
eBook - ePub
Concentric Circles of Concern
From Self to Others Through Life-Style Evangelism
- 224 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Concentric Circles of Concern
From Self to Others Through Life-Style Evangelism
About this book
In this stylish re-issue of W. Oscar Thompson's classic book on evangelism, Thompson shows Christians how to spread the love and good news of Christ by building and repairing personal relationships. Too often the only kind of evangelism encouraged is the preaching to strangers, anonymous crowds, and foreign countries. This book hits readers where they live, teaching them that the most effective way to witness is through a simple plan of meeting the needs of close family first, then friends, and then all others.Published post-humously, this book is a living testament of the brilliance of Oscar Thompson and his innovative method. It will be a perfect guide to lifestyle evangelism for church study groups, conferences, and the classroom.
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Yes, you can access Concentric Circles of Concern by Carolyn T. Ritzman,W. Oscar Thompson, Claude V. King in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Christian Ministry. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Chapter One
THE IMPORTANCE OF RELATIONSHIPS
Jim came into my office one day and said, “Dr. Thompson, my dad is a nominal Christian; but when he learned that I was going into the ministry, he became furious. He told me that he did not mind my being a Christian, but he did not want me to become a ‘religious nut.’”
Jim's father drove a truck for a big truck line, owned his own rig, and wanted his son to follow in his footsteps. It was somewhat of a family tradition. Instead, Jim came to the seminary. As a result, Jim's relationship with his parents was ruptured.
“We had been very close until this happened,” Jim explained. “Since then I have just ignored them, as they have ignored me. It has been a hurt to me, but I am going to serve Jesus. My family can do whatever they please.”
I asked, “Jim, do you really think you can be right with God and have ruptured relationships with your parents? You need to meet their needs. You need to love them.”
Jim answered, “Well, that's right, but I don't know what to do.”
So I suggested, “Get the bitterness straight in your own heart and then start to pray for them, Jim. Right those ruptured relationships.”
Jim began to pray for his dad and mom. That same day he came to class brokenhearted and said, “Friends, just please pray for me.” Then Jim prayed, “Father, I do not even know if my daddy knows you. But, Father, I have been wrong in my attitude toward my parents. Forgive me of my attitude, and help me meet my parents' needs.”
Jim wrote a letter to his parents, asking them to forgive him for his bitterness and the broken relationship. He told them that he loved them.
The next day, before the letter had time to reach his parents, Jim received a telephone call from his dad. Jim's dad had never before had a route to Dallas, but he said, “Son, I have a route to Dallas this week, and I want to see you.”
“Oh, Dad, that's great!”
On that Saturday afternoon, a big rig pulled up in front of Jim's dorm. When Jim opened the dorm door, his tall father stood with tears trickling down his cheeks. “Jim, I am wrong with God,” he said. “Can you help me?”
THE MOST IMPORTANT WORD
I believe the most important word in the English language, apart from proper nouns, is relationship. You say, “But love has to be the most important word.”
I ask you, though, where is love going to be if there is no relationship? Relationship is the track. Love is what rolls over the track. Love moves through a relationship. But the thing that satisfies the deepest longing of your being is a relationship with someone.
You may think you want to be a Henry David Thoreau and go to a secluded Walden Pond to get away from the world. But Thoreau did not stay there forever and neither could you. Why? There is something in the nature of people—something built into people—that desires to be wanted, to be needed, to be fulfilled. Those desires are fulfilled only in relationships.
In the relationships of life, we must have an inner relationship. We cannot go off somewhere by ourselves. However, if we cannot get along with people, going off by ourselves may seem best. But we will not be fulfilled because something in our nature cries out for fellowship.
Rare is the individual who wants to be a loner. In being a loner, a person loses the purpose for existence because God wants to reveal his character through a Christian's life. He does this by loving through you in your relationships with others.
John said, “What we have seen and heard we proclaim to you also, that you also may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ” (1 John 1:3).
RIGHT RELATIONSHIPS
Consider all of the warm wonderful times of joy and happiness. Do you remember:
- The warm caress of your parents' hands;
- The giggles and laughter as you romped with your friends or brothers and sisters in the bright sunshine of a summer afternoon;
- The joy of your first date with that bright-eyed boy or girl;
- The look of enthusiasm in those with whom you work?
