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ANTON, Ohio—Our goal in youth ministry is to help children, teens and college-age young adults become active followers of Jesus. A follower of Jesus is one who is in communion with God, through Christ. In that relationship, Jesus gives them the Holy Spirit, through whom they share in Jesus’ love for God and for people and are equipped and empowered to actively participate with Jesus in his ministry patterns.
Jesus’ ministry patterns:
win,
build, equip, multiply
The four Gospels illustrate the patterns of Jesus’ earthly ministry that culminated in Jesus’ command to his followers to continue doing what he had done in their presence—“make disciples” (Matthew 28:19). This work, often referred to as the great commission, has four essential, interrelated parts:
1) Win the lost: seek out those who do not know Jesus and invite them to be his followers.
2) Build believers: build up in the faith those who have come to know Jesus.
3) Equip workers: train and coach believers to become active and skillful workers in Jesus’ disciplemaking ministry.
4) Multiply leaders: identify, coach and then deploy leaders who will lead other workers in disciplemaking ministries.
In the last two editions of this column, we have examined youth ministry from the perspectives of building believers and equipping workers. In this issue, we’ll look further at how youths can be equipped for their part in winning the lost—reaching out to friends, family and classmates who do not know Jesus, with the intent of introducing them to their Savior and Lord.
Essential perspectives
In order for disciples of Jesus (including his young disciples), to be effective in winning the lost, there are some essential biblical perspectives they must understand and embrace:
1. People not in communion with Jesus are “lost.” Jesus contrasts those who are lost with those who are saved. Thus to be lost is to be unsaved. We cannot be effective at reaching out to the lost until we understand their great need for salvation.
Our reaction to their “lostness” is
not one of panic, revulsion or condemnation. Rather our reaction is that of
Jesus, who loves them and seeks them out in order that he may give them what
they truly need: salvation (Luke 19:10). Jesus invites his disciples to
participate with him in seeking the lost as shepherds searching for lost sheep
(Luke 15:3-7), fishers of men (Matthew 4:18-20) and laborers bringing in the
harvest (Matthew 9:37-38).
2. Seeking the lost is not a passive activity. Jesus actively seeks out lost people as illustrated in his parables of the lost sheep, the lost coin and the lost son (Luke 15). Scripture makes it clear that Jesus invites his followers to partner with him in actively seeking lost people in order that they may come to know Jesus as their Savior.
Only God can save a lost person, but Jesus calls on his disciples to be like Andrew, who brought his brother Peter to Jesus (John 1:40-42). Our goal is to bring the lost to Christ—that is what we mean by “winning the lost.”
3. The motivation for seeking to bring the lost to Christ must be Jesus’ motivation—a heart of love for people. Another way to say this is that our great commission work must be motivated by a great commandment heart (as in our youth ministry logo). We seek to bring lost people to Christ because, and only because, we love them.
The heart and life of an evangelist
But how, we might ask, are the lost won to Christ? And how do we equip children, teens and college-age young adults to be active in winning their lost peers to Christ? A word of caution is in order. So often, we seek after programs and formulas. But when it comes to winning the lost to Christ, what we need is a heart that is expressed in a lifestyle—a certain rhythm of relating with others—in this case, with those who do not know Jesus as their Savior and Lord.
In seeking the lost, Jesus is our
model, and so we desire to understand and embrace his heart—in this case his
passionate and tender love for those separated from him. Jesus loves the lost,
he weeps and aches for them—he reaches out to them. Jesus’ love for the lost,
like all aspects of God’s love, is “poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit
who was given to us” (Romans 5:5, New King James Version). Therefore, we seek
communion with Jesus, in the Holy Spirit, so that we might share in Jesus’ love
for lost people.
Jesus’ love, beating in our hearts, then leads us to take appropriate and intentional action to seek out lost people. In Jesus’ personal ministry, embraced and replicated by his first disciples, we see this action involving a three-part pattern that may be summarized in the acronym CPR, which stands for cultivate (friendships with lost peers), plant (gospel truth) and reap (a new follower of Jesus). As we, youth ministry leaders and workers, practice these patterns in our own lives, we are enabled and emboldened to teach the same patterns to the youths we serve. Let’s examine each one.
Cultivate friendships with lost peers
Winning a lost person to Christ involves a relationship with us through which our friend is introduced to a relationship with Jesus. Lost people are not enemies for us to conquer, nor are they projects for us to complete. Rather, they are people created in the image of God, yet separated from God and in slavery to sin. They are in desperate need of a Savior.
Because we love them, we seek to befriend them. Because of Jesus’ love for the lost, we are intentional about cultivating friendships with lost people. As we do, we are careful not to compromise our obedience to Christ. Like Jesus, we are “friends of sinners” (Luke 7:34), yet we do not participate in their sinful behaviors. This is a challenge, but it is one that Jesus has met and will help us meet.
