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Clark - Evangelism as Exiles

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Clark Evangelism as Exiles
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Evangelism as Exiles: Life on Mission as Strangers in Our Own Land
Elliot Clark

The Gospel Coalition

March 2019


Few things are harder, in the time of our sojourn in this present age, than to see ourselves as we are, as pilgrims. But harder than that, it seems, is the challenge of carrying out our calling as bearers of the good news. We seem to want to embrace the world in all the ways we shouldnt, while avoiding engaging the world in all the ways we should. Elliot Clark offers us a vision of how we evangelize in an American context. His vision is drawn from his years of ministry overseas and a heart for the local church. May this book prompt us to live as exiles and evangelists, at the same time.

Russell Moore, president of The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention

What a profound, important, and timely book Elliot Clark has given to Gods exiled peoples! We all know the world has changed around us. And we realize our gospel proclamation needs to change as well. Evangelism as Exiles helps us make the necessary shifts. And it does so with humble grace and deep theological reflection. Im very grateful for this book and the insights it delivers.
Randy Newman, senior teaching fellow at the C. S. Lewis Institute and author of Questioning Evangelism .

Even as Christianity cedes its pride of place in North America, the sky isnt falling according to Elliot Clark. Having spent years outside the United States, Clark recognizes the hopefulness of exile for Christians. By Gods grace, we can be rescued from our bigotries, our cowardice, even our moral laxities and delivered into greater boldness. Im both chastened and compelled by Clark's powerful, poetic wordsand inordinately hopeful that we will reclaim the radical mission of proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Jen Pollock Michel, author of Surprised by Paradox and Keeping Place

A helpful, hopeful, and very practical treatise from Elliot Clark. Evangelism as Exiles offers a much needed real world perspective; that cultural hostility against Christianityoften seen as a purely negative force by Western believerscan actually energize and revitalize the churchs evangelism.
K. A. Ellis, director of the Center for the Study of the Bible and Ethnicity, Reformed Theological Seminary, Atlanta

As sojourners and strangers in a secular age, the call to Christian witness is one that can feel daunting to many of us. But as Elliot Clarks wonderful new book demonstrates, the opportunity is not to be missed. If you want to be challenged and equipped for greater faithfulness in personal evangelism, this is a book you cant afford to ignore. Through keen theological insight and careful pastoral wisdom framed by his own experience, Clarks Evangelism as Exiles is a powerful reminder that times of greatest spiritual darkness are also those of greatest opportunity for the light of the good news of Jesus Christ to shine all the more brilliantly.
Matthew J. Hall, dean of Boyce College and senior vice president of academic strategy at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Perhaps you have practically given up on personal evangelismmaybe because youve depended too much on the attractional model of evangelism or because you fear the social stigma of speaking the gospel of Christ boldly. For those of us who are overwhelmed by the mounting evangelistic task, Evangelism as Exiles: Life on Mission as Strangers in Our Own Land offers us the biblical help and doxological motivation to confidently initiate gospel conversations in a society that is becoming increasingly hostile toward Christianity. The author takes us back to an approach that we shouldve never left, and I feel confident that you will be, as I was, greatly profited by this book.
Mark Allen, executive director of the Center for Apologetics and Cultural Engagement, Liberty University and professor of biblical and theological studies at the Rawlings School of Divinity

Elliot Clarks perspective is desperately neededits grounded in Scripture and relevant for the context in which the American church finds herself. He clears up so many misconceptions about evangelism that I lost count. Im praying this book and its influence reaches far and wide to a great and lasting effect.
Gloria Furman, crosscultural worker and author of Missional Motherhood

We are reminded in this challenging book that there is a cost to evangelism, that we are exiles and strangers, that we too often long for comfort and popularity instead of speaking up boldly as disciples of Christ. Clarks book is convicting, reminding us of our great responsibility to proclaim the good news about Jesus even in adverse circumstances.
Thomas R. Schreiner, professor of New Testament Interpretation and professor of biblical theology at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

This book offers conviction and challenge we urgently need in regard to evangelism. It asks believers in Christ to grasp hold of our identity as sojourners and exiles. It speaks from the ground of Scripture. And it lets us in to stories of witness and faith in parts of the world where Christians know hard exile and vibrant hope. Its a book that helps wake us up.
Kathleen Nielson, speaker and author of Women and God: Hard Questions, Beautiful Truth


Foreword
A rising number of Christians in the West are coming to grips with the reality that the Judeo-Christian worldview no longer holds sway. Of course, we've always known that there are parts of the world where missionaries undertake their work in the teeth of oppositionopposition that is sometimes cultural, sometimes judicial. At home, however, we didnt deploy missionaries: we deployed pastors and evangelists. But as the folk song puts it, The times they are a-changin. In the Bible Belt, especially in the population that is 35 or older, its still perfectly acceptable to be a nominal Christian: the subculture reinforces us as we lurk in our pious comfort zones. Elsewhere in the country, however, and just about everywhere for young people, nominal Christianity is becoming obsolete: it costs too much, with no real advantages. Decidedly non-Christian and anti-Christian agendas, riding the digital waves, increasingly prevail.
It turns out thats not entirely a bad thing. As the number of nominal Christians thins out, its becoming a little clearer who is a Christian and who is not. Christians are encouraged not to be like the culture, but to be countercultural. Pastors and others enjoin us to be like the people the apostle Peter addresses: sojourners, aliens, exiles. Instead of whining and feeling sorry for ourselves because the culture is becoming unrecognizable, Christians should align their vision with that of the most mature first-century Christians. If opposition mounts to the place where it can be rightly called persecution, well, then we are called to follow the apostles, who left the Sanhedrin, rejoicing because they had been counted worthy of suffering disgrace for the Name (Acts 5:41). After all, hadnt the Master, only a short while earlier, told his followers that if people oppose Christ they will oppose Christians (John 15:1825)? So stop living your life in fear, and wear the cultural dissonance as a badge of honor. Fear no one but God.
Elliot Clark takes the argument one step farther. The shifts in our culture, he argues, ought to modify our expectations as to what evangelism is, as to what evangelists do. Many of us think of Billy Graham as the archetypal evangelist. He sometimes went abroad, but primarily he ministered here : he was our guy, and he was feted in many contexts, sometimes labeled Americas Pastor. Now, however, the changes in the culture mean that, just as Christians face skepticism and mild opprobrium, so do evangelists. As Christians in general are thought to be too exclusive and narrow in their claims, too right-wing and old fashioned in their moral perceptions, and too out-of-touch when it comes to the freedom our culture hungers for in the domain of personal identity, so Christian evangelists fall under the same condemnation. Christian evangelists are not being celebrated in dinner meetings with the local mayor, but are quietly engaging in a one-on-one Bible study with an unbeliever, meeting in a Starbucks.
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