All these relationships make you what you are. Right relationships with parents leave you mentally and emotionally ready for marriage or for a baby brought into the family—new relationships. The special days of happiness—birthday, anniversary, Thanksgiving, Christmas—are fulfilling because of warm, wonderful relationships. Right relationships allow you to experience the best life has to offer.
HOME IS THE SCHOOL FOR RELATIONSHIPS
God established the home before any other institution. The home is the basic institution in which God seeks to teach the sacredness of relationships and how to establish and nourish them. The home is the only institution designed to teach relationships. When this institution fails, a child is left mentally, emotionally, and spiritually crippled.
The home under God should be the place to learn about relationships—husband and wife, parent and child, brother and sister. Here is where a person learns to love—learns to meet needs. A helpless baby placed in the hands of parents helps the parents to mature and develop their ability to love, to meet needs. A child is taught to submit his wayward, self-centered will to the will of the parents. Here selfishness, which is the root of sin, matures into a discipline to build relationships and meet the needs of others.
God has designed the home to be the school of relationships. The dearest, the closest, the most intimate human relationship that must exist is between husband and wife. Through the relationship of husband and wife, we teach our children about relationships. This is our own school of relationships.
BROKEN RELATIONSHIPS
A little more reflection about the importance of relationships will lead to some more obvious but amazing conclusions. Think about the crisis times of your life:
- As a child separated from your parents;
- As a child angry with your parents;
- As a teenager breaking up with your sweetheart;
- The resentment and misunderstanding that separated you from a friend;
- Perhaps the loss of a parent or spouse—remember the emptiness, the heartbreak;
- An argument with your husband or wife—maybe even divorce;
- A crisis with an employee or employer;
- Times of resentment and rupture with family;
- The distress in business or in your church.
List all the dark, sad, unhappy times in your life, and you will see that the vast majority of these times was created by ruptured, strained, or broken relationships.
Every broken business, every broken home, every broken friendship is a broken relationship. Expand this to city, national, or international problems, to every crime committed, to every war from the beginning of time that has brought untold broken hopes, lives, and dreams resulting from wrong relationships.
When society ceases to treasure relationships, it becomes decadent. Manners become course and cheap. Common courtesy is soon forgotten. Hearts become thankless, ceasing to show appreciation. As human history so painfully demonstrates, bad relationships produce:
- broken marriages;
- broken homes;
- unsuccessful businesses;
- divided churches;
- weak governments;
- chaotic nations.
RESTORED RELATIONSHIPS
Solve the relationship problems and there would be no divorce, no war, no employer-employee or labor-management disputes. Solve the relationship problems of the world, and humanity's most perplexing problems would be solved since right relationships produce:
- solid marriages;
- stable homes;
- successful businesses;
- ministering churches;
- good governments;
- strong nations.
THE BODY OF CHRIST IS A DIVINE HOSPITAL
We know that God wants to meet our needs. He builds beautiful relationships in the body of Christ. He intends that we love one another the way he loved us. He wants to meet our needs through the body of Christ so that we will all be healthy parts of a functioning body. We need each other.
Jesus came to earth to meet our deepest need. He died on the cross to redeem the earth to himself. He ascended to heaven, and he left his earthly body on earth to go out to enlarge and strengthen the body of believers.
Let's say the church is the divine hospital. The world is so very full of sickness. Many people come to the hospital for help, and every church that is doing what it needs to be doing realizes that we all continually need help. We come, over and again, for help, and we receive it. The only tragedy is that if we do not mature and join the hospital staff and start meeting other people's needs, we become a liability, and the flow is always going inward. So we stagnate, and that hurts us. That hurts the body of Christ.
After we have come for help and have received it, God wants us to go out and build relationships with others. Then we will become part of the helping staff. As we reach out to meet another's needs, we find our own needs are met.
MY PURPOSE FOR THIS BOOK
Dear friend, if your life is in turmoil today, I venture to say it is because of a ruptured relationship with someone. One purpose of this book is to explore the possible causes of your broken relationships and show how they can be mended. In other words, it is written to help meet your needs.
