It's
Time to Try Pond #2! 
Dear
Friends,
Last month
I received a letter from an enthusiastic reader who told me that he has been
downloading the first chapters of my evangelistic book, Forgive Me for Waiting so Long to Tell You This, printing them, and leaving them in
the men's bathroom stalls where he works. He said they are being read, and no
negative comments so far!
Some years
ago, right after the fall of the iron curtain, we published 10,000 copies of
that same book in Lithuania (in Lithuanian) and a Christian woman took a copy
to her unconverted parents. Her hard-hearted father threw the book into their
fireplace, but her mother quickly saved it from the blaze and rebuked him,
saying they shouldn't waste what could serve as perfectly good toilet paper!
She promptly nailed my book to the inside wall of their outhouse. Some days
later her husband came in from the outhouse angry that pages were missing from
the toilet paper—which he had been reading with great interest! He later gave
his life to the Lord, and his daughter wrote to tell me about it!
May this
month's e-teaching similarly (but not identically) find its way into your
heart! — David
P.S. You
can read Forgive Me for Waiting
so Long to Tell You This online or order a copy to give to
an unsaved loved one.
Imagine
for a moment that you are fishing at the edge of a pond. You've been standing
there all day every day for months, continually casting your line, lashing the
waters to foam. Thousands of worms have sacrificed their lives in the process.
But for all your efforts, the only thing that has happened is that on one day,
one fish jumped one time and spit in your direction. Pretty discouraging
fishing.
Then
imagine seeing another pond right beside that first one. You decide to give it
a try. While you are about to put a worm on your hook, even before your first
cast, fish start jumping out of the pond attempting to eat the worm in your
hand. Before long there are hundreds of fish lying at your feet.
If such
a thing happened, do you suppose that you might decide to do a little less
fishing at Pond #1 and a little more fishing at Pond #2?
In this
e-teaching, I'd like to talk about fishing—fishing for people that is—in
Pond #2. First, however, let's consider what's been happening at Pond #1 for
many years.
Pond
#1: Where the Fish Aren't Biting Any More
One of
the greatest tragedies of our day is that so many Christian leaders don't
realize (or don't care) that Pond #2 exists. Consequently, most of them spend
all their time fishing around Pond #1. Even more tragic is the fact that most
of the fishermen standing around Pond #1 have never, or rarely, actually caught a fish. As a result, they have
redefined fishing altogether. Now they are donning goggles and snorkels and
wading out into the pond. Some even wear fish suits in order to look just
like the fish in the pond, hoping not to spook them. Once submerged, they
scatter some fish food, trying to gather the largest number of fish around them
for an hour or so, usually on Sunday mornings. This they call fishing. Gone are the days when fish were
actually caught and taken out of the pond—out of their old life—to die, be
cleaned, and resurrected in the body of another. (I'm really pushing this
analogy to the max!)
Those
whose Sunday-morning fish gatherings are largest are those who have discovered
the food that is currently favored by the fish. They are deemed successful. The
fish, however, soon have their fill, and after an hour or so, are ready to swim
back to their favorite spots in the pond. They'll be back next week—unless
they can find a "fisherman" who offers a better meal (or better yet,
a meal with a show). There are lots of fishermen wading (or swimming) in Pond
#1 on Sundays competing with each other for the largest share of the fish.
Too many
Christian leaders have forgotten that the goal is not to see who can gather the
largest crowd on Sundays, but to make disciples who obey all of Christ's
commandments (see Matt. 28:19-20). That process begins, of course, with
preaching "repentance for the forgiveness of sins" as commanded
by Jesus (see Luke 24:7). But the fish in Pond #1 don't want gospel worms on
hooks. They want candy, and not candy on hooks, but candy just tossed to them.
They love their pond, and want no attachments to anything else.
This
kind of "fishing" has been going on for so long that many younger
fishermen have never seen it done any other way. So they mindlessly wade into
Pond #1 every Sunday with their bags of candy, and it never occurs to them that
there is something much better, something eternally better, waiting at Pond #2.
