• Home
  • My Story
  • My MAP
  • Shreddin' the Gnar
  • Register
  • Log in

gregstier.org

Rantings of a Jesus-loving, raving lunatic

Categories

  • Conferences (27)
  • God Moments (9)
  • Home Sweet Home (23)
  • MAP (12)
  • Rants (435)
  • Youth Ministry (14)
Discuss Ministry Mutiny Principals

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter

    Favorite Websites

    • Christian Post
    • Dare 2 Share
    • Deep & Wide Blog
    • Derwin Gray
    • Group Magazine
    • Interl’inc
    • Rob Kelly
    • Tim Schmoyer
    • Youth Specialties

    Syndicate

    • General RSS Feed
    • Subscribe to MyMSN
    • Subscribe to MyYahoo!
    • Subscribe to Google Reader
    • Subscribe to Bloglines
    • Subscribe to Newsgator
    Blaze Youth Ministry Conference Tour

    A Better Place to Go to Hell From…

    Posted on Wednesday 10 September 2008 by Greg @ 8:47 am
    Filed under: Rants

    When it comes to outreach in many youth groups and churches the “e” word is getting edged out by social justice issues (doing service projects, building orphanages, feeding the poor, etc.) Missions trips are less and less about sharing the gospel and more and more about just taking care of the physical needs of the hurting, hungry and hopeless.

    Young believers are flocking to good causes pushed by famous celebrities to rid the world of bad things. To be honest it excites me to see next generation Christians energized by and for a good cause. But I get gravely concerned when sharing the gospel gets pushed out of the outreach equation. Why? Because there is no greater global crisis than the pending reality of an eternal hell for everyone on the planet who doesn’t hear and believe the gospel of Christ.

    Again I do believe we as Christians should feed the poor but if that’s all we do we are missing the point. It would be a shame to let somebody go to hell but comfort ourselves with the thought that at least they had a full stomach.

    There is nothing more urgent than saving lost souls from hell, nothing. There are those who will smugly whisk this premise away as being foolish fundamentalist drivel and old school scare tactics. But the reality of hell is what it is.

    Jesus talked more about hell than anyone else in all of the Bible. Was he using scare tactics when he mentioned it? Yes! In the same way that I as a father of two small children use scare tactics when my kids venture too close to speeding traffic. What kind of father would I be if I let my kids wander toward the street without screaming at them as loud as I could and scaring them as much as I could to jolt their attention so they woudn’t get hit by a car? Sometimes scaring someone is the most loving thing you can do.

    So are all these other non-keep-people-out-of-hell causes a waste of time? No! As followers of Jesus serving those in need should be in our DNA. Anyone who claims to be a Christians but has no concern for the hurting has shunned the Person and power of the Holy Spirit in their lives. As James reminds us, specifically when it comes to feeding hungry brothers and sisters in Christ, “faith without works is dead.”

    It is only when service projects replace or marginalize evangelism that I get twitchy. Jesus said, “Go into all the world and make disciples….” That is our prime directive from the Prime Director of the universe. His last words to his followers was reminding them that they would be his witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and to the ends of the earth.

    How did they follow through on his command? They traveled everywhere and preached the gospel wherever they went! Yes they fed the poor along the way and the church was challenged to continue to look after widows and orphans in need, but the driving force of what they did was spreading the gospel message and discipling those who responded in faith.

    Let us do good things. But as we serve and as we shine let us not forget to share the good news of Jesus Christ. Let’s feed others with real bread and then the Bread of Life. Let us give them a cup of cold water and then a dose of the Living Water. Let us build them houses and then make sure they have a place in our Father’s great big house. Let us make this earth a better place, but let us remember that God did not put us on this earth just to make it a better place to go to hell from.

    Live well. Serve hard. Preach bold.

    Signed, Greg Stier
    10 Comments

    10 Comments for 'A Better Place to Go to Hell From…'

    1. On September 10, 2008 @ 9:41 am Eddie said:
      • I have a mission this afternoon to get milk and a few other groceries. I guess that’s a mission trip. At least that’s how some people look at it.

        Personally, most mission trips to me are just work parties with a longer travel time to the job site. And I’ve got no problem with it I guess. But calling it a mission trip really makes it sound so spiritual don’t you think?

        However, we should be sharing the gospel anyway, regardless of where we go. So no matter what the main purpose of the trip, sharing the gospel should be expected.

        The sad thing though is that many people feel that mission trips are the only place they should share their faith. And if it’s not expected or organized in a way that puts them in that situation, they’re not gonna do it.

        [Reply to this comment]

      • Permalink to Eddie's comment

    2. On September 10, 2008 @ 9:14 pm Jason said:
      • I agree in that I don’t get how people miss the idea that sharing the gospel and social justice go hand in hand, and shouldn’t be looked at as an either/or proposition.

