Ron Hutchcraft Ministries - Say It In My Language - #6828

Say It In My Language - #6828 Print
 
A Word With You - Your Mission

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

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So I'm settling into my hotel room when I'm out of town, and I'm going to turn on the TV probably to get a little of the local flavor. I especially like to watch the local weather and the local news. That's pretty much what I do at home. If I'm in the U. S. listening to the local news and weather, well that's easy. It gets kind of frustrating sometimes in another country.

Like I was in Amsterdam for a major conference, and I did what I just described there. I turned on the TV as I was unpacking in my hotel room, and I saw a man communicating earnestly. He was telling viewers everything they should know: the local news, the weather for tomorrow. Of course I couldn't understand a word he was saying; it was all in Dutch, and it was frustrating. He knew it, I wanted to know it, but the information was not in a language I could understand. You may know some folks who feel the same way toward you.

I'm Ron Hutchcraft and I want to have A Word With You today about "Say It In My Language."

Our word for today from the Word of God comes from Acts chapter 2, where we have a communications miracle called Pentecost. The Holy Spirit comes to dwell in Christians beginning at this point, and the disciples are preaching on the street corner in Jerusalem. The problem is the disciples don't speak many languages; they have their own language they speak. The audience is very multilingual, representing many language groups, and Hebrew just isn't going to "cut it" to get across to most of them. Listen to what happened.

In verse 1, "When the day of Pentecost came, they were all together in one place." Verse 4, "All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them. Now there were staying in Jerusalem God-fearing Jews from every nation under heaven. When they heard this sound, a crowd came together in bewilderment, because each one heard them speaking in his own language." And then it says later on in verse 11, the people say, "We hear them declaring the wonders of God in our own languages."

Well, that was the key. They were impressed that they heard the Good News in their own language. In one sense, that was a special miracle for a special occasion. But it's still true that our message has no effect until a person hears it in a language he can understand.

We have people right around us that we're trying to share Christ with, but we're sort of like that Dutch newsman I heard. We're giving the information, but the person who needs it just doesn't understand it in the language we're giving it in.

Maybe we've got a language problem. You see, when you become a Christian, right away you start hanging around the church and picking up a wonderful Christian vocabulary. We get used to expressing Christ in religious terms, but they are terms that a lost person just doesn't understand.

There may be someone close to you right now and they're rejecting Christ. Maybe they've never heard about Him in their language. They don't understand all our church talk - our Christianese. They need to hear the Gospel expressed in the language of sports, or business, or music if that's their thing, or gardening, or parenting, or computers, or the language of the medical profession, something they can relate to. It's lazy just to say it in the religious jargon you're most comfortable with. Think about that lost person. Learn to think "lost".

Walk a mile in his shoes, actually in his vocabulary. Look at his interests. Look at how the truth of the Gospel could be communicated and illustrated in his terms. When a missionary goes to the mission field, they don't just transmit the Gospel, they translate the Gospel. That's why they go to language school before they go to the mission field. We need to translate the message. This is information upon which their eternity depends.

I sat in that Dutch hotel room and I murmured, "Say it in my language, will you?" There's someone near you who doesn't have Christ who's waiting for words they can understand. Would you say it in their language?

 

Comments 

 
+4 By LynnR on March 13, 2013 at 3:35 am
Yet another answer to prayer, I need to walk in their shoes a little while and talk their talk...oh thank you Ron!
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+2 By Joe Fontanetta on March 13, 2013 at 7:34 am
I'm going to need the Holy Spirit's help on this one, just like I go to Him for so many other things, and even though the lost ones and I will be speaking the same language on the outside, maybe we'll be speaking a new one on the inside.
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