On
Monday mornings you'll find some of the older fishermen drinking coffee
together along the shores of Pond #1, reminiscing about the days when
the fish were biting there. Some of them have been praying for years that the
fishing will improve. Meanwhile, most of the fish in Pond #2 have never seen a
worm...
The
Great Bait Exchange
At one
time, the fish were indeed biting in Pond #1. But not any more. And as they
have become increasingly disinterested in the gospel, unfortunately the
fishermen have altered it to accommodate the fishes' increasing resistance to
the idea of repenting and following Jesus. Decades ago, when the current
cultural hardening first began, preachers took note that the old methods of
proclaiming certain essential elements of the gospel—for example, humanity's
sinfulness and God's wrath—were not drawing the crowds as previously. And it
was observed that speaking only about God's love brought more people forward
during the altar call—albeit without tears. Before long, repentance was also
edited from the message. And "accepting Jesus as your personal
Savior" ultimately became the means to eternal life, rather than repenting
and believing in the Lord Jesus Christ. All this was done just for the sake of
getting crowds and maintaining the appearance of spiritual success.
And the
compromises have only become worse, just as Scripture predicted long ago (see 2
Tim. 4:3-4). These days one can allegedly believe in Jesus without becoming His
disciple (now proffered as an optional step for the heaven-bound). Perhaps the
crowning evolution of this ever-changing "gospel" is the modern
version designed to appeal to the greedy, selfish people being told that God
wants them to be even richer (so they can be even more selfish). Tens of thousands
of churches have been built on this "gospel."
At one
time I thought that if we could recover the biblical gospel in Western nations,
we'd surely see the revival we long for. But now I'm sure I was wrong about
that. If John Wesley, George Whitefield, Charles Finney, or even the
apostle Paul preached in North America today, they would be dismal failures.
People don't want to hear the truth. It's time to try Pond #2.
Pond
#2: Where the Fish Are Biting...if Only Given the Chance
So where
is Pond #2? It is everywhere that people are receptive to the gospel, or
might be receptive to the gospel if given a chance to hear it. Pond #2 still
exists, to a limited degree, in Western nations (and I'll talk about that
shortly). But Pond #2 exists primarily in places like India, Cuba, Nepal,
China, Pakistan, Tanzania, and scores of other poor nations.
It
should not be any wonder that, generally speaking, Pond #2 is filled with poor fish, because Jesus told us that
it is impossible to serve God and money, and He also said that it is not easy
for rich people to enter the kingdom, because they normally don't want God
controlling their money. Jesus Himself was called to "preach the gospel to
the poor" (Luke 4:18), not because God doesn't care about the rich, but
because the poor are usually more receptive than the rich. This is one reason
why Western nations are so unreceptive.
If you
want to find Pond #2, search for the poor around the world. You won't have to
search long, since almost half of the world's population lives on less than two
dollars a day. Two billion people are undernourished. 700 million are
malnourished. 2.2 billion
people are without safe water to drink, while 25,000 die daily from dirty
drinking water. 1.3 billion people are without adequate housing. 1.4
billion people are without adequate clothing. It
would seem that the church of Jesus Christ could seize this opportunity to show
God's love and proclaim His gospel.
In
India, where more impoverished people live than in any other nation (300
million live on less than one dollar per day), it is estimated that there are
half a million villages and towns without a single church or gospel witness.
Yet there is spiritual hunger. Here
is an excerpt from a recent e-mail from my friend K.V. Daniel of India,
reporting on a "fishing trip":
Every
time I travel into the villages I see the simplicity and the power of the gospel....I
was in Orissa villages, among a group of people who has never heard the gospel.
People are so poor and hardly eat one meal a day. No good houses or clothes.
Kids starve to live. No medical facility. People have to walk miles to buy or
sell anything. I had the privilege to share the gospel with them. We fed many
kids and villages. First time in their life they had a full meal with chicken
curry. People were literally falling down and kissing our feet for a blessing.
