Wednesday, February 5, 2020

...urgency

A woman in Montana was taking pictures when a grizzly bear approached. Her friends and family quickly retreated. The woman, however, continued to look through her camera as the deadly predator approached.

Apparently, she was shooting with a long lens and did not realize how close she was to the bear. Fortunately, the animal left the area without incident.


While the woman's friends and family all reportedly backed off, she was apparently too focused on the camera to notice how close the bear was.

When I saw this story in my news feed, I had to stop what I was doing to write a post about it. The obvious spiritual lessons came to mind immediately: Like a grizzly bear, Satan “prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour” (1 Peter 5:8). We are therefore to “flee from sexual immorality” and other temptation (1 Corinthians 6:18) before we succumb to it.

But there’s another angle to this story as well.

The person who reported the woman’s encounter took a picture of her taking a picture of the bear. But he also tried to warn her, shouting at her to alert her to her danger. He said later that “she was either too far away, too focused on taking pictures, or was employing a strategy of ‘don’t move and the bear won’t mess with me’ as she was a statue.”

In other words, the fact that she remained in danger was not his fault.

The urgency and privilege of sharing our message

It is our job as Christians to warn those who are in eternal danger before it’s too late. Their response is not our responsibility. They may hear us and heed our message. They may reject our warning. They may ignore us.

What we do not want them to be able to say one day before God is that we didn’t tell them.

G. Campbell Morgan noted, “To call a man evangelical who is not evangelistic is an utter contradiction.”

We can say that the gospel is right or that it is wrong, but we cannot say that it is irrelevant. If it is true, every person we know will spend eternity in heaven or in hell depending on their response to God’s offer of salvation. If it is false, it is a lie.

If you believe that it is true, that the people you know are in imminent danger from the “bears” they don’t recognize, you must tell them.
-jim denison

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