Editorial Keynotes

Why the Heavy Losses Among Converts?

L.E.F. is editor of the Ministry. 

There is very little mystery concerning why many of our converts drift out of the faith after a short time. The fault is not with the message, which is eternally true. It lies in the human factor. Many contributing reasons might be cited. But there are four ba­sic factors which we do well to note. Most of our difficulties center around violation of four fundamentals of sound and abiding evangelism. Let us note them briefly.

I. Back of Sound Conversion as the Compan­ion to Thorough Instruction. Too many who are won to the faith are intellectually convinced without being spiritually converted. But in­tellectual assent alone will not usually hold converts permanently. There must be a genu­ine "heart warming," as Wesley called it—a re­generation, or new life—if the soul is to be abidingly anchored in the faith. Nothing is more out of keeping or disappointing than an argumentative doctrinarian whose heart and life have never been transformed by the love and grace of Christ. Such recruits to our ranks are not only potential risks, but are unsatis­factory and cantankerous members—while they remain with us.

Be it noted, however, that it takes soundly converted preachers and Bible instructors to truly convert others. In altogether too many cases there is grave weakness at this point. The lightness, joviality, and secularism, coupled with the obvious lack of genuine spirituality, the reliance upon the mechanics of method, or­ganization, argument, devices, and oratory for evangelistic equipment, are all too tragically reflected in the converts of some. This need for true conversion is basic, and it is personal. God forgive us if unsanctified hands handle the Word of life, if untransformed lips merely par­rot the message of life or death to the soul. A converted ministry, with a resultant consecrated, converted church, is our greatest need. Sound conversion is the first sheet anchor of the soul, to avoid drifting with the tide onto the rocks of separation.

2. Lack of Thorough Instruction in the Veri­ties of the Faith. In some of our high-pressure evangelistic campaigns, where there is all too little personal work and home instruction, many are hurried into the church with serious gaps in their instruction. Vital subjects were missed because of irregular attendance, and only hast­ily reviewed in the baptismal class. The dis­tinctive Spirit of prophecy and tithing truths, health, educational, and other reforms, and much else that goes to make a genuine, intelli­gent, full-rounded Seventh-day Adventist, are neglected and sometimes even omitted. We have too often rushed people into the baptismal pool before they were properly prepared and ready. Thorough instruction, then, is the sec­ond anchor to hold the soul when the buffeting winds of trial would drive it aground.

3. Failure to Integrate Our Converts Into the Throbbing Heart of the Movement. Too often we do not properly integrate our converts into the spirit and comprehensive program of the advent movement. Every family won to this message should not merely be joined to the church. All should be inducted into the Sab­bath school as regular and active members, the young people tied into the activities and objec­tives of the Missionary Volunteer Society, the children and youth enrolled in our church schools and academies, the parents brought into our various layman endeavors, the home regu­larly supplied with our periodicals and books, interests and activities tied into our evange­listic projects, and our world-wide missions, habits of health, diet, drink, dress, and recrea­tion tactfully revised and reformed.

In other words, our converts should be inte­grated into the spirit, life, and vital activities of the church. They must become full-fledged participants in God's organized movement, not mere members of the church, as are most ad­herents of popular Protestant denominations. This is the third sheet anchor to the soul. When this is fastened to bedrock, it will be a strong aid in keeping converts from drifting into carelessness.

Let us not be quick to lay on the evangelist all the blame for failure here. He is the victim of a system of intensive and too often super­ficial evangelistic campaigning that has devel­oped. Moreover, he is judged by his immediate record of baptisms, rather than by the perma­nency of his converts. Were we to change the checkup and standard of convert evaluation, to the number of those still in the church at the end of a year after baptism, the entire picture would change This is the test of true evange­lism—not merely how many, but how abiding.

