 ARE
YOU A "SOUL WINNER" OR A FORTUNE TELLER?
By Steve Van Nattan
I
have made this page pleasant in physical format. Why? Answer: The
content is going to trash about 80% of Fundamental church and Evangelical "soul
winning" methods. It
will be enough for some of you campers to deal with the content, so I go easy
on the eye. I
have been thinking about this article for a long time, and frankly, it may lose
me a lot of friends and readers. But,
it is one of the most serious discussions I can think of. Please read it
all before you render a verdict. |
This
page presents FIVE distinct items. Topic
one is a secular discussion of "Cold Reading" or fortune telling. This will show
you that modern soul winning is a product of damning manipulation. Then, in the
second topic, I take out several key quotes to show that Satan and YOU are quite
possibly using the same tools. The
second is my observation of "soul winning" as it is practiced in all of Christendom,
including the most Fundamental Bible believing environments today. Even
the Roman Catholic Church is now promoting "soul winning" among its priests and
members. Soon, I have no doubt that Islam will adopt these techniques to
clean up its classic "missions" methods by the sword. The
third item here will be a study of the biblical teaching of "soul winning." The
fourth item is about what to do when the sinner is not getting the point. The
fifth item is a video by Ray Comfort that will shake you up, I predict.
COLD
READING OR FORTUNE TELLING-- Seldom
is it of devils-- Mostly, it is human stealth.
The following is taken from
The Outer Edge, Classic Investigations of the Paranormal Edited by
Joe Nickell. You who thought the devil was hiding behind the skirts of every
fortune teller might be surprised. Satanic as it is, fortune telling and
cold reading are much more likely to be the result of a very old power in humanity
alone-- lust for money and control. Did
you suppose that Satan is the most evil force on earth? Think again:
Jer
17:9 The heart [
of man ] is deceitful
above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?
Satan may
well have learned a lot about deception over the centuries from the greatest deceiver
in the universe-- man. Read this article very carefully, and you may see
that YOU are playing tricks on unsaved people as you "go soul winning." If
you miss the point, I shall follow this article with my observations and a study
of biblical soul winning. * * * * *
Cold Reading: How to Convince Strangers That You Know All About
Them The
Outer Edge, Classic Investigations of the Paranormal
By RAY HYMAN
Over
twenty years ago I taught a course at Harvard University called "Applications
of Social Psychology." The sort of applications that I covered were the
various ways in which people were manipulated. I invited various manipulators
to demonstrate their techniques-- pitchmen, encyclopedia salesmen, hypnotists,
advertising experts, evangelists, confidence men, and a variety of individuals
who dealt with personal problems. The techniques which we discussed, especially
those concerned with helping people with their personal problems, seem to involve
the client's tendency to find more meaning in any situation than is actually there.
Students readily accepted this explanation when it was pointed out to them. But
I did not feel that they fully realized just how pervasive and powerful this human
tendency to make sense out of nonsense really is.
Consequently, in 1955 I wrote a paper entitled "The Psychological Reading: An
Infallible Technique For Winning Admiration and Popularity." Over the years I
have distributed copies of this paper to my students. The
paper begins as follows:
So you want to be admired! You want people to seek your company, to talk about
you, to praise your talents. This manuscript tells you how to satisfy that
want. Herein you will find a sure-fire gimmick for the achievement of fame
and popularity. Just follow the advice that I give you, and, even if you
are the most incompetent social bungler, you cannot fail to become the life of
the parTy. What is the secret that underlies this infallible system! The
secret, my friend, is a simple and obvious one. It has been tried and proven
by practitioners since the beginnings of mankind. Here is the gist of the secret:
To be
popular with your fellow man, tell him what he wants to hear. He wants to hear
about himself. So tell him about himself. But [do not tell him] what you know
to he true about him. Oh, no! Never tell him the truth. Rather, tell him what
he would like to hear about himself. And
there you have it. Simple and obvious, yet so powerful. This manuscript
details the way in which you can exploit this golden rule by assuming the role
of a character reader.
I will include essentially the same recipe for character reading in this paper
that I give to my students. In addition I will bring the material up to date,
describe some relevant research, and indicate some theoretical reasons why the
technique "works." My purpose is not to enable you to enhance your personal magnetism,
nor is it to increase the number of character readers. I give you these rules
for reading character because I want you to experience how the method works. I
want you to see what a powerful technique the psychological reading is, how convincing
it is to the psychologist and layman alike.
