Essentials of Evangelism - Lesson 1
In the Garden
Gain a foundation for evangelism that begins in the Garden, where God loves, seeks, and pursues fallen humanity before and after sin. You see evangelism as God’s initiative of reconciliation through covenant, mercy, justice, faithfulness, and long-suffering. You learn how self-reliance and oppression mark human sin, how God preserves a remnant through Noah and Babel, and how the course frames loving, caring, accepting, Spirit-assisted witness.
I. Introduction
II. Overview of the Lectures
III. Evangelism Begins in the Garden of Eden
A. God loved us before God made us
B. Sin begins when we become autonomous from God
C. God established covenant & provides opportunity to communicate with transcendent God
D. Characteristics of God
E. God saves the human race in Noah & the Tower of Babel
F. God continues to pursue us
I. Introduction
I’m Bob Tuttle and a professor of World Christianity Emeritus; that means I have been retired for a couple of years from teaching at Asbury Theological Seminary. I began my teaching career at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California; then at Oral Roberts University School of Theology in Tulsa, Oklahoma; and then at Garrett Evangelical United Methodist Seminary in Evanston, Illinois, on the campus of Northwestern University. The last 16 years I have been teaching at Asbury Seminary.
First of all, let me express appreciation to BiblicalTraining.org and to Matt Smith, who is a photographer. I am so grateful for BiblicalTraining.org and your [recte their] ministry worldwide. I am grateful to Matt; because he is not only good with a camera, he has been praying with me for months, that we would have the kind of anointing that would bring you insight and blessing for your life and ministry.
We are calling this a short course on evangelism. I was telling one of my students about believing in the uniqueness of faith in Jesus Christ and what that meant for evangelism. They said, “How can you insist on the uniqueness of faith in Jesus Christ that makes you so ‘holier-than-thou’”? I said, “Listen, my insisting on the uniqueness of faith in Jesus Christ doesn’t make me right, but it sure makes me an evangelist.” I’m not saying I’m right, and the rest of the world is wrong; but you can well believe, I believe I am right. If God is a triangle, and I think God is a circle, God does not become a triangle to accommodate who I believe God to be. Truth is truth regardless of what I think it is. But I spend a lot of time here. I have read four chapters of this every day for over 35 years, trying to get a feel for what God is saying to me on a daily basis, so that I might be helpful for my students and my family, and be effective and even more effective in ministry.
I ask my students in my first class in some classes I teach on evangelism, “What’s the first thing that comes to mind when you think of the word ‘evangelism’?” They usually say, “Pushy, self-righteous, and holier-than-thou.” Then I say, “What’s the first thing that comes to mind when you think of the person who influenced you most for God?” They say, “Loving, caring and accepting.” I’m saying, where this short course on evangelism is concerned, we are going to talk about the latter characteristics – an evangelism that is loving, caring, and accepting.
II. Overview of the Lectures
We are going to have 10 sessions. This first session begins in the Garden. Evangelism begins in the Garden. Abingdon Press, I wrote a book on the history of evangelism a few years ago, they wrote me and said, “How come it takes 150 pages to get to Jesus in a book on evangelism?” I said, “Because I understand evangelism, it begins in the Garden in the Old Testament.”
The second session is the covenant with Abraham, from Hinduism, which is the earliest high religion. A high religion is a religion that has trans-cultural significance, not just cross-cultural. From one culture to another, as you would perhaps in a tribal religion or a localized religion, but has trans-cultural significance. The first high religion is Hinduism. So, from Hinduism to Jesus Christ.
The third session: At the right time, Jesus Christ. You must know that Jesus Christ was born just at the right time. It wouldn’t have worked had he been born 50 years earlier. I mean, there was no common language to unite the realm. Pirates were still ruling the seas, and there were no common roads.
The fourth session: The early church, from Peter to Paul. And then following that, [fifth session] the journeys of Paul. And then following that, [sixth session] a short theology of evangelism.
And then I want to talk about in the next three sessions, sessions seven, eight and nine, about overcoming barriers to Spirit-assisted evangelism. The first barrier being we lack motivation, we’ve lost our sensitivity to fire and smoke. The second one, chapter 8, will be overcoming the fear of rejection. Then, chapter 9, the third barrier, we assume inadequacy.
