After giving it a couple of days to germinate in your souls, we still have more to say about evangelism.
Only a minority of the human race is Elect. Spiritual birth is limited. We can learn indicators of spiritual birth, but it’s only enough for the practical necessity of deciding with whom we can fellowship and carry out our divine commission. In the final analysis, we can never really know.
However, the one thing that is utterly democratic in the human condition is living from the heart. The heart-led existence is available to all humans ever born; it’s built into the mortal nature. Everyone who has ever lived, or ever will live, can move their focus of consciousness into their hearts.
In our evangelism, we conceptually hope that our actions and words call out to the Elect, but the methods we use will focus more on cultivating heart awareness in those around us. So, we can say that a major element of our outreach is to awaken the heart-centered awareness.
For folks in biblical times, the vast majority of living humans were already that way. It was the fundamental assumption behind every culture within reasonable traveling distance. People already lived in their hearts, and only a tiny few Greek philosophers were plotting a course toward elevating the intellect over the heart. That kind of shift was still quite rare even among Greeks. Indeed, the whole concept really never took hold among them; it waited until the European Enlightenment dredged up classical Greek philosophy.
For the First Century AD, the Christians could count on a common assumption about heart-led living, which carries with it a basic assumption of transcendent spiritual powers. Even among pagans, the heart knows instinctively that such powers exist. That’s not to say folks in the ANE always walked in the leadership of their hearts, but they were at least aware that it was a common expectation. We don’t have that when we deal with the world around us.
No two people are alike. There is no quick and easy recipe for teaching people about the heart-led way. You’ll have to be aware of the person you are dealing with, where they are and what they need most. And because it is so universally rare in the West, it’s something that tends to keep us from distinguishing between “the Lost” and believers. We would tend to have the same basic testimony with both, because very few church folks live by their hearts.
Until a spiritually born person begins to walk by the heart’s leadership, they cannot claim the blessings of the Covenant. The Covenant of Christ assumes walking by the heart, as does the whole Bible. Faith cannot be born in your head because faith arises only in your heart. It’s not an intellectual persuasion; it’s a driving need for hope.
Thus, a primary starting place for evangelism is cultivating the heart-led way in others. As previously noted on this blog, almost everyone will misunderstand this. In America, the heart is simply a repository of sentiment and emotion. It’s really difficult to use the language of heart-led living. Instead, we might talk more about faith and commitment, which are rooted in the heart.
But sooner or later you’ll need to introduce the biblical terminology for heart-led living, and disabuse them of the false notions of what the heart does. And frankly, this is how you filter out people who cannot receive the gospel message. You don’t stop trying to manifest the gospel in how you live, but you limit any efforts to share the explanation of the gospel to only those who grasp the heart-led consciousness.
The heart-led way is fundamental to the gospel message. Spiritual birth happens when God moves, regardless of what’s in your head, but to actually walk in the Covenant of Christ requires a heart-led consciousness.