When you see how easy it is to convince a person that you can read his character
on sight, you will better appreciate why fortune tellers and psychologists are
frequently lulled into placing credence in techniques which have not been validated
by acceptable scientific methods. The recent controversy in The Humanist magazine
and The Zetetic over the scientific status of astrology probably is irrelevant
to the reasons that individuals believe in astrology. Almost without exception.
the defenders of astrology with whom I have contact do not refer to the evidence
relating to the underlying theory. They are convinced of astrology's value because
it "works." By this they mean that it supplies them with feedback that "feels
right"--that convinces them that the horoscope provides a basis for understanding
themselves and ordering their lives. It has personal meaning for them.
Some philosophers distinguish between "persuasion" and "conviction." The distinction
is subtle. But for our purposes we can think of subjective experiences that persuade
us that something is so and of logical and scientific procedures that convince,
or ought to convince, us that something is or is not so. Quite frequently a scientist
commits time and resources toward generating scientific evidence for a proposition
because he has already been persuaded, on nonscientific grounds, that the proposition
is true. Such intuitive persuasion plays an important motivational role in science
as well as in the arts. Pathological science and false beliefs come about when
such intuitive persuasion overrides or colors the evidence from objective procedures
for establishing conviction.
The field of personality assessment has always been plagued by this confusion
between persuasion and conviction. In contrast to intelligence and aptitude tests
the scientific validation of personality tests, even under ideal conditions, rarely
results in unequivocal or satisfactory results. In fact some of the most widely
used personality inventories have repeatedly failed to pass validity checks. One
of the reasons for this messy state of affairs is the lack of reliable and objective
criteria against which to check the results of an assessment.
But the lack of adequate validation has not prevented the use of and reliance
on, such instruments. Assessment psychologists have always placed more reliance
on their instruments than is warranted by the scientific evidence. Both psychologist
and client are invariably persuaded by the results that the assessment "works."
This state
of affairs, of course, is even more true when we consider divination systems beyond
those of the academic and professional psychologist. Every system be it based
on the position of the stars, the pattern of lines in the hand, the shape of the
face or skull, the fall of the cards or the dice, the accidents of nature, or
the intuitions of a "psychic"--claims its quota of satisfied customers. The client
invariably feels satisfied with the results. He is convinced that the reader and
the system have penetrated to the core of his "true" self. Such satisfaction on
the part of the client also feeds back upon the reader. Even if the reader began
his career with little belief in his method, the inevitable reinforcement of persuaded
clients increases his confidence in himself and his system. In this way a "vicious
circle" is established. The reader and his clients become more and more persuaded
that they have hold of a direct pipeline to the "truth."
The state of affairs in which the evaluation of an assessment instrument depends
upon the satisfaction of the client is known as "personal validation." Personal
validation is, for all practical purposes, the major reason for the persistence
of divinatory and assessment procedures. If the client is not persuaded, then
the system will not survive. Personal validation, of course, is the basis for
the acceptance of more than just assessment instruments. The widespread acceptance
of myths about Bigfoot, the Bermuda Triangle, ancient astronauts, ghosts, the
validity of meditation and consciousness-raising schemes, and a host of other
beliefs is based on persuasion through personal validation rather than scientific
conviction. COLD
READING "Cold
reading" is a procedure by which a "reader" is able to persuade a client, whom
he has never before met, that he knows all about the client's personality and
problems. At one extreme this can be accomplished by delivering a stock spiel,
or "psychological reading," that consists of highly general statements that
can fit any individual. A reader who relies on psychological readings will usually
have memorized a set of stock spiels. He then can select a reading to deliver
which is relatively more appropriate in the general category that the client fits-
a young unmarried girl, a senior citizen, and so on. Such an attempt to fit the
reading to the client makes the psychological reading a closer approximation to
the true cold reading.
