Show love to Muslims, then Bible verses, says evangelist by Kenneth Chan,
Christian Post
Posted: Wednesday, August 20, 2008, 10:19 (BST)
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LONG BEACH, California - An evangelist from northern Ghana has told
Christians to reach out to the Muslim world by first getting to know Muslims
near to them, instead of "sniping people with Bible verses".

It's easy to "know Muslims as immigrants from other countries", noted Dr
John Azumah, an ordained minister of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana and
speaker at the Inside-Out Conference in Long Beach, California, last
weekend.

"In my country, they're at worst a neighbour," continued the former Muslim
who says he still has friends who follow Islam. Muslims are "not a nameless,
faceless creature somewhere".

"A Muslim has a name, has a face," he said. But many Christians "don't know
them".

"They're strangers to us," he confessed.

The third step for Christians to take is to be "Barnabases", according to
Azumah, who said that personal testimonies are more powerful when people
know the one involved.

He used the story of the Samaritan woman recorded in John 4 as a case in
point, noting that the Bible records how "many of the Samaritans from the
town believed in him (Jesus) because of the woman's testimony" (John 4:39).

Samaritans, Azumah said, were to Jews as Muslims are to Christians.

But Azumah noted that even as a believer gets to know a Muslim, testifies to
them and demonstrates the love of God to them with their life, ultimately
the change takes place through the power of the Holy Spirit.

"Wait upon the Lord!" Azumah urged, citing from Ephesians 6.

"You might have the resources; you might have enthusiasm and all the
knowledge, but wait for the Holy Spirit to come to you," he exhorted. "It's
a spiritual business."

Before concluding his address, Azumah urged Christians to offer four prayers
to God for the advancement of the Gospel in the Muslim world.

"First, pray for ourselves for a heart for Muslims. Second, pray for
Christian minorities in the Islamic world. Third, pray that God may open up
the Muslim world for the Gospel. Finally, pray for individual ordinary
Muslims wherever they may be," he said, adding that he had prayed for his
uncle for 15 years before laying hands on him and baptising him three years
ago.

"Many Muslims come to Jesus Christ through visions and dreams," Azumah
pointed out. "God is doing it."

Though Muslim countries can deny missionaries visas, "the Holy Spirit does
not need a visa", he said, drawing the applause of the crowd.

"He goes where he wants to go," he added. "If we pray with Muslims as our
prayer topic, the Holy Spirit will go."

In closing, Azumah urged Christians to step up in response to the challenge
of Muslim evangelism; step out of their comfort zones, even their churches
and denominations; and step into Muslim neighbourhoods, Muslim countries,
and the Muslim world.

Azumah said that more than 80 per cent of Muslims have never heard the
Gospel and less than one per cent of the Christian missionary force works
among Muslims.

Last week's Inside-Out Conference, hosted by the Presbyterian Global
Fellowship, was the third annual conference held in response to the decline
of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and the controversies that have kept the
denomination embroiled in internal battles over the year.

It was the hope of a group of leaders to begin to change the culture of the
Church by being "inwardly strong and outwardly focused".



During a plenary session on Saturday, Azumah shared four steps that
Christians can take to reach out to followers of the religion followed by 24
per cent of the world's population.

The first step, he said, was to know Muslims as people, as individuals, and
as neighbours.

"Show interest in knowing their beliefs, fears, and joys," he said.

Second, Christians need to engage with Muslims as "light" and "salt of the
world", not as "flashlights" or "fires".

"Light and salt are only meaningful when they come in contact with food or
darkness," he said.

But Azumah discouraged believers from being "flashlights", which he said
some Christians tend to be, because pointing light directly into people's
eyes will more likely make them cover their eyes or turn away.

"Do not go sniping people with Bible verses," he exhorted. "Engage them and
show that you love them before you show verses.

"Stop the flashlight approach and become lanterns," he said, noting how
lanterns provide light in a non-imposing way.


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