14 June 2012

Jay Erickson: "[I]t [living next to a hospital] has caused me to realize again in a new way that there is nothing sad about the death of a Christian. The only sadness (and I do not intend to belittle this aspect) is in the loss of companionship by those left behind. And yet, to contrast this, the level of tragedy is so vast for the passing of an unbeliever. "


I love these words, from a missionary pilot in Zambia who died for the sake of the gospel. And I pray for a grander, bigger vision of Jesus, that I too will be compelled to give my life away for His sake. 


From Ken Currie:

Here's one answer: God gives most of us this awareness of awkwardness so that we would never, not for a second, trust in or magnify ourselves and drift away from the magnificence of the gospel. This awareness in evangelism makes the gospel tangible. It means I need the gospel right now myself. Not only does my hearer need Jesus at this moment, but so do I!
Jesus died for disciples who do a poor job of witnessing. He died for those of us who have all too often failed to commend him because we feared it might get awkward. But he also died to give us the grace to press through the awkwardness to testify to him.
May God give us the grace to rebound from our many failures and grace not to fold in the face of awkwardness in telling others the most important news in the world.
So true. 

2 comments:

strat said...

Same here. My eyes were opened.

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Unknown said...

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