I was humiliated by their simplicity and faith. Twelve people took water
baptism. Two-hundred more are ready.
In
China, where 1.4 billion people live, the fish are biting by the thousands
every day. Here is an excerpt from a recent report I received from Dennis
Balcombe, a legendary missionary to China and an authority on the church there:
We are
now in the time of a great harvest in China and every week I am seeing hundreds
saved and baptized in water. Churches are growing very fast, but there is
a great need for training the leaders...
And here is a report
from Paul Hattaway, another authority on what is happening in China, and author
of The Heavenly Man:
The
kingdom of God continues to advance in China. With the 2008 Olympics just
around the corner, it seems that overall the government has decided to pause in
their persecution of Christians, because they don't want any bad press. There
are believers continuing to be arrested and imprisoned, but much less than
usual. The house churches have taken advantage of this to preach the Gospel
even more fervently than usual, and thousands are being saved throughout the
country every day.
I could
cite similar encouraging reports from other nations. Fish are biting all over
the world! Wouldn't it be wise for every Western Christian leader to find out
where the fish are biting and get involved in some way to help reel in the
catch? Why is so much effort and money expended to fish in Pond #1 where the
fish are hardly biting and so comparatively little effort and money
expended to fish in Pond #2 where the fish are biting? What we are doing makes less sense than if
Mary Kay were sending all her saleswomen to sell cosmetics to the monkeys at
the Dallas Zoo.
Leaving
the Dead to Bury the Dead
Clearly,
Jesus doesn't want us wasting our time at Pond #1. He said:
And as
for those who do not receive you, as you go out from that city, shake the dust
off your feet as a testimony against them (Luke 9:5).
Do not
give what is holy to dogs, and do not throw your pearls before swine, or they
will trample them under their feet, and turn and tear you to pieces (Matt.
7:6).
Paul was
a wise fisherman who followed Jesus' instructions in this regard. Read about a
time that he said good bye to Pond #1 and hello to Pond #2:
But when
they resisted and blasphemed, [Paul] shook out his garments and said to them,
"Your blood be on your own heads! I am clean. From now on I will go to the
Gentiles" (Acts. 18:6).
Christians
in Western nations so often wonder why the reports they hear of miracles and
healings are always from overseas. The answer is that God isn't wasting His
time trying to reach unreceptive people. What Abraham said to the rich man in
hell is fully applicable to hardened Western nations:
If they
do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be persuaded even if
someone rises from the dead (Luke 16:31).
So why
not work where God is working? Why not reach out to those who have not yet
heard a single verse from the Bible?
Every
true Christian church should have fishing in Pond #2 as a primary priority.
Pastor, how much of your church budget is being invested in Pond #2? Are you
ready to justify that percentage before Jesus? And dear pastor, if your
"sheep" aren't interested in helping in some way to reel in the fish
in Pond #2, they aren't sheep at all. They're goats. True sheep get excited
about Pond #2.
Every
God-called evangelist should be making an effort to go to Pond #2. And when you
get there, dear evangelist, please don't take the Western "candy
gospel." You can actually catch fish in Pond #2, not just gather them on Sundays, and you can
do it with the same message that the apostles preached.
Every
Christian in the Western world should be helping, in some way, to reel in the
catch in Pond #2. Support a missionary or evangelist whom you know who is
preaching the truth and making disciples in Pond #2. Or, there are wonderful
ministries, such as Gospel for Asia and Christian Aid (and Heaven's Family by the year's end) whereby any Christian can support a
native church-planter who is fishing every day in Pond #2.
Fishing
in Pond #2 Right from Your Doorstep
Pond #2
actually limitedly exists right in our back yard, but you have to look for it.
Every year, over a million new immigrants legally relocate in the United
States, looking for a better life. This year, 70,000 of those immigrants will
be refugees who have been granted asylum because of suffering religious or
political persecution in their native lands. Many other developed nations
besides the U.S. receive refugees. Canada, for example, accepts more than the
U.S. on a per-capita basis.
