“I heard myself saved”

When I hear God’s Word proclaimed… both the law which shows me my need and drives me to despair and the gospel which meets my need and gives me life, I find myself believing it.  It isn’t a decision on my part, it simply happens.  I didn’t believe, then I found myself believing after the hearing of the message of Christ. 

That “experience” of hearing myself saved, occurred at my baptism and it occurs regularly when I hear the gospel.  It is life to me.  I love to hear it again and again.

I’m told that there is an old word or expression in Norwegian that means just that: “I heard myself saved”.  I don’t know that word,  but I’d love to learn about it.  (If anyone knows it, I’d love to hear from you)

This thought has significance to me in these ways:
It impacts my idea of evangelism.  There is enormous freedom in it.  Evangelism no longer carries with it the idea of needing to convince or somehow persuade unbelievers to decide or accept or respond in a particular way to God’s redemption story.  My only responsibility is simply to proclaim His word, both the Law and the Gospel.  It does it’s work.  I don’t always know when it is doing its work to hearers and that’s okay.  I simply proclaim the message God has given us to proclaim. 

In much of ‘evangelicalism’ today, there is a western idea imposed upon the gospel that demands a purpose driven, decision making, evidence showing, prosperity producing, particular way of doing evangelism.  I think that way works against the gospel because it clouds the message and makes hearers feel more like a project than recipients of the best news they have ever heard. 

“Conversion” may look much different than what we’ve been conditioned by our ‘evangelical culture’ to expect.  It may look more like a nod, a smile, or a simple sigh of relief.  I think many of the passages of scripture used to tell people exactly what they need to say and do to be saved, were meant to be assurances for believers rather than a club to beat unbelievers.  Indicative statements have been made into imperatives. 

My experience in ministry has shown this whole idea to be true.  I’ve known many individuals with a disdain for Christ who, after hearing the message of the gospel again and again, found themselves eventually resonating with Him.  I didn’t always know when it happened, it just did.  The good news had its effect.  That makes me want to tell it more and more.

All of this doesn’t fit nicely into a graph or a year end annual report on numbers of conversions.  It doesn’t jive with our bottom line ways of thinking but I’m confident that in God’s economy none are missed.

                                                                                                     Patrick Thurmer

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Thank you, Pastor Pat Thurmer.

Living-Faith-Church

 

 

 

 

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5 Responses

  1. I like to wander off on my own. I think that I have a better idea. I want to be in charge.

    In this way I lose faith.

    Hearing the Word preached, receiving the Word (in the Sacraments), reading the Word in written form in the Bible or on a blog post, or wherever…creates faith in me, anew.

    And flesh and blood have not revealed this me, but our Father in Heaven.

    What an awesome God we have!

    Thanks, Pastor Pat.

  2. “Faith comes by hearing…”

    Good stuff. Thanks!

  3. Baptism. What he says is really missing something without baptism. I am not criticizing what he says at all. it was wonderful and rare to hear.

    thanks for sharing this.

  4. Frank,

    I know Pastor Thurmer is a BIG proponent of Baptism. But we don’t baptize in a vacuum. In Mathew 28 Jesus commands that we “…baptize and teach…”

    So, hearing is an important factor in how faith comes to us.

    When faith does come, Baptism is complete. And it comes again and again and again.(as we walk away from it…again and again and again).

    My 2 cents.

  5. Great post. Thank you, Patrick Thurmer!

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