Archive for reaching the lost

Reaching Begins with Prayer

My dad owns a farm in northwest Louisiana. During the season when calves are being born, he will walk onto his porch at night with a rifle and a spotlight to keep coyotes away. He knows that many times the cow will seclude herself and birth the calf. Even though they choose seclusion, they need the group!

Like the farmer, you as a Sunday School leader have the privilege of praying and caring for group members and reaching new ones. Consistent prayer is a powerful tool! Yet, prayer remains the most undervalued treasure in the Christian life.

Wait, what!?

Prayer is NOT reserved for a special few but is to be practiced by all believers. The truth is that a believer learns this best in connection with a group of believers, like a Sunday School class. This vital relationship will provide at least three essentials for the believer:

  • Protection from predators
  • A foundation from which to flourish
  • Relationships that foster revival

A sheep is the most commonly used metaphor to describe a Christian in the New Testament. In Luke 15 we learn three valuable principles when guiding sheep to spiritual maturity.

First, sheep need one another to survive. I learned decades ago on my dad’s farm that predators rarely go after the herd, they prey on the isolated farm animal. Sunday school leaders must guide their members to regularly seek how to minister to participants within their group, welcome the wanderers looking for a new flock, AND provide an open door for the isolated individuals who may have never been born into a flock.

Second, sheep need the flock in order to thrive. In John 10:10 Jesus tells us that He offers abundant life to all who follow Him. You see, the Christian life is not just about surviving. Jesus tells us that His goal is that we flourish from the foundation that He has provided in the local church. So what’s the deal with believers who lack peace and power? Either they are not accessing the power available to them or they have never genuinely been born into “the flock.”

Third, sheep need deep relationships that lead to revival. The natural tendency of most sheep is to wander and push boundaries. Many wake up one day separated from the flock and lacking the energy to find their way back. Leaders, we must consistently provide a place for wandering sheep to return. To be like Christ, we must be willing to leave the 99.

Friends, if we fail at anything, may it not be in our efforts to reach wandering sheep or those who have never been born into the flock! And a key ingredient for ministering within the flock and reaching those outside the flock can be found in a group of believers who fervently pray.

Written by Dr. Scott Sullivan, Discipleship Catalyst with the Georgia Baptist Mission Board

A Biblical Perspective on Reaching Lost People

Matthew 28:19-20
“Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe everything I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”

When Jesus ascended back to the right hand of the father, ,he left us with one great task. He called us to make disciples. The focus in Matthew 28 is on the process of making disciples, and too often we spend all of our time choosing to focus on a portion of this great task, but not the entire commission.

The first part of the mission Jesus gave us is to take the Gospel to all peoples of the world. That includes the neighbor across the street as well as the unreached people groups. The Great Commission, without evangelism, clearly misses the mark. There are billions of people alive today that have no hope, and we have the Truth of life. In your Sunday School classes and Small Groups, always remember that people who are far from God must always be a clear and central focus of the mission.

The other key aspect to this task is that we must teach people to obey all that Christ commanded. That means that we help them to know God, to live out His word and to pass their faith and life on to the next generation. This is essence of the Great Commission. In truth, we are called to know more about God and we need to be life long learners. However, the Great Commission is not focused on merely learning about God and His word; it’s about learning to be obedient to God through His word. Someday in eternity we will spend our time at the feet of Jesus knowing Him more and more. However, our time on this earth is limited. Therefore, we must share the truth of God’s word and focus on raising up the generations to come to do the same.

To have a robust and biblical perspective we must see all of this as part of the command of God from evangelism all the way to multiplication. So the question today is, are you leading your groups to think about reaching people, helping them grow and then sending them back out into the world to continue to multiply? Time is of the essence!

Lance Crowell serves the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention as an Associate in the Church Ministries Department.