The cold reading, at its best, provides the client with a character assessment
that is uniquely tailored to fit him or her. The reader begins with the same assumptions
that guide the psychological reader who relies on the stock spiel. These assumptions
are
(1) that we all are basically more alike than different; [
Read that, All men are sinners and feel some sort of guilt. ]
(2) that
our problems are generated by the same major transitions of birth, puberty, work,
marriage, children, old age, and death; [ Read
that, "All people will admit that life is a puzzle to them at some time, especially
death. ]
(3) that, with the exception of curiosity seekers and troublemakers, people come
to a character reader because they need someone to listen to their conflicts involving
love, money, and health. [ Read that, All people
will respond to sympathy and sincere attempts to make life more understandable,
even if it means God has to get somewhat involved. ]
The cold reader goes beyond these common denominators by gathering as much additional
information about the client as possible. Sometimes such information is obtained
in advance of the reading. If the reading is through appointment, the reader
can use directories and other sources to gather information. When the client enters
the consulting room, an assistant can examine the coat left behind (and often
the purse as well) for papers, notes, labels, and other such cues about socioeconomic
status, and so on. Most cold readers, however do not need such advance information.
The cold
reader basically relies on a good memory and acute observation. The client is
carefully studied. The clothing- for example, style, neatness, cost, age- provides
a host of cues for helping the reader make shrewd guesses about socioeconomic
level, conservatism or extroversion, and other characteristics. The client's physical
features--weight, posture, looks, eyes, and hands provide further cues. The hands
are especially revealing to the good reader. The manner of speech, use of grammar,
gestures, and eye contact are also good sources. To the good reader the huge amount
of information coming from an initial sizing-up of the client greatly narrows
the possible categories into which he classifies clients. His knowledge of actual
and statistical data about various subcultures in the population already provides
him the basis for making an uncanny and strikingly accurate assessment of the
client.
But the skilled reader can go much further in particularizing his reading. He
wants to zero in as quickly as possible on the precise problem that is bothering
the client. On the basis of his initial assessment he makes some tentative hypotheses.
He tests these out by beginning his assessment in general terms, touching upon
general categories of problems and watching the reaction of the client. If
he is on the wrong track the client's reactions, eye movements, pupillary dilation,
other bodily mannerisms--will warn him. When he is on the right track other reactions
will tell him so. By watching the client's reactions as he tests out different
hypotheses during his spiel, the good reader quickly hits upon what is bothering
the customer and begins to adjust the reading to the situation. By this time,
the client has usually been persuaded that the reader, by some uncanny means,
has gained insights into the client's innermost thoughts. His guard is now down.
Often he opens up and actually tells the reader, who is also a good listener,
the details of his situation. The reader, after a suitable interval, will usually
feed back the information that the client has given him in such a way that the
client will be further amazed at how much the reader "knows" about him. Invariably
the client leaves the reader without realizing that everything he has been told
is simply what he himself has unwittingly revealed to the reader.
THE STOCK SPIEL
The preceding paragraphs indicate
that the cold reader is a highly skilled and talented individual. And this is
true. But what is amazing about this area of human assessment is how successfully
even an unskilled and incompetent reader can persuade a client that he has fathomed
the client's true nature. It is probably a tribute to the creativeness of
the human mind that a client can, under the right circumstances, make sense out
of almost any reading and manage to fit it to his own unique situation. All that
is necessary is that the reader make out a plausible case for why the reading
ought to fit. The client will do the rest.
You can achieve a surprisingly high degree of success as a character reader even
if you merely use a stock spiel which you give to every client. Sundberg (1955),
for example, found that if you deliver the following character sketch to a college
male, he will usualy accept it as a reasonably accurate description of himself:
"You
are a person who is very normal in his attitudes, behavior and relationships with
people. You get along well without effort. People naturally like you, and you
are not overly critical of them or yourself. You are neither overly conventional
nor overly individualistic. Your prevailing mood is one of optimism and constructive
effort, and you are not troubled by periods of depression, psychosomatic illness
or nervous symptoms."
Sundberg found that the college female will respond with even more pleasure to
the following sketch: "You
appear to be a cheerful, well-balanced person. You may have some alternation of
happy and unhappy moods, but they are not extreme now. You have few or no problems
with your health. You are sociable and mix well with others. You are adaptable
to social situations. You tend to be adventurous. Your interests are wide. You
are fairly self-confident and usually think clearly."
Sundberg conducted his study over 20 years ago. But the sketches still work well
today. Either will tend to work well with both sexes. More recently, several laboratory
studies have had excellent success with the following stock spiel (Snyder and
Shenkel 1975)·
Some of your aspirations tend to be pretty unrealistic. At times you are extroverted,
affable, sociable, while at other times you are introverted, wary and resented.
