It’s true that effective evangelism usually takes place after trustworthy relationships have been built. But something is amiss when we can “get to know” people well over a period of months and never talk about Jesus.
A few months ago, I struck up a conversation with the father of one of the kids on my son’s T-ball team. We talked a little about his work, about his kids, about our community. I asked him why he had chosen our town. His answer? The church drew him here. They had wanted to raise a family in a small town with a good church. Several family members had recommended a particular church, and so they upped and moved here.
This guy had no idea I was an associate pastor at another local church. He didn’t even know I was a Christian. Yet within a few minutes of the conversation, it was clear that he was a believer and that his faith in Christ was central to his life. As I thought about that conversation later, I realized that it would have been impossible for us to form a lasting friendship without talking about Christ. His Christianity was so central to his identity that it could not go unnoticed or unmentioned.
In pastoral ministry, I have the same “problem.” Whenever I talk to a neighbor or strike up a conversation with a stranger, I usually am asked about my occupation. As soon as I mention that I’m a pastor, the relationship changes. The conversation shifts. (Things either go uphill or downhill from there.) But there’s no sense in hiding. What I do is connected to who I am. To form a good friendship with someone, my occupation has to be on the table.
I am all about building relationships and sharing the gospel within the context of those relationships. I’m not saying that every conversation has to end with an altar call. But it worries me when Christians can become “good friends” with non-Christians without revealing their Christian identity.
Waiting too long to talk about your faith is counterproductive. If I can get to know you well over the course of several months and yet never hear you speak of Jesus, then when you eventually do share the gospel, I will probably assume that Jesus is not very important to you.
On the other hand, when your Christian faith runs deep, Jesus has a way of making an appearance much sooner. Our identity in Christ should be such an integral part of our lives that it is impossible for someone to know us well without understanding how our Christian faith informs our lives.
So, yes. By all means, build deep relationships with unbelievers. But be up front about who you and are and what you believe. Don’t go in cognito in order to be a better witness. Let people see Christ in you and let them know Who it is they’re seeing.
The Betrayal: A Novel on John Calvin is one of the better novels I’ve read in a long time. Admittedly, I’m slightly prejudiced and inexperienced to review this particular novel for a two reasons.

Yeah, it’s the bobblehead and the beer. No, not really.
I like John Calvin. And I like him because his life was centered around the glory of God. It’s really that simple. People often misjudge Calvin because they don’t like what he taught or they don’t like the Servetus incident. Douglas Bond through his words awakens the sleeping student in history class.
I haven’t read any of Douglas Bond’s other books. He writes in a genre known as “historical fiction”. I have read extensively in the cousin of this genre known by “alternative history”. Imagine General Lee given Tylenol to soothe his headache and his army being equipped with automatic machine guns. From my reading of this, I would heartily recommend you to look at his other books as I will once I have time on my hands.
This has been my pattern of life every semester for the last 3-odd years. When it comes to an end, I don’t know what I’ll do.
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