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January 2009 Newsletter
Undercover No More
After one of my recent speaking engagements, a gentleman came up to me to chat. He told me that
he worked for the government in kind of an undercover capacity. I was intrigued and started asking
him questions. Well of course, he couldn’t tell me too much! He told me that when he does undercover
work, he has to have some type of “cover” so people won’t know what he is really doing. He told me
that he chose to be an open air preacher and to hand out tracts as his “cover!” I stood there almost
stunned. I said that you get paid every day to preach the gospel and hand tracts out, but that really
isn’t your job?! I loved it. What a fantastic idea. I asked him how he got away with that as a
“cover.” He told me that he was the boss, and he could make that decision! My kind of boss!
The whole conversation really got me thinking. What really got to me was that for many of us, we do just
the opposite. We are salesmen, who happen to be Christians. We are mothers and fathers, whose faith is
only seen on Sundays. We are plumbers, but our customers never know that we read the Bible. We are
politicians, but we don’t want to mix our faith in with our job. We are teachers, but leave our Christianity
at the front door with the metal detector. We are students, but think we don’t need to raise our hands up
to speak against the false teachings that are being propagated on college campuses. We are, and you can fill
in the blank, but yet we are keeping the most important part of ourselves, our relationship with the Almighty
God, to ourselves. So when this world is in desperate need of eternal truth, it comes down to the fact that
we are scared or ashamed and that it is really not my job to tell these people anyway. Wrong!
Once while I was still teaching, I had to hire a guy to speak at an athletic banquet, so I hired this ex-Major
League Baseball player. It was a Christian school, and we wanted someone with a strong testimony to challenge
the students and parents to boldly stand for Jesus Christ. So, I asked him what he was doing for a living. He
told me that he worked for a cable company and installed cable TV in people’s homes. I asked why would you be
doing that? I am not the smartest guy in the world sometimes! I thought that every ex-pro athlete should be
rolling in the dough. And of course reality is very different from our perception. He looked at me and said,
the reason I install cable TV is to get into more people’s homes so I can tell them the truth about eternity
and the truth about the crucified Savior of the world. I can’t even begin to tell you the feeling I had inside
of me when he told me his story. It was one of the most humbling moments of my entire life; this man had life
figured out. It isn’t that you go and lay cable to feed the family and pay the bills, but that you go into
people’s homes to plant seeds for the Lord Jesus Christ, and at the same time God allows you to get a paycheck.
Read what is written in the 26th chapter of the book of Acts verses 23 through 29:
“That Christ should suffer, and that he should be the first that should rise from the dead, and should
shew light unto the people, and to the Gentiles. And as he thus spake for himself, Festus said with a loud voice,
Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad. But he said, I am not mad, most noble Festus;
but speak forth the words of truth and soberness. For the king knoweth of these things, before whom also I speak
freely: for I am persuaded that none of these things are hidden from him; for this thing was not done in a corner.
King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets? I know that thou believest. Then Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou
persuadest me to be a Christian. And Paul said, I would to God, that not only thou, but also all that hear me this
day, were both almost, and altogether such as I am, except these bonds.”
You see that Paul wasn’t standing before Festus and King Agrippa as a tentmaker. He was standing there as a man
of God who happened to make tents on the side. He didn’t get arrested for being a tentmaker. His real profession
was making sure that Festus and King Agrippa knew the truth about Jesus Christ, period. Paul made some very
powerful and direct statements to the King. He didn’t worry about the consequences; he worried about being
faithful to God and nothing else.
As the New Year begins, I want to encourage you not to be an undercover Christian in the coming days. Make
sure it is the part about you that most people know first and foremost. Oh by the way, the government person
who was undercover told me that one day he got the chance to hand a tract to the terrorist that he had been
following! Even he knew that jail doesn’t change a man’s heart, but the gospel does. Make sure no one around
you in the coming days will ever mistake you as an undercover Christian. Be bold!
Until the nets are full,
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