You have found it unwise to be too frank in revealing yourself to others. You
pride yourself on being an independent thinker and do nor accept others' opinions
without satisfactory proof. You prefer a certain amount of change and variety
and become dissatisfied when hemmed in by restrictions and limitations. At times
you have serious doubts as to whether you have made the right decision or done
the right thing. Disciplined and controlled on the outside, you tend to
be worrisome and insecure on the inside.
Your sexual adjustment has presented some problems for you. While you have some
personality weaknesses, you are generally able to compensate for them. You have
a great deal of unused capacity which you have not turned to your advantage. You
have a tendency to be critical of yourself. You have a strong need for other
people to like you and for them to admire you.
Interestingly enough the statements in this stock spiel were first used in 1948
by Bertram Forer (1943) in a classroom demonstration of personal validation. He
obtained most of them from a news stand astrology book. Forer's students, who
thought the sketch was uniquely intended for them as a result of a personality
test, gave the sketch an average rating of 4.26 on a scale of O (poor) to 5 (perfect).
As many as 16 our of his 39 students (41 percent) rated it as a perfect fit to
their personality. Only five gave it a rating below 4 (the worst being a rating
of 2, meaning "average"). Almost 3O years later students give the same sketch
an almost identical rating as a unique description of themselves.
THE TECHNIQUE
IN ACTION The
acceptability of the stock spiel depends upon the method and circumstances of
its delivery. As we shall later see, laboratory studies have isolated many of
the factors that contribute to persuading clients that the sketch is a unique
description of themselves. A great deal of the success of the spiel depends upon
"setting the stage." The reader tries to persuade the client that the sketch
is tailored especially for him or her. The reader also creates the impression
that it is based on a reliable and proven assessment procedure. The way the sketch
is delivered and dramatized also helps. And many of the rules that I give for
the cold reading also apply to the delivery of the stock spiel.
The stock spiel, when properly delivered, can be quite effective. In fact, with
the right combination of circumstances the stock spiel is often accepted as a
perfect and unique description by the client. But, in general, one can achieve
even greater success as a character analyst if one uses the more flexible technique
of the cold reader. In this method one plays a sort of detective role in which
one takes on the role of a Sherlock Holmes. (See the "Case of the Cardboard Box"
for an excellent example of cold reading.) One observes the jewelry, prices
the clothing, evaluates the speech mannerisms, and studies the reactions of the
subject. Then whatever information these observations provide is pieced together
into a character reading which is aimed more specifically at the particular client.
A good illustration
of the cold reader in action occurs in a story told by the well-known magician
John Mulholland. The incident took place in the 1930s. A young lady in her late
twenties or early thirties visited a character reader. She was wearing expensive
jewelry, a wedding band, and a black dress of cheap material. The observant reader
noted that she was wearing shoes which were currently being advertised for people
with foot trouble. (Pause at this point and imagine that you are the reader; see
what you would make of these clues.)
By means of just these observations the reader proceeded to amaze his client with
his insights. He assumed that this client came to see him, as did most of his
female customers, because of a love or financial problem. The black dress and
the wedding band led him to reason that her husband had died recently. The expensive
jewelry suggested that she had been financially comfortable during marriage, but
the cheap dress indicated that her husband's death had left her penniless. The
therapeutic shoes signified that she was now standing on her feet more than she
was used to, implying that she was working to support herself since her husband's
death. The
reader's shrewdness led him to the following conclusion, which turned out to be
correct: The lady had met a man who had proposed to her. She wanted to marry the
man to end her economic hardship. But she felt guilty about marrying so soon after
her husband's death. The reader told her what she had come to hear-- that
it was all right to marry without further delay. THE
RULER OF THE GAME Whether
you prefer to use the formula reading or to employ the more flexible technique
of the cold reader, the following bits of advice will help to contribute to your
success as a character reader.
1. Remember that the key ingredient of a successful character reading is confidence.
If you look and act as if you believe in what you are doing, you will be able
to sell even a bad reading to most of your subjects.
The laboratory studies support this rule. Many readings are accepted as accurate
because the statements do fit most people. But even readings that would ordinarily
be rejected as inaccurate will be accepted if the reader is viewed as a person
with prestige or as someone who knows what he is doing.
One danger of playing the role of reader is that you will persuade yourself that
you really are divining true character. This happened to me. I starred reading
palms when I was in my teens as a way to supplement my income from doing magic
and mental shows. When I started I did nor believe in palmistry. But I knew
that to "sell" it I had to act as if I did. After a few years I became a firm
believer in palmistry. One day the late Dr. Stanley Saks, who was a professional
mentalist and a man I respected, tactfully suggested that it would make an interesting
experiment if I deliberately gave readings opposite to what the lines indicated.
