Greg Laurie on the Message 
America Hasn't Heard Yet





 
By _Anugrah Kumar_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/anugrah-kumar/) , 
Christian Post  Contributor
July 29, 2013|2:28 pm
Pastor Greg Laurie on Sunday shared about the essence  of the Book of 
Jonah, telling his congregation at Harvest Church in Riverside,  Calif., that 
the 
message that the minor prophet was asked to deliver to the  people of 
Nineveh is what even America needs but is yet to hear.
Laurie's message, titled, "The Message We Must Proclaim," was based on  
Chapter 3 of Jonah, which contains the essence of the book. 
The pastor said the story of the book is not just about a whale swallowing  
Johan, but about "a man who was given a second chance, and a city that was 
given  a second chance." It's about "a man used by God to bring about a 
revival, the  greatest in human history... a great God who shows a great love." 
The book tells us that God gives second chances, and that even one man or 
one  woman can make a difference, Laurie said. "Jonah was called to preach in 
 Nineveh. We have also been called to preach, not to Nineveh, but to our  
country," he said. "We have our marching orders, as Jonah had his marching  
orders." 
The method is also the same, the pastor said. We go and preach, as the 
Great  Commission also tells us to do. "Am I doing what God called me to do?" 
he 
 asked. 
Laurie said the book has two big lessons for the believers. 
The first, he said, is, "To reach our culture, we must preach the Gospel."  
Jonah was not asked to go and be a good example, the pastor stressed. But 
you  don't have to yell; preaching can be conversational, he clarified. You 
can even  preach through an email or a Facebook page. "The emphasis is on 
communicating  the content of the Gospel… on verbally communicating the 
Gospel." 
But some churches have moved away from evangelistic preaching and biblical  
teaching, Laurie said. The secret of the first century Church in changing 
the  world was that the believers continued in the Apostles' doctrine. "They 
offered  a theology without an apology, and we should do the same." 
When Jesus started his ministry, he was a preacher of the Word, as 
mentioned  in Matthew 4:7, the pastor said. Matthew 10:7 says Jesus also sent 
his 
disciples  to preach. 
Why preach? "Because preaching is God's primary way in reaching people."  
While God is all-powerful and do anything to reach the world, He has chosen 
to  use "people like you and me." 
The second lesson of the book, according to Laurie, is, "We are to preach 
the  message He has given." God asked Jonah to preach the message that "I 
tell  you." 
But Jonah first experienced a second chance himself, and then he was to  
preach that to others, the pastor cautioned. As Paul said in 1 Corinthians  
11:23, "For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you." 
"Nothing is going to go through you until it first happens to you," Laurie  
emphasized. "It is a great thing to go through the Bible, but it is a 
greater  thing if the Word has gone through you." 
We don't need to edit the message so that it doesn't offend anyone, Laurie  
went on to say. "Don't mess with the message of the Gospel. There is 
explosive  power in the essential message of the Gospel... To make the Bible 
relevant, we  need to understand that the Bible is relevant." 
It is the job of all believers to preach, Laurie said, as the Bible says 
your  sons and daughters will prophesy. The definition of "prophesy" is to 
speak for  another, he explained. "Jonah was God's prophet to speak to his 
culture, and you  are God's prophets to speak to your culture," he told the 
congregants. 
Who is a true prophet? 
God's representative or prophet is usually an ordinary person, Laurie said. 
 "God choses unlikely candidates so that He will get the glory… He is not 
looking  for flawless, fearless... or perfect... people." 
God's prophet speaks for someone else, he added. We are like "delivery boys 
 and girls" who deliver newspapers to people's homes – they are not the 
writers  of the news. "If our message is rejected, we don't take it personally. 
And when  the message is accepted, we don't take that personally." We don't 
take the blame  or the credit for the response. A true prophet recognizes 
the results are up to  the Lord. 
Our message must be delivered with urgency, Laurie said. Our message must 
be  clear and definite – even a child should be able to understand it. 
Jonah's message had a warning, Laurie said. "Whenever God gives a warning,  
that's a good thing," because he also offers hope. 
"Do you think God is warning America to turn back to Him?" the pastor 
asked,  and then answered the question himself, saying, "I believe He is. I 
believe He  is very gracious to us." Is America listening to that warning? "I 
don't think  so." 
However, "if God can bring a mighty revival in Nineveh with no better  
representative than Jonah and no more Gospel than he preached in their streets, 
 
the Lord can surely do the same in America," Laurie added. 
"My opinion is that most Americans have never heard an accurate Gospel  
presentation," the pastor said. For if we only tell the people God loves them,  
we have not given them the full Gospel. If we only tell the people God will 
 judge them, we have really not given them the whole Gospel, he said. 
The Gospel should have all its elements, he stressed. We are all sinners, 
as  1 John 1:8 and James 2:10 tell us, he said. But good news is that Jesus 
died for  us, as Romans 5:6-8 says, he added. And Jesus, who resurrected from 
the dead, is  the only way to God, as mentioned in John 14:6, Acts 4:12 and 
1 Timothy 2:5, he  said. 
Has America heard this message? Most Americans have heard only bits of the  
Gospel, Laurie suggested. It is the mandate of the believers to deliver the 
full  message, as Jonah did, he concluded

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