| evangelismAdvocacy  Apologetics: Finding Common GroundBy Rusty WrightProbe Ministries
 
 CBN.com 
		     As you  examine your life, can you think of any lessons you wish you had learned  earlier than you did?	 I’m really glad  I learned this lesson very early in  my career as a Christian communicator.   It’s made a world of difference. God has graciously  sent me presenting Christ and biblical truth on six continents before  university students and professors, on mainstream TV and radio talk shows, with  executives, diplomats and professional athletes.   He’s put me  speaking in university classrooms and auditoriums, in embassies, boardrooms, and  locker rooms.  He’s had me writing for mainstream  newspapers, magazines, and on the Internet about controversial subjects like  sex, abortion, the afterlife, and reasons for faith.   As you  might imagine, I’ve encountered many skeptics and objections to faith.  I’ve  learned much from my critics, the “unpaid guardians of my soul.” But if I hadn’t learned this crucial lesson at the outset, would all those outreach doors have opened? The Lesson I learned  it on an island in a river in Seoul,   Korea.  Over a million believers were gathered for  Explo 74.  One speaker that day was a prominent  church leader from India who  discussed how to best communicate the  message of Jesus to the types of Buddhists in India.  Here’s my paraphrase of his advice.  We could  use two methods, he said.  One was to begin by stressing the  differences between Buddhism and Christianity.  But that often gets people mad and turns them  off.   A second way involved agreeing with the Buddhist where we could.  We could say something like this:  "I know that you as a Buddhist believe  in Four Noble Truths."  (This is  foundational to many strains of Buddhism.)   "First you believe suffering is universal.  As a follower of Jesus, I also believe  suffering is everywhere.  It needs a  solution.”  “Second,  you believe that suffering is caused by evil desire or craving.  I believe something very similar; I call this  evil desire ‘sin.’" “Third, you  believe that the way to eliminate suffering is to eliminate craving.  I feel selfishness needs to be eliminated,  too.  And fourth, you feel we eliminate  craving by following the Eightfold Path: right understanding, right aspiration,  right behavior, etc.”   “Here’s  where I would suggest an alternative.   For many years I, too, tried to eliminate my selfishness by seeking to  think and do the right thing.  But you  know what happened?  I became very  frustrated because I lacked the power to do it. I realized that if I relied on  God, He could give me the inner power I needed." Do you see the  contrast between those two methods of approaching someone who differs with  you?  The first emphasizes differences  and has the emotional effect of holding up your hands as if to say "Stop!" or "Go away!"  The second begins by agreeing where you  can.  Your emotional hands are extended  as if to welcome your  listeners.  If you were the listener, which approach would you prefer?   Start by Agreeing where You Can In  communicating with skeptics, start by agreeing where you can.  You'll get many more to listen.   I call this  approach “Advocacy Apologetics.”  You’re  approaching the person as an advocate rather than an adversary.  You believe in some of the same things they  do.  Expressing agreement can penetrate  emotional barriers and communicate that you are for that person rather than against them.  It can make them more willing to  consider areas of disagreement.
 Don't  compromise biblical truth; but agree at the start where you can.
 Paul used  this approach.  He wrote (1  Corinthians. 9:19-23 NLT, emphasis mine): 
		  I have become a servant of everyone so that I can  bring them to Christ.  When I am with the  Jews, I become one of them so that I can bring them to Christ. … When I am with  the Gentiles who do not have the Jewish law, I fit in with them as much as I  can. … Yes, I try to find common  ground with everyone so that I might bring them to Christ.  I do all this to spread the Good News…. Here’s an  experiment:  The next time you encounter  someone who differs with you, take a deep breath.  Pray.   Ask God to help you identify three areas of agreement.  Can’t find three?  How about one?  Discuss that first.  Become an advocate for them.  Maybe you’ll oil some stuck emotional and  intellectual gears and nudge someone in His direction. More Evangelism Resources  More from Spiritual Life 
 
 Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer with Probe.org who has spoken on six  continents.  He holds Bachelor of Science  (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively. More from Rusty 
		  Wright at Probe.org. 
 
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