We will conclude these sessions, [session ten], with the future. How can we anticipate the future in such a way that we can take planet earth back for God? At the end of that last session, I will give you a challenge, a covenant. If everyone in your congregation were to accept this covenant, and it is not complicated, you could well double your attendance in one year.
III. Evangelism Begins in the Garden of Eden
A. God loved us before God made us
It begins in the Garden, session one. This is what that story teaches us. Before the foundation, the Lamb was slain. That means that even before creation, God redeemed us before God created us. God loved us before God made us. I wrote a book where I was kind of imagining a conversation between the persons of the Trinity. I believe in one God, only one God. When I talk to my Muslim friends about the Trinity, I talk about Father, Word, and Spirit; and they can somehow understand that a bit better than Father, Son, and Spirit. And then I try to help them understand how Word has become flesh. Conversations between the persons of the Trinity anticipating creation. God, in God’s omnipotence, knew that if you give creation freedom—and this is my Wesleyan bias, so you’ll forgive me for this—if you cannot say “no,” your “yes” is meaningless. God knows that to give creation freedom, and if you give creation freedom, we’ll abuse it. It didn’t take us long. Right in the Garden, we abused our freedom, and we sinned.
B. Sin begins when we become autonomous from God
We attempted to become autonomous. Paul Tillich got it right. Sin begins when we attempt to become autonomous from God. We think we can do it out of our own steam, out of our own resources. If you read the Bible straight through, Genesis to Revelation, two big sins come at you time and time and time again. The first big sin is self-reliance; the second big sin is oppressing poor people. You really don’t want to do that.
Adam and Eve fell, and sin cannot bear the light. Do you understand? It cannot bear the light. What does God do? God, a loving God, withdraws behind the veil, so that we could still be in fellowship with God and not be overwhelmed by God’s holiness. The first words out of the mouth of God after the Fall are what? “Where are you?”
C. God established covenant & provides opportunity to communicate with transcendent God
God is the first evangelist, looking to be reconciled with a fallen creation. God establishes covenant and provides opportunity for fellowship, to be able to communicate with the transcendent God. Terribly important. Communicate what?
D. Characteristics of God
I sometimes tell my students that if you had to describe the characteristics of God from Genesis to Revelation, you would probably come up with at least five wonderful characteristics. The first of course is love; second is mercy, justice, faithfulness, and long-suffering.
Genesis to Revelation. You don’t have to get to the New Testament to find a God who is loving and merciful and faithful and just and long-suffering. That’s who God is.
Yet, in spite of the fact that God loves us and wants to be in fellowship, within generations of Adam and Eve, we almost perfected—humankind almost perfected its own evil; we are about to destroy ourselves. Before we could destroy ourselves, do you know what God does? God cuts us right back to the root.
E. God saves the human race in Noah & the tower of Babel
I am not trying to make a literal case for a universal Flood, but I can tell you what that means. God, before we could destroy ourselves, perfect our own evil, and destroy ourselves; God cuts us right back to the root and saves a remnant and establishes a covenant. A covenant with Adam and Eve; a covenant with Noah, confirmed with a rainbow. Then within generations of Adam and Eve, within generations of Noah, we did it all over again. We were about to perfect our own evil.
We want to build this tower to God, the Tower of Babel. “We don’t need God. We can build this tower to heaven ourselves. We can get to heaven out of our own steam.” You know what God does to preserve the remnant? Everyone spoke their own language. And in community there is nothing we cannot do for good or for ill, you know that. There are some cultures where in mass they would far rather hate their enemies than love their friends. One on one, they give you their shirts off their backs; but in mass would far rather hate our enemies than love our friends. In community, there is nothing we cannot do for good or for ill. And so, what does God do? God confuses us, just to preserve the remnant.
F. God continues to pursue us
I love this story. I love evangelism. I love a God who pursues us, from the very beginning, before the Lamb was slain, before the foundation. We get back to that in a later session. I love the story of evangelism. I love it that God knows who we are, but yet pursues us from the very beginning and continually is looking for opportunity to be—our fellowship to be renewed and refreshed.
I look forward to session two. God bless you.
Lord, we’re grateful for your goodness. We ask you now, God, with all simplicity, to take what God teaches us in the Word and apply it to our lives in such a way that we can be better prepared for life and ministry. Amen.