I tried this out with a few clients. To my surprise and horror my readings were
just as successful as ever. Ever since then I have been interested in the powerful
forces that convince us, reader and client alike, that something is so when it
really isn't.
2. Make creative use of the latest statistical abstracts, polls, and surveys.
This can provide you with a wealth of material about what various subclasses
of our society believe, do, want, worry about, and so on. For example, if you
can ascertain about a client such things as the part of the country he comes from,
the size of the city he was brought up in, his parents' religion and vocations,
his educational level and age, you already are in possession of information that
should enable you to predict with high probability his voting preferences, his
beliefs on many issues, and other traits.
3. Set the stage for your reading. Profess a modesty about your talents.
Make no excessive claims. This catches your subject off guard. You are not challenging
him to a battle of wits. You can read his character; whether he cares to believe
you or not is his concern.
4. Gain his cooperation in advance. Emphasize that the success of the reading
depends as much upon his sincere cooperation as upon your efforts. (After all,
you imply, you already have a successful career at reading characters. You are
not on trial-- he is.) State that due to difficulties of language and communication,
you may not always convey the exact meaning which you intend. In these cases he
is to strive to reinterpret the message in terms of his own vocabulary and life.
You accomplish
two invaluable ends with this dodge. You have an alibi in case the reading doesn't
click; it's his fault not yours! And your subject will strive to fit your generalities
to his specific life occurrences. Later, when he recalls the reading he will recall
it in terms of specifics; thus you gain credit for much more than you actually
said. Of
all the pieces of advice this is the most crucial. To the extent that the client
is made an active participant in the reading the reading will succeed. The good
reader, deliberately or unwittingly, is the one who forces the client to actively
search his memory to make sense of the reader's statements.
5. Use a gimmick such as a crystal ball, tarot cards, or palm reading. The
use of palmistry, say, serves two useful purposes. It lends an air of novelty
to the reading: but, more important, it serves as a cover for you to stall and
to formulate your next statement. While you are trying to think of something to
say next, you are apparently carefully studying a new wrinkle or line in the hand.
Holding hands, in addition to any emotional thrills you may give or receive thereby,
is another good way of I detecting the reactions of the subject to what you are
saying (the principle is the same as "muscle reading").
It helps, in the case of palmistry or other gimmicks, to study some manuals so
that you know roughly what the various diagnostic signs are supposed to mean.
A clever way of using such gimmicks to pin down a client's problem is to use a
variant of "Twenty Questions," somewhat like this:
Tell the client you have only a limited amount of time for the reading. You could
focus on the heart line, which deals with emotional entanglements; on the fate
line, which deals with vocational pursuits and money matters; the head line, which
deals with personal problems; the health line, and so on. Ask him or her which
one to focus on first. This quickly pins down the major category of problem on
the client's mind.
6. Have a list of stock phrases at the tip of your tongue. Even if you
are doing a cold reading, the liberal sprinkling of stock phrases amidst your
regular reading will add body to the reading and will fill in time as you try
to formulate more precise characterizations. You can use the statements in the
preceding stock spiels as a start. Memorize a few of them before undertaking your
initial ventures into character reading. Palmistry, tarot, and other fortune telling
manuals also are rich sources for good phrases.
7. Keep your eyes open. Also use your other senses. We have seen
how to size up the client on the basis of clothing, jewelry, mannerisms, and speech..
Even a crude classification on such a basis can provide sufficient information
for a good reading. Watch the impact of your statements upon the subject. Very
quickly you will learn when you are "hitting home" and when you are "missing the
boat." 8.
Use the technique of' "fishing." This is simply a device for getting the subject
to tell you about himself. Then you rephrase what he has told you into a coherent
sketch and feed it back to him. One version of fishing is to phrase each statement
in the form of a question. Then wait for the subject to reply (or react). If the
reaction is positive, then the reader turns the statement into a positive assertion.
Often the subject will respond by answering the implied question and then some.
Later he will tend to forget that he was the source of your information. By making
your statements into questions you also force the subject to search through his
memory to retrieve specific instances to fit your general statement.
9. Learn to be a good listener. During the course of a reading your client
will be bursting to talk about incidents that are brought up. The good reader
allows the client to talk at will. On one occasion I observed a tea-leaf reader.
