Our Example Speaks Volumes
by
Seth Barnes, Executive Director
Adventures In Missions
Classroom-style teaching isn’t very effective. Students must learn
their Christianity by doing it.
This is why mission projects are so important. They distill the
essence of Christianity into a predetermined time frame. A study on the
subject of service is abstract. Dirty fingernails and a humbled spirit
are the realities that accompany a service project.
A study on the subject of faith doesn’t hit the heart like finances
that come through at the last second. A study on the power of God soon
fades from memory, but God's power demonstrated through the miracle of
healing is indelibly stamped.
Jesus taught His disciples principles and then He modeled them. We
should never teach principles without modeling behavior. Any biblical
principles "taught" but never modeled are wasting away in the fragile
environment of our students’ memories.
To make the Christian walk come alive for today's generation of
cynical teens, we've got to bring them alongside us. Our message should
be: "Jesus taught us to love; let's find someone who needs our love.
Jesus taught us to share our reason for hope; let's go share our faith
tonight."
So, enough talk already. Listen to James: "In the same way, faith by
itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead." Spiritual growth
in a person’s life takes place in the realm of the spirit, not in the
intellect.
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