We go to great expense and pains to gain converts. But we often rush our evangelists through their efforts. We transfer them too soon—before their efforts are properly bound off and their converts soundly established. No one else can so establish these new recruits in the faith as the one who first leads them to accept it. His instruction needs to be more full, thor­ough, and complete. We should not rush him or permit him to be pulled away from an effort with his work only partly done, to repeat the incomplete procedure in another place. Both the conference committee and the evangelist must share the responsibility for failure here. We must revise our evangelistic schedule if we are to conserve our fruitage. Conservation is imperative today, for our own sake, for the sake of souls at stake, and for the honor of God.

4. Failure of Co-ordination Between Visiting Evangelist and Resident Pastor or District Leader. The frequent lack of co-ordination at this point, though in a slightly different cate­gory, is serious. Oftentimes there is failure on the part of the evangelist to actively tie the resident worker into the effort, so that the converts are jointly his converts and his charge. Sometimes the tragic human trait of indiffer­ence or jealousy shows itself. They are not my converts, the pastor may say. Intensely busy with his own problems and interests, he lets them drift through neglect. Nevertheless, they are souls within his parish, and there is ines­capable responsibility.

Sometimes the pastor is out of sympathy with the evangelist. At times this may be sheer lack of co-aperation. In other cases it springs from revulsion against an evangelist's boastful pub­licity, or perchance his careless and superficial work. And then, when the credit for all souls won in the city for the duration of a campaign goes to the visiting evangelist, it is easy to see how there is naturally a lack of ardor on the part of the resident pastor and a failure to tie in with the effort. This matter of faulty rela­tionship is a serious weakness that should be resolutely remedied.

New converts have to be nursed along for a time. This responsibility must be shared. We do not leave the newborn infant to shift for it­self. We do not say, It is not my child; I have no special responsibility for it. Or, to change the figure, there needs to be active, vital, per­sistent husbanding of our fruitage. The tender plant must be cared for—watered, sheltered from the burning sun, cultivated, and fed until its roots are firmly set, and it can stand alone under storm, stress, or drought, bearing fruit and honoring the expectations of the heavenly husbandman.

Few people are harder to reach again than those who have become only half Adventists and have drifted away from the faith. Only partially indoctrinated, not under­standing the genius and spirit of their new faith, not being willing to abandon completely their former worldly life, they are moved to repentance by nothing. Such individuals often develop an indifference and an apathy toward the church that frequently puts them beyond the pale of help.

It is a fearful thing to bring a soul part way along the path of a new life and then allow hint to become confused and lose his way because the signboards are not clear, the lighting is dim and insufficient, or the road is beset with unmarked bypaths, and sometimes marred by unknown ruts or pits. Leaving such to strug­gle along behind the procession, to stumble oft the pathway back to the familiar and enticing life of the past, involves most solemn account­ability which we cannot pass on to others.

Fellow workers, this situation presents a tre­mendous challenge and confronts us with fear­ful responsibility. We must grapple with the problem and alter the situation. We must change our methods, attitudes, and relation­ships. We must never rest until this great wastage has been stopped. For the sake of souls, for the cause we love, for the honor of the church, and, above all, for the sake of Christ who gave His life for the souls of men, let us change this situation.

L. E. F.

 

L.E.F. is editor of the Ministry. 

January 1944

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More Articles In This Issue

Build Up Your Reserves

If It is perilous to launch an offensive without reserves, then we need to do our part and build up our reserves.

Interchange of Holiday Gifts

Vital Testimony Counsels.

The Landmarks Defined

And Their Relation to the Receiving and Disseminating of Advanced Light

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Efficient Evangelistic Methods and Pastoral Technique.

The Evangelistic Appeal

Bending the human will to repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.

Signboards and Lantern Slides

The use of pictures during evangelistic efforts.

Writing for the Press

It is one thing to write an article for the press, but it is quite another thing to pre­pare an article that will get a response.

Bible Work in an Effort

Should the Bible instructor carry on regu­lar Bible studies during the evangelistic effort, or will her work mainly consist of mak­ing contacts with the people and keeping them attending the meetings?

Who Is a Bible Instructor?

The calling of the Bible instructor should be a distinctive office, as much so as that of the minister or the evangelist.

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