The client actually spent 75 percent of the total time talking. Afterward when
I questioned the client about the reading she vehemently insisted that she had
not uttered a single word during the course of the reading. The client praised
the reader for having so astutely told her what in fact she herself had spoken.
Another
value of listening is that these clients who seek the services of a reader actually
want someone to listen to their problems. In addition many clients have already
made up their minds about what choices they are going to make. They merely want
support to carry out their decision.
10. Dramatize your reading. Give back what little information you do have
or pick up a little bit at a time. Make it seem more than it is. Build word pictures
around each divulgence. Don't be afraid of hamming it up.
11. Always give the impression that you know more than you are saying.
The successful reader, like the family doctor, always acts as if he knows
much more. Once you persuade the client that you know one item of information
about him that you could not possibly have obtained through normal channels, the
client will automatically assume you know all. At this point he will typically
open up and confide in you.
12. Don't be a afraid to flatter your subject every chance you get.
An occasional subject will protest such flattery, but will still cherish it. In
such cases you can further flatter him by saying, "You are always suspect of people
who flatter you. You just can't believe that someone will say good of you unless
he is trying to achieve some ulterior goal."
13. Finally remember the golden rule: Tell the client what he wants to hear.
Sigmund Freud once made an astute observation. He had a client who had been
to a fortune teller many years previously. The fortune teller had predicted that
she would have twins. Actually she never had children. Yet, despite the fact that
the reader had been wrong, the client still spoke of her in glowing terms. Freud
tried to figure out why this was so. He finally concluded that at the time of
the original reading the client wanted desperately to have children The fortune
teller sensed this and told her what she wanted to hear. From this Freud inferred
that the successful fortune teller is one who predicts what the client secretly
wishes to happen rather than what actuary will happen (Freud 1333).
THE FALLACY OF
PERSONAL VALIDATION As
we have seen, clients will readily accept stock spiels such as those I have presented
as unique descriptions of themselves. Many laboratory experiments have demonstrated
this effect. Forer (1949) called the tendency to accept as valid a personality
sketch on the basis of the client's willingness to accept it 'the fallacy of personal
validation."
The early studies on personal validation were simply demonstrations to show that
students, personnel directors, and others can readily be persuaded to accept a
fake sketch as a valid description of themselves. A few studies tried to go beyond
the demonstration and tease out factors that influence the acceptability of the
fake sketch. Sundberg (1955), for example, gave the Minnesota Multiphasal Personality
Inventory (known as the MMPI) to 44 students. The MMPI is the most carefully standardized
personality inventory in the psychologist's tool kit. Two psychologists, highly
experienced in interpreting the outcome of the MMPI, wrote a personality sketch
for each student on the basis of his or her test results. Each student then received
two personality sketches-- the one actually written for him or her-- and a fake
sketch. When asked to pick which sketch described him or her better, 26 of the
44 students (59 percent) picked the fake sketch!
Sundberg's study highlights one of the difficulties in this area. A fake, universal
sketch can be seen as a better description of oneself than can a uniquely tailored
description by trained psychologists based upon one of the best assessment devices
we have. This makes personal validation a completely useless procedure. But
it makes the life of the character reader and the pseudo psychologist all the
easier. His general and universal statements have more persuasive appeal than
do the best and most appropriate descriptions that the trained psychologist can
come up with.
Some experiments that my students and I conducted during the 1950s also supplied
some more information about the acceptability of such sketches. In one experiment
we gave some students a fake sketch (the third stock spiel previously discussed)
and told half of them that it was the result of an astrological reading and the
other half that it was the result of a new test, the Harvard Basic Personality
Profile. In those days, unlike today, students had a low opinion of astrology.
All the students rated each of the individual statements as generally true of
themselves. The groups did not differ in their ratings of the acceptability of
the individual statements. But when asked to rate the sketch as a whole, the group
that thought it came from an accepted personality test rated the acceptability
significantly higher than did the group that thought it came from an astrologer.
From talking to individual students it was clear that those who were in the personality
test group believed that they had received a highly accurate and unique characterization
of themselves. Those in the astrology group admitted that the individual statements
were applicable to themselves but dismissed the apparent success of the astrology
as due to the fact that the statements were so general that they would fit anyone.
