Lectionary
reading: Luke 10:1-11, 16-20
The
question that I am asked more than any other is this:
How
can we get more people to come to church?
It
is the wrong question.
The
question we ought to be asking, as my friend Keld recently asked me, is:
How
many people do we expect to see come to faith in the next six months?
Now,
that is a question we tend to shy away from, in the Church of England.
It sounds presumptuous. People coming to faith is God’s business, not ours. Okay,
leaving aside what Jesus says for a moment, how is God doing? How many people
have we seen come to faith in the last six months? Or the six months before
that? Indeed, when was the last time that we saw someone come to faith?
Jesus
said, ‘The harvest is plentiful, but the labourers are few; therefore, ask the
Lord of the harvest to send out labourers into his harvest.’ Indeed, Jesus said
this more than once, sending out first twelve more labourers and then
seventy-two more (Matthew 9:37-38 and Luke 10:2). He even
challenged them that they were in the habit of saying that the harvest was four
months away—that is, always just out of reach, never actually arriving—but, in
fact, they are to pay attention as he corrects them, declaring that the harvest
is ripe now (John 4:35-38). There is always a harvest.
Note
that Jesus doesn’t say, pray for a harvest. He says, pray for labourers. And he
says that to those who are about to find themselves labourers. It isn’t a
division of labour, where some are called to pray, and others are sent to
harvest.
I
shared some of these thoughts recently, and the question came back:
So
how do we do that? How do we bring in a harvest?
How
do we see people come to faith?
Well,
it just so happens that Jesus has some instructions for just that scenario.
Let’s take a look at them.
First,
Jesus says, go in pairs. Now, I’m sure we’re all familiar with pairs
turning up unannounced on our doorstep, perhaps wanting to speak to us about
Jesus, perhaps collecting for Christian Aid Week. And you’ll breathe a sigh of
relief to hear that I’m not going to ask you to go door-to-door, or even about
the neighbourhood, in pairs. But each of us does go about the neighbourhood,
sometimes in pairs, as spouses or good friends, and speak with people we meet.
We listen to their stories, their struggles and joys right now. So, if we are
moving, and meeting, why not offer to pray, there and then? Just a simple
prayer, asking for God’s blessing, in the struggle or the joy. People are more
open to that than you might think; and, if they decline, that’s fine too. No
need to press them.
Of
course, there are also those times when we are on our own. Perhaps much of the
time. And that’s okay, too. But even then, I’d encourage you: is there a friend
you meet up with regularly for coffee, Or, for those of us who are married, is
there a time in the day when we might review our day together? To be
accountable to one another about how our labouring is going. Not how busy we
are doing things at church or for the community, but, having God-conversations.
How might we creatively go in pairs?
Next,
Jesus says, look for the person of peace. That is, look out for the
person who is open to peace. They’re easy enough to spot, because they stand
out from the angry people. Look out for the peacemakers. You see, anyone who is
open to peace is evidencing the Holy Spirit already at work in their lives.
They are reaping a harvest of peace, they are sowing peace into the lives
around them, and they are ripe to know God more fully.
Then,
Jesus says, say, the kingdom of God has come near to you. We’re not bringing
the kingdom of God, where it was not until we arrived; we’re naming what
is already there. We’re celebrating what God is doing in the world, and
inviting people to join in. That concern for justice you clearly have, that
care for creation, your ability to see the stranger as a person, or to
recognise evil in the world, that love you know and share—these are signs that
the kingdom of God has come near to you. And that kingdom has a king, and he’d
like for you to know him. In fact, he’d like for you to know that you are his
daughter, his son; that you are loved, yes, and commissioned. That this king
has a purpose for your life, and can empower you to make a difference, for
good, in the world.
And
then, Jesus says, return with joy. Celebrate the harvest. When we come
together as gathered church, tell the stories of where we have seen God at work
this week. Joy changes our entire perspective.
This
is our 80th year, at St Nicholas’ and later in the year we will hold
a flower festival under the banner 80 fruitful years. But the measure of
fruitfulness is not flowers. The measure of fruitfulness is women and men, boys
and girls, coming to faith and growing in faith and passing faith on. The
flowers are the celebration of fruitfulness.
Allow
me to return to the question: How many people do we expect to see come to
faith in the next six months? These are, as it happens, the final six
months of this decade. How many people do we expect to come to faith by
Christmas, as we go out looking for people of peace, proclaiming that the
kingdom of God has drawn near, and return here with joy?
It
isn’t a rhetorical question. It is a commissioning to the mission field of our
parish.
When
you came in, you were given two pieces of card. Here is what we are going to
do. You need to answer the question, How many people do we expect to see
come to faith in the next six months? That will give you a number. I’d like
you to write that number on both pieces of card. And then I’d like you to put
one of those cards in your pocket or handbag and take it home and put it
somewhere where you will see it every day. And I want you to pray that the Lord
of the harvest would send you out into his harvest field. If your honest number
is 0, God can work with honesty. Pray that your expectation would be exceeded,
and that you would be surprised by joy. The other piece of card—on which you
have written the same number—I’d like us to collect up in the bowl that will
pass around, so that we can know what our expectation is, and how it might
grow.
Let
us pray: Lord Jesus, send us out, in the power of the Holy Spirit, as labourers
in the harvest field, to love and serve you to the glory of God the Father.
Amen.
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