How
those refugees would appreciate someone who would reach out to them and be
their friend, who would help them assimilate to a new way of life, and how they
need a Christian to save them from a culture that will try to suck them into
hell with it. Many of them, when they first arrive, come with open hearts. My
wife has been serving refugees for years in our hometown of Pittsburgh. Our son
has begun helping two young men who are recent refugees from Myanmar. They've lived
practically all their lives in a refugee camp in Thailand. (To find a U.S.
organization that needs volunteers to help them resettle refugees, visit www.state.gov/g/prm/rls/fs/82822.htm.)
Every
year there are more than half a million international students studying at
American colleges and universities. Most of them would love to be invited to an
American home for a meal, especially during the holidays when the rest of the
student body heads home. Two years ago on Christmas day we were sitting around
our dinner table with two Chinese students when one of them asked, "Can
you please tell me about Jesus Christ?" That made witnessing fairly easy!
And that open door has led to more, to the end that two other Chinese students
are just about ready to commit their lives to Jesus. Last year on Christmas day
I had a wonderful conversation about the Lord with several Taiwanese students.
To find out how you can be the friend of an international student, just contact
the international student office at the closest college or university.
Suffering
people are often more receptive to God than those whose lives are easy. Those
who are ill, or who have recently suffered some tragedy, can sometimes be found
in Pond #2. There is no doubt in my mind that God tries to open people's hearts
by allowing them to experience a dose of His temporal wrath. Here is another
report from Dennis Balcombe, writing about the opening of some Hindu hearts
after the Indian Ocean tsunami:
I
visited Batticaloa, Sri Lanka, where the tsunami destroyed a large Hindu temple
made of huge stone blocks, killing all the people inside and sweeping a large
heavy Hindu idol—18 feet high made of iron—two kilometers away (impossible
to even conceive). However next to the temple a simple Christian church was
left standing and all the people were safe. The Hindus told me, "Your
Christian God is angry at us for idol worship, thus He destroyed our temple
while He saved His house. We will destroy our false Gods and believe in
Jesus." The same thing happened all over these areas over and over again.
Some Christians did die, but everyone told about miracles in which the majority
of the churches and believers were miraculously spared. The whole area is now
open to the Gospel, which is the first time in history.
A friend
of mine in another state wrote to me about his son who was recently
incarcerated. He gave him a printed copy of the vision of the seven young
Colombians that I sent out some months ago (not exactly a "candy"
gospel!). The combination of prison and a dose of the fear of God opened his
heart:
As I'm
sure I told you, our son has been a drug addict and imprisoned many times. He
was on parole here, but violated parole. On Mother's Day they picked him up at
our house. He will likely be imprisoned another 8-16 months.
I gave
him a copy of "An Incredible Vision." He didn't read it all before he
was picked up, so I sent it to him in prison. He read it there and it scared
the heck out of him. He's now utterly convinced that he would have gone to hell
during this period. Before reading it, I think he thought he was headed for
heaven no matter what he'd done.
But the
story goes on. He let another fellow, then another read it. Before long they're
making copies and passing them around the prison. Bible studies are starting.
My son called and asked me to send him the Bible study I've written...
Finally,
it is possible that some fish we thought were in Pond #1 are actually in Pond
#2. The kind of fish I'm speaking of have actually not rejected the gospel.
Rather, they've rejected the candy that has been cast in their direction.
They've heard of hundreds of sexual scandals by pastors and priests. They've
concluded (correctly) that many TV evangelists are just money-grabbers. They've
tasted the hypocrisy of "Christians." Thus, phony evangelicals, more
than the devil himself, have inoculated people against listening to anyone who
claims to be a Christian. Through sincere and consistent love, however, we can
help open hearts. These days it seems that evangelism must be relational.
Lift up
your eyes and look on the fields, that they are white for harvest (John 4:35).