Intro
In today’s Church, probably for about the last 200 years, we’ve often heard 
about Christian “witnessing,” telling others about Jesus, and how every 
Christian is supposed to be a witness.  Yet, that’s not true.  But hear me out 
before you brand me a heretic!  For what I’m going to share with you comes from 
the Bible.  And as Christians, it’s good for us to have our worldview shaped by 
God’s Scriptures. 

Main Body
When the New Testament uses the word “witness,” it means telling someone else 
what you’ve seen with your own eyes.  If you didn’t see it, you can’t witness 
about it.  It’s like being a witness in a court of law.  If you didn’t see 
something, you can’t testify about it.  

Now, Jesus does tell His Apostles to be witnesses, eyewitnesses, to what they 
had seen.  That’s because they did see Jesus do what He did with their own 
eyes.  But after the first generation of Christians, Scripture no longer tells 
those brought into the Church to witness but, instead, to confess.  Faith 
changed from seeing to hearing.  

Jesus pointed forward to this shift when He said to Thomas: “Do you believe 
because you see me?  Blessed are those who believe without seeing” (John 
20:29).  And, later, the Apostle Paul said, “Faith comes from hearing, and 
hearing through the word of Christ” (Romans 10:17).  Hearing is how we are 
brought and kept in the faith--through our ears, not our eyes. 

If you haven’t seen something with your own eyes, then what you say only 
becomes your subjective experience against someone else’s.  That’s not how God 
wants the Christian faith to be expressed, based on your subjective experience. 
 

God wants us to take Jesus’ life-creating Word beyond mere feelings and 
subjective experiences to objective truths.  That’s why after the first 
generation, the New Testament only speaks of confessing, of saying the same 
thing that you have heard, not saying what your eyes have witnessed.  

In the Greek, confess (homolego) literally means “to say the same thing.”  
After all, you haven’t seen Jesus do something with your own eyes.  But you 
have heard about Him from the Word that has been preached into your ears.  
That’s why Scripture exalts us to walk by faith [that is, by what you have 
heard] and not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:7). 

1 John 2:23 says, “… the one who confesses the Son also has the Father.”  And 
this confessing agrees with the truth of who Jesus is.  The Apostle John later 
says: “Every spirit who confesses that Jesus Christ has come as a human is from 
God.  But every spirit who does not confess Jesus is not from God” (1 John 
4:2-3).  God calls us to confess the Christian faith (1 Timothy 6:12), the 
Christian hope (Hebrews 10:23), and the Gospel (2 Corinthians 9:13).  Those are 
objective truths that Christians are to speak as they confess the saving Word 
of Jesus to others. 

And so we now come to what the Apostle Peter says.  Peter, writing to 
Christians, both laity and pastor, said: “Always be ready to give a defense to 
anyone who asks about the hope that is in you” (1 Peter 3:15).  Always be a 
ready to defend the faith, ready to give a clear answer to anyone who asks you 
why you believe what you believe. 

But how can you do that if you only know the basics of the Christian faith?  To 
give a robust answer, you must know the faith in a robust way.  And how can you 
know the faith in a robust way if you don’t make a robust effort to learn it?  

You may think that you’ve learned all you need to know from the sermon or the 
Catechism all those years ago.  But that’s not true.  Jesus told His Apostles 
to preach repentance into the forgiveness of sins (Luke 24:47).  And if you 
take Jesus at His word, the sermon’s purpose then is to bring you to repent of 
your sin, so you are brought again into His forgiveness.  

The sermon’s purpose isn’t to teach, although teaching does happen.  It’s to 
bring you to repent and then hunger for the forgiveness that Jesus gives.  
That’s why the Lord’s Supper follows the sermon.  That’s by design, not by 
accident.  If a pastor preaches repentance into the forgiveness of sins, he’s 
always preaching you to the Lord’s Supper. 

To confess the faith is to know the faith.  According to a proper Christian 
worldview, the most-important hour of the week is the Divine Service.  The 
second most-important hour is then Bible class.  You can’t speak of what you 
don’t know.  And today, the whispered lies of Satan against God have become 
more and more sophisticated.  Bible class will help arm you to defend and 
understand the faith as you should.  

It’s easy to be lulled into thinking that you know enough.  After all, Jesus 
saves us.  Isn’t that enough to know?  And yes, that is a proper, faith-based 
understanding, that Jesus saves you, but with a sinful-nature conclusion--that 
I don’t need to know more than that.  The Apostle Peter says otherwise.  

