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The backwoods philosopher
loved to sit in his old rocking chair and tell the younguns,
”You kain’t teach what you ain’t never lern’t anymore than
you can come back from where you ain’t never been.”
Although his grammar
may leave something to be desired his WISDOM and understanding
shines through. It is true that you cannot teach someone something
that you do not know. As brethren and sisters of the Lord
Jesus Christ, we have an obligation to share the good news
of the coming kingdom with those we know and meet, but we
cannot teach what we have not ourselves learned. For this
reason it is necessary for each of us to not only know the
truth but also know how to give an ”answer to every man that
asketh us a reason of the hope that is in us with meekness
and reverence.”
Who else does God
have on this earth to tell the perishing world the trut4 as
it is in Jesus? If we do not do it who will? Now it should
be our pleasure as well as our duty to tell this good news
to all we know.
Does everyone who
knows you know of your love for God? Is your love of God and
love of the truth so strong, so much a part of your life that
it is shining through to all you meet? You may be the only
Bible some of your friends have ever read. Paul told the Corinthian
brethren that they were his ”epistle written in his heart,
known and read of all men.” What is the gospel according to
you?
In the business
world, a person with a fantastic product takes pleasure in
telling all who know him of its attributes. A real sports
fan loves to tell the details of their perfect game in bowling,
or their hole in one, or the big fish that got away or the
smaller one that didn’t.
Is our love for
Jesus less than the world’s love for the things of this life?
We have had a number of successful Christadelphian businessmen
confess that they feel much more comfortable talking about
their business than they do the truth. If this is true, we
need to work at changing things. We all admit that the truth
is the most important thing in our life but we may not live
or talk like this was the case. Remembering that ”you kain’t
teach what you ain’t never lernt,” we need to learn how to
ask leading questions that will bring the conversation we
have with those of the world around to the things of the truth.
We must not say ”we can’t.” Of course we can, but only if
we believe and know the truth and love it enough to want to
share it with others.
In our experience,
questions are better door openers than statements. When someone
mentions inflation ask the question, ”Have you ever heard
the Bible’s description of inflation?” You will usually get
a ”no” and then you can tell them how Haggai explains it as
”earning wages to put into a bag with holes.” When someone
mentions world conditions, ask them if they are excited about
the fact that it is two down and one to go concerning the
three nations mentioned in Ezekiel 38:5. These have been on
the side of the western nations and now are securely in, or
are going into the Soviet block. When they express their amazement,
gently tell them about Persia (Iran) Ethiopia and Libya. When
someone tells you of a friend with cancer or heart trouble,
ask if they are looking forward to the time soon to come when
”there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying,
neither shall there be any more pain.” They may not understand
when that will be and you will have an opportunity to share
the good news with them.
The more you practice,
the more proficient you become. Talking to your friends and
even strangers becomes an exciting experience as you look
for openings in the conversation to bring out a question that
will help you share the good news you know with those who
don’t. If you don’t know how, learn how, because you ”kaint
teach what you ain’t lernt anymore than you can come back
from where you ain’t never been.”
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