Jethro Bodine
Member
Demand they stop?It would depend. I would not run up to every person I see smoking and demand they stop.
That is NOT witnessing. What the religious right has done in the media is NOT witnessing.
Witnessing is waking people up to the truth of the open elevator shaft that lies ahead.On the other hand, I would immediately warn them if they attempted to enter an open elevator shaft should they not be paying attention.
You're not a Christian. How can you be a witness to the gospel?I don't believe that to be true. I have parents who are heavy smokers, so I know what you speak of when you mention defensive responses. They know it is bad for them. I have never experienced anything like that with regard to the gospel.
Which is a good illustration of how what's going on in the hearer is why an otherwise polite and compassionate message stirs offense in a person, but a person who then blames the message.I don't think it is that simple. For many, especially those who were raised either Christian or in a Christian environment but who have rebelled against its strictures, it can certainly have the effect of dredging up unwanted guilt.
It's interesting that I have noticed that the most resistant people I've talked to about God and the Bible are former Catholics. That tells me something, but not about Christianity, nor about those people...but let's not go there, lol.
Well, you would represent the handful of unbelievers who I talked to that could talk calmly and rationally about the gospel.And for others, it certainly can be perceived as persecution, especially if their lifestyle has been subject to significant social stigma. But I believe there must also be people like myself for whom neither of these conditions are met. I would not mind discussing the gospel with anyone interested in talking about it with me.
I learned it really just comes down to what a person thinks about what the Bible says is sin and God's justice in judging it. That seems to be what keeps people from coming to faith in Christ...not disputable facts about science, or supposed contradictions, and things like that. It seems almost without exception that after you wade through those things you see they are really still in the great debate with God about how and why they are guilty. It's impossible to come to faith in Christ while that debate rages on in a person.
You can't make a person believe and accept what God says about sin and the judgment to come. You can only educate them on what the Bible says and let God do the convicting and leave any hope of them responding to the conviction of the Holy Spirit with him. After all, that is how each of us came to faith.