosophy on missions. He was giving a sermon, and he had time for one example. His example of missions was that “wealthy” Christians in the West should give money to groups like World Vision that provide for the immediate physical needs of poor people in other countries. So his target for evangelism is not a wealthy Western professional who lives next door to him and isn’t impressed with food. His target for evangelism is someone who is starving in another country, who is at a disadvantage when it comes to education and poverty. And his preferred missionary is not someone who has studied to know how to persuade using knowledge, it’s someone nice and kind who is bringing food to starving people and then presenting the gospel to them through an interpreter as they eat the food.

Witnessing

The example the pastor gave for witnessing to non-Christians was to pray with them. He said that there would be less room for “hate” (his actual word) if Christians spent more time praying with non-Christians. The first thing I thought of when he said this was Mormon missionaries establishing the truth of their religion with people by praying for a “burning in the bosom”. Regarding his mention of “hate”, he didn’t mention gay marriage specifically, but I think that is the most reasonable context for the word “hate” in this culture. If we prayed with people and started caring for them and being nice to them (no mention of sin and repentance, note), then our “hate” for them would decrease.

So I want to make some basic points about what was said and what was left out.

Truth

At no point in this sermon or any any other sermon I have seen delivered by this pastor has the issue of how we know truth, or how we demonstrate that something is true, ever been addressed. I have not ever heard this pastor give a sermon on how he knows that God exists, how he knows that the Bible is reliable, and how he knows who Jesus is.

Persuasion

I was very careful today to pay attention to how the pastor was getting the audience on board with what he is saying. And I think I’ve hit on his method of persuading. It’s not to make arguments and to supply evidence, or even to quote the Bible in context. He relied a lot on hipness and emotional resonance with his audience. I think he expects us to accept what he is saying because he is able to 1) share illustrations from his life experiences (farming, this time), or 2) name rock bands like “Cold Play”. So his approach is more like “I’m just like you, so you should believe what I’m telling you”.

Evangelism

His two strategies for evangelism above seemed to be 1) giving money to Christian groups who can then travel to other countries to discuss Christianity with people who are receiving gifts from them and 2) offering to pray with non-Christians. I do not think that merely expressing theological opinions and then handing someone food or clothing is a good strategy for evangelism. I think it is permissible, it’s just not the way I see it being done in the Bible. I realize that there are going to be cases where someone accepts Jesus on the basis of this sort of evangelism, and in the best case, they might even go on to become a great Christian scholar who understands the truth of these matters so well that they can present it to non-Christians with authority. That would be the ideal case. But I think when I read the New Testament, the appeal to non-Christians in evangelism is an appeal to truth, based on the historical event of the resurrection, for example. I asked a friend of mine who knows the Bible well, about whether giving charity to people is ever a method of evangelism, and he said he couldn’t think of any. His preference for this evangelism-by-charity makes me wonder about people who have non-Christians living right next to them in the West, or even in secular Europe, who nevertheless choose to go to places where they can use the leverage of financial goods to get into conversations with people about spiritual things. It’s easy to go to a foreign country and talk to someone uneducated who can’t challenge you because they want the food you brought. It’s harder to evangelize your neighbor who is an atheist and a medical doctor – you would have to read books, and demonstrate the truth of things. Maybe that’s why so many people prefer the former to the latter – it’s easier.

His second method of evangelism (praying with non-Christians) seems to me to be impractical. It seems to me that it would work on people who do not have questions, and who are looking to decide theological / spiritual claims by their emotions. Prayer is not able to establish the historical fact of the resurrection in a debate situation, for example. You should pray before and after making a case for the resurrection, but you should at least know how to make the case for the resurrection to a non-Christian. Again, I am not familiar with a case in the New Testament in which a non-Christian, non-theist was ever approached with prayer alone. I know that Paul reasons from the Scriptures with people (Acts 16-17), and Peter appeals to the resurrection (Acts 2). His approach is more like what Mormons do, because they can’t demonstrate truth using arguments and facts. If this guy can only use Mormon techniques, that’s disturbing – like he has reduced Christianity to a flavor of ice cream that you either like or not, depending on your feelings or whether people are nice to you. Prayer is not used to demonstrate the truth of anything in any other context in real-life. Why is he trying to use it with Christianity? Is Christianity not the same as any other area of knowledge?

