Re: ?
Elizabeth,
I think you mis read something in Bruce's posts. I never say him say there was no evangelical use in talk/teaching, but rather that it is a weaker attractant to the gospel as a music format might be. Its like back in the 60s and 70s when churches started using bus ministries, or in the 70s and 80s when churches started using basketball and softball, or in the 80s and 90s when churches started presenting more modern sounding songs and using projectors (then video projectors and powerpoint, then video projectors and actual video clips)... they were changing their approaches to reaching a lost generation by seeing what attracted them to come and actuall hear the gospel story.
All of which goes to the point I make to churches all the time when discussions concerning "worship wars" begin: "We dont' know what we like, we like what we know." Typically that is a true statement. Evidenced by the fact that if you ask various Christians about the approach they prefer to use when witnessing, it will generally match the approach used to bring them to the gospel message to start with.
Again, I don't think Bruce was totally disregarding the evangelistic opportunities presented through talk/teaching, but rather pointing out the weaknesses of such radio programming to be truly and wholly evangelistic. Besides, Jesus didn't tell us to teach them before he told us to go get them, instead he told us to do the opposite.
> Bruce,
>
> I don't disagree that Christian radio is business, sometimes
> mixed with ministry, sometimes not...
>
> BUT your post knocked talk/teaching and presumed there was
> no evangelical use. You claimed it was church that saved
> people, not a song or story on the radio...at least that is
> what I gathered from your thread reply...
>
> That's simply not true.
>
Elizabeth,
I think you mis read something in Bruce's posts. I never say him say there was no evangelical use in talk/teaching, but rather that it is a weaker attractant to the gospel as a music format might be. Its like back in the 60s and 70s when churches started using bus ministries, or in the 70s and 80s when churches started using basketball and softball, or in the 80s and 90s when churches started presenting more modern sounding songs and using projectors (then video projectors and powerpoint, then video projectors and actual video clips)... they were changing their approaches to reaching a lost generation by seeing what attracted them to come and actuall hear the gospel story.
All of which goes to the point I make to churches all the time when discussions concerning "worship wars" begin: "We dont' know what we like, we like what we know." Typically that is a true statement. Evidenced by the fact that if you ask various Christians about the approach they prefer to use when witnessing, it will generally match the approach used to bring them to the gospel message to start with.
Again, I don't think Bruce was totally disregarding the evangelistic opportunities presented through talk/teaching, but rather pointing out the weaknesses of such radio programming to be truly and wholly evangelistic. Besides, Jesus didn't tell us to teach them before he told us to go get them, instead he told us to do the opposite.
> Bruce,
>
> I don't disagree that Christian radio is business, sometimes
> mixed with ministry, sometimes not...
>
> BUT your post knocked talk/teaching and presumed there was
> no evangelical use. You claimed it was church that saved
> people, not a song or story on the radio...at least that is
> what I gathered from your thread reply...
>
> That's simply not true.
>