J
JRKH
Guest
For the sake of Discussion:
You are part of a Christian missionary group. (The specific faith tradition doesn’t matter.) The leader of the Group hears of an isolated set of tribes far up in a remote and virtually inaccessible part of the world. Only one or two caravans per year can get in or out. You are sent to this area for a year with the mission, not of evangelizing but of study. You are to learn all that you can of their beliefs and social structure in order that the group can devise an appropriate plan of evangelization to Christianity.
During your time with these people you find, to your surprise, the most Christian of societies:
No war among the tribes,
Just laws, rigidly but justly applied and tempered with mercy and forgiveness,
Little if any crime,
Strong family bonds,
Neighbor helping neighbor constantly,
A society of Love and Fellowship open and freely given to any who come to it.
Weekly meetings to honor the Universal God in prayer and fellowship,
The Great commandment engraved in the very Core of society: Love God and Love neighbor.
In fact the only disturbing thing you notice is that their dress (or undress) would be considered inappropriate even by today’s worldly standards, though sexual promiscuity is virtually unknown.
Also some of their punishments are harsh by our standards but so rarely applied that they virtually do not count.
Now, after a year, you return to your missionary group with your findings. What are you going to recommend to them?
Here is a group, living quite naturally the Christian ideal of Fellowship, Peace and Love of God. The only things lacking are a few ritualistic signs such as baptism by water. Other than this they are the living embodiment of the Ideal taught by Christ, and they have been for a 1000 years or more.
Do you take them the Gospel or do you leave them in (obviously) God’s Hands?
Do you go back to teach them or to learn more from and about them?
Are these people behind the curve simply because they haven’t heard the name of Jesus, or far ahead of the curve by living inside the very teachings of Christ.
Do you try to “Convert” these people or do you simply stay away since God has so obviously taken these people in Hand and written His ordinances on their Hearts.
Peace
James
You are part of a Christian missionary group. (The specific faith tradition doesn’t matter.) The leader of the Group hears of an isolated set of tribes far up in a remote and virtually inaccessible part of the world. Only one or two caravans per year can get in or out. You are sent to this area for a year with the mission, not of evangelizing but of study. You are to learn all that you can of their beliefs and social structure in order that the group can devise an appropriate plan of evangelization to Christianity.
During your time with these people you find, to your surprise, the most Christian of societies:
No war among the tribes,
Just laws, rigidly but justly applied and tempered with mercy and forgiveness,
Little if any crime,
Strong family bonds,
Neighbor helping neighbor constantly,
A society of Love and Fellowship open and freely given to any who come to it.
Weekly meetings to honor the Universal God in prayer and fellowship,
The Great commandment engraved in the very Core of society: Love God and Love neighbor.
In fact the only disturbing thing you notice is that their dress (or undress) would be considered inappropriate even by today’s worldly standards, though sexual promiscuity is virtually unknown.
Also some of their punishments are harsh by our standards but so rarely applied that they virtually do not count.
Now, after a year, you return to your missionary group with your findings. What are you going to recommend to them?
Here is a group, living quite naturally the Christian ideal of Fellowship, Peace and Love of God. The only things lacking are a few ritualistic signs such as baptism by water. Other than this they are the living embodiment of the Ideal taught by Christ, and they have been for a 1000 years or more.
Do you take them the Gospel or do you leave them in (obviously) God’s Hands?
Do you go back to teach them or to learn more from and about them?
Are these people behind the curve simply because they haven’t heard the name of Jesus, or far ahead of the curve by living inside the very teachings of Christ.
Do you try to “Convert” these people or do you simply stay away since God has so obviously taken these people in Hand and written His ordinances on their Hearts.
Peace
James