Economics

Now, I sense that this pastor has a concern for the poor, and I agree with him that charity is Biblical, and even that we can give money to big organizations like World Vision to help the poor in other countries, (although I don’t like World Vision). But I think where I get annoyed is that this is his only stated method of helping the poor. But I prefer a different method of helping the poor, namely the method that you see in countries like Hong Kong or Chile. That method is free market capitalism. And all you need to do to push that method is to sit with an economics book, learn what policies drive economic growth, and then push them in the public square. I’m being frank here. I think it can be demonstrated that foreign aid, for example, accomplishes little or nothing to help the poor, and often hurts the poor. What we need to do is to trade with these countries, promote economic growth in these countries, in the same sustainable, organic way that growth occurred in countries like Hong Kong and Chile. But what I get from this pastor is a kind of naive “Michael Moore” anti-corporation vibe. I think I can say without being proved wrong that we will never here any presentation from him that addresses the need to learn economics in order to promote the policies that will drive organic, sustainable economic growth in these counties, (e.g. – micro-loans, free trade, etc.). I do think it’s important to give to charity, though.

Advice for this pastor

If he read this post, then my advice to this pastor would be to take a two-pronged approach. If his concern is evangelism, then I recommend that he speak to some non-Christians in this country, and then when he sees that they have questions about God’s existence, gay marriage, the resurrection, abortion, sexual ethics, religious pluralism, miracles, evolution, creation, the reliability of the NT documents, etc., then he can do something different than Mormons do – he can embrace apologetics. Then he will be able to do missionary work right here in the West, with the educated professionals that God providentially placed right next door to him and right next door to his flock, too. Also, instead of worrying about how much we “hate” others, maybe he can offer Christians some advice on how to explain and defend religious liberty, which is under attack from the very groups he implies, in my opinion, that we are “hating” Also, it might be good for him to bash McDonald’s chicken nuggets less, and to defend the unborn more, in his sermons.

Second, if his other concern is to help the poor, then I recommend that he focus on promoting economic growth and individual charity. I think the big problem I have with this guy is that everything he says is so childish and simplistic. I agree we should want to help the poor, and that we should be charitable. But I think that when you are talking about poverty in other countries, then we should do everything possible. And everything possible certainly includes becoming educated about economics and the policies that are known to lift poor nations out of poverty. This is what people who are really interested in solving the problem would focus on. If you’re going to talk about poverty, then talk about it based on knowledge. Don’t leave it at a kindergarten level.

11 thoughts on “My disagreements with a trendy, hip pastor on missions and witnessing”

  1. Persuasion goes beyond charity. Imagine an educator who wants to convince a group of people that the earth revolves around the sun, and not vice versa. Yet, he says that we should convince them not through science and argument, but entirely through being kind and charitable to them.
    Most of us would think of such an educator as insane, yet people think this way about convincing people that Jesus was raised from the dead.

    Like

  2. It’s very convenient to preach to people to give money to the poor in a foreign country. You never have to get your hands dirty, hug or meet the poor person. What our pastors don’t understand is that the poor live across the street. They may have fine houses, but if they don’t have Christ, they have zero Treasure. I have gone door to door, baptized people who lived across the street from the Church, found women living in sin and bondage who wanted to return to Church but couldn’t because they were financially dependent on the man they were living with. I have found poor people one block from the Church who wanted Christ, but only received material relief from the Church. Why are our pastors so afraid to meet people outside the congregation, who so easily could fit inside the Church with Christ Crucified? I’ve never met such a bunch of cowards. Mother Teresa of Calcutta said the greatest poverty is no love. Pope Francis marches up to the most disfigured of people and hugs them. He says if you meet with the poor and you don’t touch them, you have not touched them. May God forgive us for our squeamishness. God bless you. Susan Fox http://www.christsfaithfulwitness.com

    Like

  3. Could not agree more. 1. Return all of the expensive and ineffective American missionaries from other countries, and spread the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ to Amerika. 2. Shut down the 90% of American churches that are either irrelevant to the culture, or worse, delivering the many false gospels that have harmed our culture. Perhaps we should seriously consider eliminating the tax exempt status of churches to weed out the chaff? 3. For foreign missions, donate your money to organizations like Gospel for Asia, which uses inexpensive native missionaries for witnessing, delivers 100% of field-directed donations to the field, and places the Gospel (with mention of sin!) first. What good does it do to make a sinner comfortable on earth only to have them spend an eternity in Hell?

