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GROWING
EDGES
Each of my letters to you this year has centered
on some aspect of the "Reformation of the Heart"–a
reformation centered upon our actual obedience
to Jesus Christ as the result of our personality
being increasingly transformed by the power of
God. It is this world-wide reformation that I
believe we are in the beginning stages of right
now and which will intensify as the century progresses.
In
the last Perspective I made the case that
Jesus is the unique Savior of the world, the divine
Son, the second person of the Trinity; further,
that he is the divine Logos who is present everywhere
and is not blotted out nor overwhelmed by the
powers of darkness, that he is the true light
which enlightens every person coming into the
world, and that the saving light of Jesus Christ
reaches out to all peoples, even those who have
never heard his name. If all this is true,
then why is evangelism and missions necessary?
In April I promised to address this question in
the "next Perspective."1
So
then, why are we to go into all the world and
preach the gospel if, as we have seen, all peoples
have a knowledge of God, and, through the saving
light of Jesus Christ, they can be pleasing
to God without any special revelation (Ps. 19;
John 1:9, 14:6; Acts 10:34-35; Rom. 1:20, 2:6-29)?
Because, very simply, "though they knew God, they
did not honor him as God or give thanks to him,
but they became futile in their thinking, and
their senseless minds were darkened" (Rom. 2:21).
Our world, you see, is full of rebels against
God and failures before God. For every rare person
who, without human aid, turns toward the light
of Jesus Christ there are thousands, perhaps millions,
who "walk in darkness, and do not know the way
to go, because the darkness has brought on blindness"
(1 Jn. 2:11).
This
is why the great Apostle Paul is so insistent
upon the necessity of human messengers to make
the good news of the gospel clear and compelling:
"How can they call on one in whom they have not
believed? And how are they to believe in one of
whom they have never heard? And how are they to
hear without someone to proclaim him? And how
are they to proclaim him unless they are sent?
As it is written, ‘How beautiful are the feet
of those who bring good news!'" (Rom. 10:14-15).
All
people are equally loved by God, and he is constantly,
lovingly reaching out to all human beings. And
to love God is to share this love of his for all
people alike, and to reach out to them–constantly,
lovingly–as God does. Therefore, for as long as
there are people who "walk in darkness and do
not do what is true" (1 Jn. 1:6) there will be
the need–nay, the necessity–for evangelism and
mission.
Peace
and joy,
Richard J. Foster
1
My answer to this crucial question is coming to
you later than I had hoped since we did not print
a July Perspective due to our restricted
financial picture. It costs us about $8,000.00
to print and send a Perspective to the
25,000 folk that make up our Renovaré family,
and in June we just did not have the monies. However,
your response to my last Heart-to-Heart Pastoral
letter has been beyond anything we could have
hoped or imagined. Because of your sacrificial
generosity we have enough to cover all of our
needs and even enable us to dream the future in
new and creative ways. Thank you so very much
for every gift, both in monies and in loving prayer
concern.
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