I want to help you experience restored relationships and begin to experience the best life has to offer. Not only will right relationships be a blessing to you, but they will also be a blessing to others around you. Your family will be blessed. Your friends, relatives, and coworkers will be blessed.
The key to a fulfilled life is relationships. Things do not satisfy; relationships do. The first relationship is with the Father. When he becomes Lord of our lives, we forfeit forever the right to choose whom we will love, and he releases his love in us to build right relationships.
Recall the story about Jim and his dad at the beginning of the chapter. When Jim got right with God, he also wanted to get right with his parents. Once God had Jim prepared, he brought Jim's dad to Dallas so that Jim's life could be a channel of love to point his dad to Jesus Christ. That's the way God works.
All this is why I contend that the most important word in the English language is relationship. Through right relationships, God's love can flow to be a blessing to all the lives it touches. Will you allow God to use your life and your relationships as a channel for his love to flow to others?
“Yes,” you say? Wonderful! In the next chapter we'll take a look at God's plan to bless a world through his people.
PERSONALIZING CHAPTER 1
Using a journal or notebook, respond to the following questions or activities. Record details that will help you understand and apply the truths of this chapter to your own life.
- Pray and ask the Lord to teach you about the importance of relationships. If you have a relationship that needs to be reconciled, like Jim and his dad, ask God to guide you to be reconciled. Ask him for the courage to make things right.
- List two or three of the most happy or joyful experiences of your life, and identify one person who was involved in those experiences with you.
- List two of the most dark, sad, or unhappy experiences of your life, and write the initials of a person who was involved in those experiences with you.
- List the “top five” memorable or significant relationships with people you have ever had in your life.
- If you could improve or be reconciled in one relationship in your life today, which one would it be? With whom? What do you sense God would have you do to get that relationship right? Ask him.
BUILDING UP THE BODY
Use the following questions and activities with your small group to help one another apply these truths to your lives and to build up the body of Christ.
- Invite volunteers to share one or more of the following:
- One of my most joyful and happy experiences growing up was …
- One of the darkest, saddest, unhappy times in my past was …
- One of my most significant positive relationships with another person is (or was) …
- Discuss ways your home life growing up has affected your successes or failures in relationships. What are some of the positive lessons you learned about relationships?
- Discuss ways your church experience has (or could have) provided a “divine hospital” for the healing of relationships. How do you sense a small-group study of this book may help?
- Invite volunteers to tell about any relationship God has identified that needs to be reconciled. Take time to pray with each person who shares that God will guide him or her to experience reconciliation.
- Take time to pray for each other in one or more of the following areas:
- thanksgiving for meaningful relationships of the past
- spiritual healing for brokenness from past relationships
- current relationships that need to be reconciled
- current relationships that call for a demonstration of love by meeting needs
- persons you sense God wants to love into the kingdom through your life
- Ask each small-group member: How can we pray for you this week? Then take time to pray for each specific need or request.
Chapter Two
THE GOSPEL MOVES
THROUGH Relationships
THROUGH Relationships
Before I became a professor at Southwestern Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, I preached and pastored churches for twenty-four years. Most of the concepts of evangelism I had read emphasized training Christians to tell strangers about the Lord. I call a stranger like this “Person X.”
As I began to prepare to teach personal evangelism at the seminary, I did not take my position lightly. I was very aware of James's admonition, “Let not many of you become teachers, my brethren, knowing that as such we shall incur a stricter judgment” (James 3:1). So I realized, to whom much is given, much is required.
THE IMPORTANCE OF LIFESTYLE
Each year I teach more than one thousand students. Those students will literally go to the ends of the earth to carry the gospel. So I prayed, “Father, teach me first so that I may teach them.” I didn't want to teach only concepts. My students didn't need head knowledge only. They needed to learn a lifestyle.
A person...
Table of contents
- Front Cover
- Halftitle
- Title page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Stage 1
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Stage 2
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 11
- Stage 3
- Chapter 12
- Stage 4
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 14
- Stage 5
- Chapter 15
- Stage 6
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 17
- Stage 7
- Epilogue
- Concentric Circles Survey Form