    Like

  4. I agree with what you’ve said, and though I thankfully have not personally witnessed this sort of thing, I’m from the same general area as Rob Bell, so I have some indirect experience with Feelgoodism as Christianity.

    A big part of the problem is that the only permitted virtue these days is charity. Holiness, chastity, prudence, discipline; those are antiquated and seen as “holier-than-thou” behaviors. Only charity is a virtue in the eyes of these hip Pastors and teachers. The problem is, charity is only a virtue when it lines up with the rest in its proper place. On its own, it becomes benevolence, which is just a justification for the denial of rights.

    This is a book I’ve been meaning to get on the topic. See if you can find a used copy or one at your local library; from what I’ve heard of it, it addresses exactly the type of silliness that is at the root of what you describe here:

    Like

  5. Wintery, the man is a pastor. When have you ever known a pastor to give a lecture on foreign missiology by way of economics? Sure the man is naive, but most ministers/pastors/priests I have ever known have been naive in this department. But if I’m totally honest, I don’t expect them to be read up on the subject of free-market capitalism and its alternatives. Yes, they should be educated to defend their belief in Christ as an objective fact, but the latter feels rather nitpicky. Ideally, should they be well-read in all these areas? Well, yes. But lets face it, this is asking rather a lot.
    My main problem with his witnessing method is that is could be perceived (I know I would have thought so) as blatant bribery or psychological manipulation of poor starving Africans (at least, when not applied to people who can question you). And you’re absolutely correct regarding his ‘prayer approach for the unbeliever next door’.
    I would like to give the man credit for addressing the subject of ‘hate’ though. I only wish he had been clearer on what he meant by it. For example (and I’m not looking at anyone in particular here), there has been a number of triumphalistic comments floating around regarding Gene Robinson’s divorce. Such comments really do balance on the edge of hate in my opinion and we should check ourselves to avoid this behaviour. The man is broken and hurting. Regardless of his bad decisions, we should be cautious not to be mean-spirited and focus on being constructive. If this (or something like it) is what the pastor was attempting to criticise, that’s awesome. If he meant something silly like “being kindly, but vocally anti-same-sex-marriage = hate” then not so much.

    Like

  6. Performing acts of service before presenting the gospel is biblical and it’s the method often demonstrated by Jesus. Notice that Jesus would enter a town and perform healings and other works that would draw an audience. Jesus would then use the opportunity to teach the gospel and explain God’s kingdom in parables etc.
    Acts of service can open doors since people often want to know you care about them before they are willing to listen to what you have to say. However, I agree it’s possible to be all service and no gospel which is another faulty path.

    Like

  7. Well, you certainly hit on a topic close to my heart on the evangelism to the FOREIGN starving masses. The reality is that most of this human suffering comes from living under a godless tyrannical despot.

    So, we go evangelize those who upon being converted become victims of their own government. This from a nation of believers that won’t, and most probably can’t, defend their own LIBERTY of Christian beliefs right here at home.

    The irony is so appalling that it makes me sick to think about it.

    Then to continue on your “hipster” pastor meme…

    My husband and I recently left a church after years of membership due to certain “irregularities”. It is interesting to note that the chief elder was the local superintendent of the school district….and in observing him I never got the impression he was a Lot constantly troubled by all the wickedness that he came across in “doing business”, but instead a man who understood that his great wealth and position was evidence of God’s satisfaction with him.

    What correction and direction could such an elder offer the pastor or the church body? Or, a pastor unable to prick the conscience of a man delivering the community’s children into the hands of Satan – only one master at a time – which gets us directly to the fault of the church for the state of our community, period. The blind leading the blind into darkness….

    Like

Leave a comment