My name is Ashley and my husband Luke and I both work at a Christian homeless shelter. We have the chance, in fact it is part of our actual job description, to share the gospel with everyone who comes in seeking shelter. I am telling you this because this has been instrumental in causing us to start this blog. At the shelter, we meet a lot of people who have a vague “belief in God” or who define their faith by what they “grew up as,” even if they don’t really know what that means (“I was raised Catholic”, “My dad was a Baptist preacher” etc). We’ve found a lack of understanding about what the gospel is and about the bible in general. Many people strongly believe they are Christians, but when questioned with any depth on what that means, they realize that they don’t know, that it has never really been explained to them, or they just find themselves talking in circles. Being able to share everyday about who Jesus is and what he has done for us has impressed upon us the urgency for the truth about Christ to be told, and opened our eyes to what many of you may already know. Underneath a sea of religious labels, we live in a culture that not only does not believe in, but often has literally no idea what the true gospel of Jesus Christ is. Of course it’s not just at the shelters, nor is it only in certain social classes. We started to notice and pay more attention to where we lived: there are so many groups around us who need to know the real Jesus Christ of the bible. We live in an area with a strong Mormon and Jehovah Witness presence, not to mention Buddhist, Muslim, and many others. We had, on and off, been trying to meet with and discuss the scripture with members of these other faiths, but it wasn’t a specific part of our life, really only when we had the time. We have felt called to make this a regular, consistent, ministry for us, to intentionally and diligently work to make this part of each week. We want this to become part of our regular routine. But it goes deeper than that. Not every false gospel and twisting of God’s word comes with an easy label, and not every false teacher wears a name tag like the Mormon missionaries to help you pick them out of a crowd or know it when you are talking to them. Too many of us for too long have let our Bibles grow dusty and our churches trendy, and have somewhere along the way lost the passion to make knowing God the all consuming passion of our lives, and to do so on HIS terms! Through the diligent study of his word and a commitment to living out what it says in detail, which includes calling out those who would lead others to do the opposite!
So why Jude 3? Well honestly I think this verse sums up our goal perfectly: “dear friends, although I was very eager to write to you about the salvation we share, I felt compelled to write and urge you to contend for the faith that was once for all entrusted to God’s holy people.” Contend means to debate, dispute, or to strive in opposition or against difficulty. This definition makes sense, since if you read past verse 3 Jude begins to discuss those who have crept into the church unnoticed and describes their ungodly actions. Jude then calls the believers to persevere, to hold fast to what they know and learned from the apostles. It seems to me that Jude chose to use the word contend to make the point that the believers should not just keep silent, but seek to engage with those teaching and believing falsely, not simply for the sake of contention, but in love for the sake of God’s Holy truth! Note what he says in verse 22: “Be merciful to those who doubt; save others by snatching them from the fire; to others show mercy mixed with fear- hating even the clothing stained by corrupted flesh.” We see over and over examples of being called to defend the faith. We are again told in 1 Peter 3:15 “… Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have.” We both feel that we can not and should not keep silent about our hope in Christ, and neither should we keep silent about misrepresentations of that hope, that though seeming like truth, will leave a man condemned before God. As you read through the New Testament, there are so many examples of “giving an answer” and “contending for the faith.” When Peter was addressing the crowd in Acts 2, how did he do it? He reasoned and demonstrated the truth and accuracy of the gospel message through Scripture that they might really understand what God had revealed in Jesus and the events the crowd was seeing at Pentecost. The defense of the faith by the early believers is again shown by Stephen in Acts 7 and vividly demonstrated by Paul in Acts 17. Paul sought daily to reason with those in the synagogues and in the marketplaces. I think what strikes me about this is that Paul didn’t simply wait for opportunities to share Christ, he actively sought them out. He went outside of his comfort zone and made a deliberate effort to reach people. Jesus is the way, the truth and the life, and Luke and I desire nothing less than to share that truth and life with everyone that we can and to show Him through the testimony and authority of the word of God, the Bible. Not only that, but if you are in Christ, we want to urge you to do the same! That is why we’ve started this blog, as a way of documenting some of our thoughts, experiences, conversations, and even failures along the way, hoping it will encourage sincere discussion leading to earnest seeking of the truth in the Bible. We hope to encourage other Christians to be an active witness for Christ, to avoid attractive false teachings that may seek to lure you astray, and to maybe help equip you to engage those who hold to such teachings with clarity and accuracy as well as compassion and love.
- Ashley