- Overview of the story of the gospel, beginning with Genesis 1-11. God loved us before he made us. God loves us, pursues us, preserves a remnant, and establishes a relationship with us within the framework of a covenant.0% Complete
- God’s covenant with Abraham, Israel’s history, exile, and the rise of world religions reveal God’s continuing faithfulness and lead to Jeremiah’s promise of a New Covenant written on the heart.0% Complete
- Jesus’ ministry, healing, forgiveness, and fulfillment of prophecy reveal him as the sinless redeemer who fulfills the New Covenant and restores humanity’s relationship with God at the right moment in history.0% Complete
- The Holy Spirit empowers the early church as Peter and Phillip proclaim the gospel, breaking barriers among Jews, Samaritans, Gentiles, while showing that evangelism often begins by showing up and recognizing God’s work.0% Complete
- Dr. Tuttle teaches how Paul’s ministry, the Jerusalem Council, and the Spirit’s guidance show that evangelism moves beyond legal bondage as God prepares hearts, opens doors, and calls you to show up, pay attention, and witness.0% Complete
- Romans 8:1-4 reveals that in Christ you live with no condemnation, as repentance and faith open you to the Holy Spirit’s power to overcome sin, fulfill God’s law, and enter renewed fellowship with God.0% Complete
- Discover how lack of motivation weakens Spirit-assisted evangelism, that truth must be spoken in understandable ways, that eternal need is at stake, and that Christian community sustains you through prayer, attachment, and shared care.0% Complete
- Fear of rejection hinders evangelism, yet ministry often requires many witnesses before conversion, so your faithfulness allows God’s prevenient grace to work and make you an instrument of eternal change in others.0% Complete
- Overcoming inadequacy in evangelism comes through understanding that you are an indispensable part of the body of Christ, uniquely equipped to minister in your sphere, where even weakness becomes strength through reliance on God.0% Complete
- Effective ministry comes through understanding covenant, relying on prayer, loving others as God does, embracing Spirit-given gifts, and intentionally reaching people in your sphere through consistent prayer and action.0% Complete
Lessons
- Overview of the story of the gospel, beginning with Genesis 1-11. God loved us before he made us. God loves us, pursues us, preserves a remnant, and establishes a relationship with us within the framework of a covenant.0% Complete
- God’s covenant with Abraham, Israel’s history, exile, and the rise of world religions reveal God’s continuing faithfulness and lead to Jeremiah’s promise of a New Covenant written on the heart.0% Complete
- Jesus’ ministry, healing, forgiveness, and fulfillment of prophecy reveal him as the sinless redeemer who fulfills the New Covenant and restores humanity’s relationship with God at the right moment in history.0% Complete
- The Holy Spirit empowers the early church as Peter and Phillip proclaim the gospel, breaking barriers among Jews, Samaritans, Gentiles, while showing that evangelism often begins by showing up and recognizing God’s work.0% Complete
- Dr. Tuttle teaches how Paul’s ministry, the Jerusalem Council, and the Spirit’s guidance show that evangelism moves beyond legal bondage as God prepares hearts, opens doors, and calls you to show up, pay attention, and witness.0% Complete
- Romans 8:1-4 reveals that in Christ you live with no condemnation, as repentance and faith open you to the Holy Spirit’s power to overcome sin, fulfill God’s law, and enter renewed fellowship with God.0% Complete
- Discover how lack of motivation weakens Spirit-assisted evangelism, that truth must be spoken in understandable ways, that eternal need is at stake, and that Christian community sustains you through prayer, attachment, and shared care.0% Complete
- Fear of rejection hinders evangelism, yet ministry often requires many witnesses before conversion, so your faithfulness allows God’s prevenient grace to work and make you an instrument of eternal change in others.0% Complete
- Overcoming inadequacy in evangelism comes through understanding that you are an indispensable part of the body of Christ, uniquely equipped to minister in your sphere, where even weakness becomes strength through reliance on God.0% Complete
- Effective ministry comes through understanding covenant, relying on prayer, loving others as God does, embracing Spirit-given gifts, and intentionally reaching people in your sphere through consistent prayer and action.0% Complete
Class Resources
Recommended Books
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Essentials of Evangelism - Student Guide
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