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After you have been saved, it’s
important to tell someone about it.
In the Bible we read about Andrew, a man
who later became one of Jesus’ disciples.
When he trusted Jesus as Savior, he took an important
first step. He
told someone! In
fact, he told his brother.
John 1:41
says, “He first found
his own brother Simon, and said to him, We have found the
Messiah.”
His explanation of his salvation was not
very long, not very detailed and definitely not very
theological. Andrew
was a fisherman, not a theologian.
Through the years he would learn more about God and
become more theologically astute, but at this time he had just
been saved. He
simply told his brother what he had found.
No one expects you to have all the
answers or all the right terminology just after you have been
saved. God
doesn’t expect it of you.
All you need to do is to tell someone what has happened
to you. Tell that
person that Jesus has become real to you, and that He has come
into your life and has saved you.
This doesn’t make you a missionary, but
it does make you a witness.
Jesus want us to be His witnesses (Acts 1:8).
Talking about your salvation may not be
easy, and you may not comprehend everything that happened to
you when you were saved. But
sharing your new life in Christ with others will help you in a
number of ways. It
will help clarify your thinking; you’ll be able to separate
the questions you have in your mind from the facts you know.
It will also help solidify in your own mind what has
happened to you. And
it will bring your friends face to face with God’s love for
them.
One caution:
When you tell someone what has happened to you, do not
start an argument. People
do not come to Christ at the end of an argument; but they
frequently come to Him at the end of a testimony.
Be genuine. Be
kind. Be patient.
Let the love of God that brought you to Him be
reflected in the way in which you tell others about Him.
The greatest thing that will happen to
you in your life is your salvation.
Tell someone about it.
Charles Wesley wrote:
“O for a
thousand tongues to sing
My great
Redeemer’s praise,
The glories
of my God and King,
The triumphs
of His grace.”
We don’t have a thousand tongues, but
we do have one. Let’s
use it for the noblest purpose possible—telling our friends,
relatives, and neighbors about what Christ Jesus has done for
us. When you do,
you have taken another first step for the new Christian.
The Son of God became a man so that man
could become the sons of God.
Tell someone.
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