I became acquainted with Michael
Green in 1970 from reading his book Evangelism In The Early
Church. It was thorough, biblical, and just what I needed at
that time in my studies and spiritual life. His credentials are
outstanding, from a Senior Research Fellow at Wycliffe Hall,
where he teaches evangelism and New Testament Studies, to Regent
College, Vancouver where he is professor of evangelism.
Avoiding Jesus is a book that you
will enjoy reading, at least from the view of knowing how to
answer skeptics, cynics and the curious. Green, who has
ministered globally, states that no matter where he is, he finds
that men and women tend to come up with the same answers and
almost universally is the notion that “Oh, but all religions
lead to the same God.” “If not that,” said Green, “then ‘Oh, I
have not time for religion.’” Most the responses range from
shallow, to escapist, to not wanting to take the time to
investigate the truth of Christianity or any other religion.
It makes an enormous difference
if there is a God or not, says Green. We cannot bury our heads
in the sand. I would add, we cannot do the same by not knowing
how to share the Gospel with those kinds of people.
This book contains 12 responses,
excuses, or attempts to ignore the truth. More specifically: I’m
not the religious kind. You can’t believe in God these days. All
religions lead to God. I can do my best. No one can do more.
When you’re dead, you’re dead.
You will find him responding to
the scientist who sees no need for God: “There is nothing in the
scientific method that can either demonstrate God’s existence or
disprove it. But for what it is worth, the basic presupposition
of the scientific method strongly supports the existence of the
mind behind matter.” Or to the person who says “if you are right
about Jesus, are other religions all wrong?” To which Green
says, “By no means.” But you will not find God revealed in any
other religion in fully personal terms who rescues us from sins
and self-centeredness. The idea “I must earn or pay something
for my salvation” is present in one way or another in all other
religions. There is a universal feeling that we must do
something to earn our salvation. Green responds by using Jesus’
description of our human condition. The good religious Pharisees
failed at earning God’s pleasure, forgiveness, and salvation.
After going through argument
after argument with the skeptics and cynics, Green concludes,
“If, in Jesus, God himself has come to look for us, it clearly
will not do to imagine that as long as we are sincere, it does
not matter what we believe. Nor will doing our best solve our
problems.” Of course the answer is Jesus Christ.
This book is worth reading and
using in a study group, especially for parents and youth workers
to use in ministering to youth and in other small group settings
to train people in knowing how to share the Gospel, clearly and
biblically. |