Witness
and Evangelism
Among People of Other Faiths
From a brochure of the
same title, produced and distributed by the Office of Ecumenical
and Interfaith Relations, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), 100 Witherspoon
St., Louisville, KY 40202-1396.
The Brief Statement of Faith
of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) reads:
"The Spirit justifies
us by grace through faith,
sets us free to accept ourselves
and to love God and neighbor...
the Spirit gives us courage...to witness among all peoples to
Christ as Lord and Savior, to unmask idolatries in Church and
culture,
to hear the voices of peoples long silenced, and to work with
others for justice,
freedom, and peace."
Book of
Confessions, 10.4
Christians affirm
that the gospel of Jesus Christ is good news for all people and
that we, as his disciples, are called to share it in a spirit of
openness and trust. We make our witness among neighbors who live
by other religious convictions and ideological persuasions.
The motive
of the church's witness is God's love for all people. Important
expressions of the love of God are found in ministries to human
need and in service for justice, freedom, and peace. Witness is
also given through loving and sometimes silent presence with others
in their struggles, joys, and sorrows. Nevertheless, an integral
part of the church's mission is spoken testimony to the wonderful
things that God has done for us in Christ and an invitation to others
to join us in praising God through Christ.
God addresses us in human
life through experience. Our approach as witnesses, therefore, is
confessional. We can only express and share what we have experienced
and what we have learned through the historical self-disclosure
of the God who brought a people out of Ur and Egypt and who taught
them through priests and prophets, psalmists and sages. We express
what we have learned through the particularity of God's self-revelation
in Jesus of Nazareth, in whom the Christian community has found
the way, the truth, and the life.
God is both the author and
the content of the revelation to which our faith responds. Christians
understand that Christ is the central revelation of the triune God.
This is not to say that God has acted in a self-revealing way only
in Jesus. Christians are free to acknowledge their center without
concentrating on defining the boundaries of God's self-disclosure.
The God revealed in Jesus Christ is the creator and ruler of everything.
Therefore, Christians are called to relate to all aspects of God's
creation with love, respect, and the expectation of seeing the Creator's
hand in what we meet.
From a Christian point of
view, it is the relationship of God and humans that matters most
in religion. All people must be presumed to stand in relationship
to God. Though we are all sinners, all nations are God's children,
created so that they might search for and perhaps find God (cf.
Acts 17:26-28).
The goodness and wisdom of
people of other religions often appear to have been nourished by
their particular faith. An encounter of faiths in witness and evangelism
places the Christian, as well as the other, in a humble relationship
before God. It leaves the Christian open to receive from the other
as well as to give. We may recognize that we have learned something
about God from others insofar as this enriches our relationship
with the God of Israel who is revealed in Jesus Christ and who demands
our allegiance.
Suggestions for a life
of witness and evangelism among people of other religions:
Churches are free to choose
the ways they consider best to announce the good news of the gospel,
mindful that every methodology illustrates or betrays the gospel
we announce. In all our communication of the gospel, power must
be subordinate to love.
- Witness to your neighbors
in a humble, repentant, and joyful spirit.
- Share your faith as
a part of genuine dialogue. Be prepared to listen and speak.
Listen sympathetically to understand others' experiences and views
as well as sharing your own.
- Respect the humanity
of those whose faiths differ from your own and the seriousness
of their religious quests and commitments.
- Acknowledge your struggles
and lack of all the answers.
- Be truthful about your
disagreements with others. Do not attempt to achieve an artificial
harmony with other religions by bending your own faith in Jesus
Christ.
- As your Christian affirmation
meets the faith of others, remember that you are not called
to respond in judgment but in awareness of the limitless saving
presence, power, and grace of God.
- As a duty of honesty,
know about another faith when you speak concerning it.
Especially when you do not agree, remember the importance of not
misrepresenting others.
- Do not contribute to
an identification of Christianity with western cultural imperialism
by dishonoring other religions or the cultures in which they are
expressed. Recognize in yourself and others any pride of culture
or fear of human differences. Resist the temptation to respond
with fear or hostility if you are confronted with proselytizing
efforts from other groups.
- Affirm that, by God's
grace in Jesus Christ, some aspects of every culture must be transformed
while other aspects should be discarded. Recognize that this task
remains to be completed in us, as Christian witnesses.
- Seek common ground
for putting concrete ethical concerns into action together with
people of other faiths. Acknowledge one another's religious motivations.
- Remember that deeds
of Christian love are as important as verbal statements in
communicating God's love to most people. Although Reformed Christians
assert that actions convey God's truth with greater clarity as
they are connected with words, be aware that the character of
an act of love or service may easily be damaged by trying too
directly to make a religious point.
- Confess frankly the
great wrongs against adherents to other religions that have been
committed in the name of Christianity-for instance, in the
recurring persecution of Jews and in crusading aggression against
Muslims.
See General Assembly actions
on which this content is based: Witness and Evangelism 1983, Nature
of Revelation 1987, Turn to the Living God 1991.
Resources
Armstrong, Richard S. Faithful
Witnesses: A Course in Evangelism for Presbyterian Laity. Participant's
Workbook, PPH#02407550. Leader's Guide, PPH #02407630.
Confessing Christian Faith
in a Pluralistic Society. Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural
Research, Collegeville Mn., 1995.
Muck, Terry. Is the Christian
Faith Superior to Other Religions? Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Office of Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations, Occasional Paper
#7, 1997. PDS#74-292-97-001
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
The Nature of Revelation in the Christian Tradition from a Reformed
Perspective. 199th General Assembly (1987). OGA#88-068.
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
Turn to the Living God: A Call to Evangelism in Jesus Christ's
Way. 203rd General Assembly (1991). OGA#91-018.
World Council of Churches.
Mission and Evangelism: An Ecumenical Affirmation. 1982;
affirmed by 195th General Assembly (1983). Copy available from Office
of Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations.
"... faith-sharing...is
more incarnational (being there and caring) than propositional (going
there and unloading) ... faith is ultimately a gift of God ..."
Faithful
Witnesses
"We witness to people
of other religious traditions in many ways, ways which may vary
according to the gifts we have received and the settings in which
we live. Two of these ways of witnessing are evangelism and dialogue...Many
Christians believe...that evangelism should always be dialogical
in its approach and that dialogue should involve sharing one's deepest
faith convictions."
Confessing Christian
Faith in a Pluralistic Society
"God's intent is
that there be a human community that enjoys God's presence, reflects
God's image, demonstrates God's love, shares God's passion for justice,
and cares for God's earth. The proclamation of the triune God's
loving purpose for the world is a radical call for individuals and
institutions to turn from idolatry, to acknowledge God's reign,
and to serve the living and true God."
Turn to
the Living God
Information was provided by the PC(USA) Ecumenical and Interfaith
Office, and has been reprinted with permission. For additional
information, please go to www.pcusa.org/wmd/eir.
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