There’s a popular saying often repeated by Christians. It has found
new life on Facebook and Twitter. Maybe you have even uttered these
words, commonly at tributed to Francis of Assisi: “Preach the gospel.
Use words if necessary.” I think we can appreciate what many are getting
at when they say something like this. As Christians, we should live in
such a way that our lives point to the person and work of Jesus.
However, good intentions cannot overcome two basic problems with this
quote and its supposed origin. One, Francis never said it, and two, the
quote is not biblical.
Mark Galli has pointed out that there is no record of Francis, a
member of a preaching order, uttering anything close to this. In fact,
everything we know about the man suggests he would not have agreed with
his supposed quote. He was well known for his preaching and often
preached up to five times a day.
The idea may not have resonated with Francis, but for many today,
wordless ministry is a compelling approach. “Words are cheap,” we like
to say, and “Actions speak louder than words.” Galli explains that the
sentiment complements our culture rather well:
“Preach the
gospel; use words if necessary” goes hand in hand with a postmodern
assumption that words are finally empty of meaning. It subtly denigrates
the high value that the prophets, Jesus, and Paul put on preaching. Of
course, we want our actions to match our words as much as possible. But
the gospel is a message, news about an event and a person upon which the
history of the planet turns.
And this is the real problem — not from whom the quote originally
came, but just how it can give us an incomplete understanding of the
gospel and how God saves sinners. Christians are quick to encourage each
other to “live out the gospel,” to “be the gospel” to our neighbors,
and to even “gospel each other.” The missional impulse here is helpful,
yet the gospel isn’t anything the Christian can live out, practice,
or become. Continue at Ed Stetzer
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