        [Reply to this comment]

      • Permalink to Jason's comment

    3. On September 12, 2008 @ 12:59 pm Wes Searcy said:
      • THANK YOU, GREG! You wouldn’t believe…..yes you would….how many “yeah, but…” comments we get when we talk to people about training students to share the gospel, and actually DOING IT for a few days over and over on a “mission trip.” I agree that it is not either/or. At the same time, the “service” part of a mission trip MUST be linked to an overall, very real strategy to take the gospel/make disciples in that area. In the same manner, we cannot go out and do “drive by” missions (street/park evang) and not be connected to a church that will genuinely follow up and make disciples/plant churches. Many people that we talk to have overreacted to those who have (or they perceive have) advocated a confrontational-only style of evangelism. In their overcompensation, they leave the gospel out of the equation of joining God in His mission to call the nations to worship him. May we all join our missional God in calling every tongue, tribe and nation to worship Him.

        [Reply to this comment]

      • Permalink to Wes Searcy's comment

    4. On September 13, 2008 @ 6:36 pm Becky said:
      • That was an amazing blog.Very true.

        [Reply to this comment]

      • Permalink to Becky's comment

    5. On September 15, 2008 @ 11:23 am A New Direction in Youth Ministry (My job is changing but not my mission) « brianford.org said:
      • [...] needs alone, it’s about meeting a greater need. My friend Greg Stier recently wrote in a blog post…“Again I do believe we as Christians should feed the poor but if that’s all we do we [...]

      • Permalink to A New Direction in Youth Ministry (My job is changing but not my mission) « brianford.org's comment

    6. On September 16, 2008 @ 8:38 pm Tim McLaughlin said:
      • Why is it when some Christians speak for what one does (feed hungry, visit those in prison, care for the orphans and widows, advocate for the powerless)–i.e., what Jesus said was a mark of his followers–instead of what one believes, the Greg Stiers of the relatively affluent Western world jump to an extreme that social-justice Christians never intend: “Well, if all one does it dig wells instead of preach the gospel….” No one said anything about either-or. It’s both-and, or ought to be.

        [Reply to this comment]

      • Permalink to Tim McLaughlin's comment

    7. On September 17, 2008 @ 10:04 am Eddie said:
      • Tim,

        We’ve got quite a few of those great ministries in our area that feed the hungry, visit the prisoners, care for the orphans and widows and such and when I ask them about how they’re sharing the gospel with those they serve, I get the big blank stare or it’s a discussion about not wanting to offend anyone or something along those lines. Most of the time, they try to avoid it for fear of the reaction hurting their ministry. Which proves the fact that sharing the gospel is not part of their actual goal.

        Greg’s making a point to remind people that it SHOULD be both. He has to make that point because unlike what is believed by many, it is NOT the standard, but the exception.

        Most Christians I come across would stop on a busy highway to help someone change a tire. But they would hesitate to share the gospel or just simply not even bring it up with that same person. More often than we’d like to realize, it’s the same issue with missions.

        Fact is, if Christians shared the gospel like we should, there’d be no need for a ministry like D2S. But as we’ve seen, D2S is greatly used of God to motivate and teach Christians what God has commanded us to do in this area.

        It’s not rocket science to notice that this country is full of good hard working people going out of their way to help others. With all the disasters that have gone on over the last few years, there’s alot of examples to pull from. But it’s equally as easy to see that the gospel was not shared in conjunction with those efforts.

        That’s why many Christians say, “Well, if all one does is dig wells instead of preach the gospel…” Because in general, that’s all that’s being done.

        [Reply to this comment]

      • Permalink to Eddie's comment

    8. On September 17, 2008 @ 11:47 am Clay Conry said:
      • 1 Corinthians 1:21 21 For since, in the wisdom of God, the world through wisdom did not know God, it pleased God through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe.

        [Reply to this comment]

      • Permalink to Clay Conry's comment

    9. On September 22, 2008 @ 10:19 pm Tim said:
      • I think we are kindred spirits, Greg. Or, perhaps, more fittingly, we serve a kindred Spirit :)
        Have faith in Christ!

        [Reply to this comment]

      • Permalink to Tim's comment

    10. On November 8, 2008 @ 8:10 am free online nolimit texas holdem poker poker said:
      • free online nolimit texas holdem poker poker…

        reinforcements ledgers!poem psychiatrist corrupting eloquence …

      • Permalink to free online nolimit texas holdem poker poker's comment

    Name (required)

    e-mail (required)

    Website

    Information for comment users

    • Line and paragraph breaks are implemented automatically.
    • Your e-mail address is never displayed.
    • Please consider what you're posting.
    • No HTML is allowed at this time.
    • You can also register or login.

    Click to cancel reply

    Free Youth Ministry Christian Resources.
    Copyright 2010 Dare 2 Share Ministries International.

    Free Youth Ministry Christian Resources