As youth ministry leaders and
workers, we seek to encourage and train our youths to make contact with and
establish friendships with peers who do not know Christ. We model for them
genuine love for the lost, and a commitment to go where they are—seeking to show
them Jesus’ love by being with them in their lives—in their joys and sorrows.
Just showing up is half the battle. We also teach them to be in continuing
prayer for their lost friends, knowing that God alone can open a heart to be
receptive to us and to what we will share with them.
Plant gospel truth
Much of our impact in the lives of the lost comes through good deeds—actions that convey Jesus’ care and concern for hurting people. Jesus’ earthly ministry included feeding the hungry, healing the sick and blind and setting the oppressed free from demonic influence. However, Jesus did not stop with good deeds—he paired his acts of mercy with words that proclaimed the gospel truth (Luke 4:18-19, 43; 9:10-11).
Jesus calls on us to participate
with him in both his compassionate deeds and his words of testimony (Luke 9:1-2,
6). When accompanied by good works, our testimonies about the goodness of
Jesus will have a much greater, positive impact on lost friends. Our desire in
both our deeds and words is to help them develop a positive outlook on Jesus.
As we share life with lost friends, it is inevitable that they will encounter times of difficulty and pain—life happens to us all. At such times, our words of comfort and of encouragement that God loves them and seeks to help them are particularly appropriate and powerful.
If our words are not positively received, we are not offended, nor do we abandon our lost friends. Rather, our love for them is unconditional and we are willing to continue cultivating and planting for as long as circumstances allow. We trust the timing and the outcome to the Holy Spirit.
As youth ministry leaders and workers, we seek to equip our youths with the ability to share their testimonies about the goodness of Christ in their lives. We help them to see God at work in their own lives, and we give them encouragement, models and opportunities to practice sharing with others about God’s goodness.
Reap a new follower of Jesus
As we continue to cultivate friendships with lost peers, taking advantage of opportunities to plant truths about Jesus into those friendships, the time will often come when the fruit of our efforts will be ready for reaping. The reaping of a new follower of Jesus involves sharing the simple yet essential details of the gospel with our friend. In this sharing, we explain how God offers salvation through Jesus’ death and resurrection and how they need that salvation and may receive it by turning to God in repentance and faith.
We explain this and then invite them to respond. We pray that we will reap a genuine response that will accompany their birth as children of God—members of his family and citizens of his kingdom.
In our youth ministries, we work to be sure that our youths clearly understand the essentials of the gospel of salvation in Christ and are able to explain it to others in age-appropriate ways. Our goal in this is not to pressure our kids to be evangelists, but to help them experience the joy of knowing Jesus, the joy of understanding the glorious gospel of grace and the privilege and blessing it is to share that gospel with a friend.
Strategies for equipping
youths
for peer evangelism
In describing the basics of CPR, I
have noted several goals we have as youth ministry leaders and workers in
equipping our youths for their personal involvement in winning lost peers to
Christ. To help you in thinking about the effectiveness of your youth ministry,
let me conclude with a list of questions to stimulate your thinking concerning
how you can be more successful in this equipping (my thanks to Sonlife
Ministries for this list):
Cultivating
* Are the youths in your group consistently praying for their lost friends’ salvation?
* Are you regularly challenging your youths to make new unchurched friends?
* Are you providing regular events designed to help your youths build friendships with the unchurched?
Planting
* Do your youths share their testimonies in evangelistic ways at school?
* Do you host activities where unchurched youths can be exposed in positive ways to truths about Jesus?
* Are you encouraging and equipping your youths to have on-going “truth based” dialogues with their unchurched friends?
Reaping
* Do you regularly equip your youths with the ability to share the gospel?
* Do your youths “own” the conviction that all people need salvation and that Jesus is the only way for that salvation?
* Do you regularly share the gospel in relational ways with the non-churched visitors to your youth group?
For more ideas and further equipping concerning CPR:
1. Attend one of the 2003 WCG-USA regional conferences that include the seminar “The Great Commandment.”
2. Take some of your kids to a WCG SEP camp, for training in personal evangelism using the CPR model.
3. Check out Ted Johnston’s Evangelism Toolbox posted on the web at http://churches.wcg.org/ greatlakes/articles/EVANGELISM%20TOOLBOX.doc (click on “cancel” when you see the box asking for a password).
4. Take some of your youths to a Sonlife Youth Ministry training conference (called SEMP and EQUIP)—see www.sonlife.com/ semp/index.html or www.sonlife. com/equip/index.asp
Copyright © Worldwide Church of God, 2003