Romans 10:13–15
For everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. But how can they call on Him in whom they have not believed? And how can they believe without hearing about Him? And how can they hear without a preacher? And how can they preach unless they are sent? As it is written: How welcome are the feet of those who announce the gospel of good things!
I am reading a sermon by Oswald Chambers. He points out the four “how’s” in these verses. First there is a promise: “call on the name of the Lord and be saved.” But to call you must first believe. To believe you must first hear. To hear someone must preach. To preach someone must be sent. The final responsibility God puts on us to send. If the missionary is sent he can preach. If he preaches people will hear the Gospel. If they hear some will believe. Those who believe will call, and those who call will be saved. But where does it start? With sending.
I am a Southern Baptist. The statistics show that my denomination has been in decline for the last few years. I believe we have been in decline for longer. I believe we have been living off our reputation for the past twenty years!
The latest edition of On Mission Magazine prints some statistics that reveal the main culprit. In 1999 about one in five of our forty thousand SBC churches baptized no one. That’s zero baptisms for a year! In 2006 that was up to one in four churches that baptized no one! That same year half of our churches baptized no one—that is zero baptisms—between the ages of 12-17!
We need to send missionaries to our own churches!
I’ve heard the complaint so many times: “You win all these people to Christ but you don’t disciple them. If we did a better job of discipling the ones we have we’d see the number of conversions go up.” So we have tried to do a better job of discipleship, but what kind of disciples are we producing if we are seeing less people saved—especially teenagers?
We have more literature on how to reach the lost than we’ve ever had—but what good is it doing us?
We simply must do a better job of sending out missionaries. Ah, but, we must do a better of job of being missionaries! We need a renewed emphasis on evangelism and missions or we are going to see our churches whither up and blow away—and our country along with them.