In the blog this week, I've been talking about how one evangelizes and how
evangelism means changing a person's beliefs. If you've missed the previous
posts, you can find them
here and
here. Today, I'd like to talk about the practical implications of witnessing, especially to those who hold to different faith backgrounds.
Last
night, I had an engaging conversation with two gentlemen who are Jehovah's
Witnesses. I had spoken with one
previously, and they were now coming to discuss more deeply whether Jesus
was God. I had offered them the
John 1:3 argument in
our previous meeting and now continued to show how Jesus does things only God
can do, has attributes and powers that only God has, and claims titles reserved
to God alone. We spoke about how Jesus Himself said that worship was reserved
to God alone (Matt. 4:10) and even when John, being overwhelmed at the vision in
the book of Revelation fell down at the angel's feet, the angel rebuked him and
said that as a created being, he didn't deserve worship. Worship is reserved for
God alone. (Rev 19:10). I then took them to Hebrews 1:5-6, which reads:
"For
to which of the angels did God ever say, 'You are my Son, today I have begotten
you'? Or again, 'I will be to him a father, and he shall be to me a son'? And
again, when he brings the firstborn into the world, he says, 'Let all God's
angels worship him.'"
My guests had never heard about this passage before.
They quickly turned to Hebrews in their New World Translation and breathed a
momentary sigh of relief because Hebrews 1:6 reads a bit differently there:
"And let all of God's angels do obeisance to him." They began to say how doing
obeisance is a simple act of recognition. However, I happened to have a 1961
version of the NWT in my library. In that version, the Greek word proskyneō
(προσκυνέω) is translated worship. Even the Jehovah's Witnesses' own scriptures
said that God the Father commanded the worship of Jesus by the angels! I further
explained that this Greek word is the same word that Jesus used in the Matthew
passage and that the Revelation passage.
As the night went on, I offered
other evidences, both biblically and logically. While there were many things
that they had never considered before, they held fast to the theology of the
Watchtower, even resorting to show that their good deeds proved the Watchtower
was God's appointed organization.
But why? Why wouldn't these men, who truly
were earnest in their time with me, want to change their beliefs when faced with
so many arguments and even the proof of change verified by the two different
approaches to Hebrews 1:6? The evidence that the Watchtower was changing the
words of scripture to suit their purposes was there in black and white! The
reason is this: not all beliefs are the same and people will not give up on
those beliefs that are deeply held so easily.
Think about it for a moment. If
someone was raised by his family in the faith of the Watchtower, then you are
telling him that not only does he believe the wrong thing, but the faith to
which he dedicated his entire life is a fraud. More than that, if he
embraces the historic Christian faith, then he is acknowledging that all his
family and friends are all going to hell! That's a lot to swallow in one
sitting. Think about what you would have to give up if you were to renounce
Christianity for, say, Islam. All your memories of childhood Christmases would
be an exercise in wrong practice. Your children will not have that same
experience. Your parents would be considered "infidels", committing the sin of
Shirk by ascribing attributes to Jesus that are Allah's alone. You would have to
give up your social time at your church and start again.
Add to all
this the spiritual war that is also raging as the Devil seeks to keep every soul
out of heaven and you can soon realize that there is no "magic bullet." There is
no phrase or argument that will convert people. You can only be faithful
to deliver the message as effectively as you can so God may use that
faithfulness to His glory.
Sometimes I think Christians don't realize
momentous an event it is when a lost soul comes to Christ. It takes a lot of
work, a lot of prayer, and a true reliance on the Holy Spirit. That's why it's
important to keep sharing. Continue to provide new information to that person
and continue to show the contradictions that stem from their existing beliefs.
Who knows what God would use to open the ears of one who is lost? We do know
that God wants to use the exchange of ideas to reach the unsaved. Romans 10:14
tells us "How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how
are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to
hear without someone preaching?"
I know it's hard work and sometimes it's
easy to feel that you're wasting your time. I've felt that way, too. But take
comfort in the words that Paul shared with the Christians in Galatia, "And let
us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not
give up."