So does Jesus.  How are you to learn the “all” that Jesus told His Apostles to 
teach if you don’t open yourself to instruction?  Learning the “all” that Jesus 
commanded doesn’t happen on its own.  It takes active listening and learning.  
And on this side of heaven, the Christian is never to stop learning.  We should 
always be hungry to learn more of what it means to be God’s baptized child.  
Bible class will help in that way.  

And the more you know, the more God’s truths become ingrained within you, the 
better you can confess and defend the hope that is in you.  We have Bibles, we 
have Bible classes, and we have the Lutheran Confessions.  Ignorance is no 
excuse. 

To confess Christ is to defend the faith.  It’s not talking about your 
experiences, for experiences vary from person to person.  One person can have a 
powerful awakening where God turns his life around.  One day, he is hell bound 
in unbelief; the next, he’s on his way to heaven, confident in Jesus, his 
Savior.  Yet, someone else may not have such an experience.  God brought him 
into the Church as an infant through the waters of holy baptism.  He has known 
Christ as long as he can remember.  

There isn’t a one-size-fits-all religious experience for Christians.  But there 
is this common denominator: It’s as the Apostle Peter tells us at the end of 
our epistle reading: “Baptism now saves you” (1 Peter 3:21). 

Defending the faith isn’t talking about yourself.  It’s talking about what God 
reveals of Himself to us for us to believe and confess.  God gives us the 
reason for the hope that is in us.  Knowing that, you are then better able to 
answer the people who are going to ask you, “Why?”  Why do you go to church?  
Why do you believe in God?  Why do you worship Jesus?  Why do you call yourself 
a Christian and what does that mean?  People want to know.  You get to tell 
them. 

Our silence is our sin.  We have failed to give a reason for our hope.  We have 
failed to do it with gentleness and respect.  We have failed to do it with a 
good conscience, which is the gift that God gives us in our baptism.  

Baptism is an appeal to God for a good conscience through the resurrection of 
Jesus Christ.  We are free, forgiven people.  We have nothing to lose because 
we have everything in Christ.  We have nothing to fear, because faith in Christ 
trumps all fear. 

Forgiveness means freedom, even freedom to risk, even freedom to fail.  Now, as 
God’s people, we should never choose failure.  We should never keep ourselves 
so ignorant of the truths of the faith that, by doing so, we cannot defend what 
we believe and why.  We should always be able to give the reason for the hope 
that we have to the genuinely curious, even to the scoffer and skeptic.  

What is that hope?  It’s the sacrificial blood of Jesus forgiving your sins, 
making you righteous before God.  That righteousness isn’t your own, but 
Christ’s.  And because He lives, you, too, will live.  Not even death can 
separate you from God’s love in Christ Jesus.  Why is that?  In baptism, God 
the Holy Spirit joins you to Christ’s death and burial, even connecting you to 
Jesus’ resurrection and life.  That’s why baptism saves.  

And then in His Supper, you personally receive what Jesus sacrificed to save 
you: His own body and blood.  Christ even speaks the words of forgiveness into 
your ears through the pastor He has sent to you.  And you believe this because 
Jesus is risen from the dead and live and reigns to all eternity.  That’s the 
hope that you have!

The hope that God gives every Christian is what all people need.  As someone 
brought into the Church, adopted into God’s family, you need not even be afraid 
of facing Jesus on Judgment Day.  Why should you?  In baptism, you’ve met Him 
where He suffered and died for you to take away your sins.  Even more, you meet 
Him here, where He gives Himself to you every week in His Supper.  

When the Holy Spirit is working in our lives, we never become tired of hearing 
this Gospel of Jesus.  We never become weary of coming to church, of confessing 
our sins, of being absolved.  Finding God’s refuge for us in our baptism never 
becomes old.  And neither does eating and drinking the medicine of immortality 
that gives us eternal life.  And always hungry to learn more of what it means 
to be God’s baptized child, we never become bored with Bible class, as we 
continue to learn the “all” that Jesus wants us to learn (Matthew 28:19-20).  

Conclusion
As we receive those precious gifts, as we learn the content of the faith all 
the more, we are ready, willing, and able to give a reason for the hope that is 
in us, with gentleness and respect.  So, do not fear.  Do not be troubled.  
Instead, consider Christ the Lord as holy, always being ready to give a defense 
to anyone who asks about the hope that is in you.  Amen. 



--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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