In other words, by changing the context in which they got the statements we were
able to manipulate the subjects' perceptions as to whether the statements were
generalities that applied to everyone or were specific characterizations of themselves.
In a further
experiment we obtained a pool of items that 80 percent or more of Harvard students
endorsed as true of themselves. We then had another group of Harvard students
rate these items as "desirable" or "undesirable" and as "general" or 'particular"
(true of only a few students). Thus we had a set of items that we knew almost
all our subjects would endorse as true of themselves, but which varied on desirability
and on perceived generality. We were then able to compose fake sketches which
varied in their proportion of desirable and specific items. We found that the
best recipe for creating acceptable stock spiels was to include about 75 percent
desirable items, but ones which were seen as specific, and about 25 percent undesirable
items, but ones which were seen as general. The undesirable items had the apparent
effect of making the spiel plausible. The fact that the items were seen as being
generally true of other students made them more acceptable.
The most extensive program of research to study the factors making for acceptability
of fake sketches is that by C. R Synder and his associates at the University of
Kansas. A brief summary of many of his findings was given in an article in Psychology
Today (Snyder and Shenkel 1375). In most of his studies Snyder uses a control
condition in which the subject is given the fake sketch and told that this sketch
is generally true for all people. On a rating scale from 1 to 5 (1, very poor;
2, poor; 3, average; 4, good; 5, excellent) the subject rates how well the interpretation
fits his personality. A typical result for this control condition is a rating
of around 3 to 4, or between average and good. But when the sketch is presented
to the subject as one which was written "for you, personally" the accept ability
tends to go up to around 4.5, or between good and excellent.
In a related experiment the subjects were given the fake sketch under the pretense
that it was based on an astrological reading. The control group, given the sketch
as "generally true for all people," rated it about 3.2, or just about average.
A second group was asked to supply the astrologer with information on the year
and month of their birth. When they received their sketches they rated them on
the average at 3.76, or just below good. A third group supplied the mythical astrologer
with information on year, month, and day of birth. These subjects gave a mean
rating of 4.98.
From experiments such as those we have learned the following. The acceptability
of a general sketch is enhanced when (1)
the reader or source is believed to know what he is doing.
(2) the instrument or assessment device is plausible,
(3) a lot of mumbo iumbo is associated with the procedure (such as giving month,
day, hour, and minute of birth along with a lot of complicated calculations),
and
(4) the client is led to believe that the sketch has been tailored to his personality.
When these conditions are met, the client, and possibly the reader as well, have
a strong "illusion of uniqueness," that is, the client is persuaded that the sketch
describes himself or herself and no one else.
WHY DOES IT WORK?
But why does it
work? And why does it work so well? It does not help to say that people
are gullible or suggestible. Nor can we dismiss it by implying that some individuals
are just not sufficiently discriminating or lack sufficient intelligence to see
through it. Indeed one can argue that it requires a certain degree of intelligence
on the part of a client for the reading to work well. Once the client is actively
engaged in trying to make sense of the series of sometimes contradictory statements
issuing from the reader, he becomes a creative problem-solver trying to find coherence
and meaning in the total set of statements. The task is not unlike that of trying
to make sense of a work of art, a poem, or, for that matter, a sentence. The work
of art, the poem, or the sentence serve as a blueprint or plan from which we can
construct a meaningful experience by bringing to bear our own past experiences
and memories.
In other words the reading succeeds just because it calls upon the normal processes
of comprehension that we ordinarily bring to bear in making sense our of any form
of communication. The raw information in a communication is rarely, if ever, sufficient
in itself for comprehension. A shared context and background is assumed. Much
has to be filled in by inference. The good reader, like anyone who manipulates
our perceptions, is merely exploiting the normal processes by which we make sense
out of the disorderly array of inputs that constantly bombard us.
A variety of examples and experiments could be drawn upon to illustrate this point.
Let us look at a couple of instructive cases. Dr. Joseph Weizenbaum, of
M.I.T., developed a computer program that would enable a human to apparently carry
on a conversation with a computer. One version of his program is called "Doctor"
The program is designed to "talk" like a Rogerian psychotherapist. Such a therapist
is relatively easy to imitate because the basis of Rogers' technique is simply
co feed the patient's statements back to him in a paraphrased form. The human,
playing the role of the patient, types in questions and answers on a teletype
machine. The computer, under control of the program, types replies and questions
on the same teletype paper. A
typical example (Weizenbaum 1176) of a conversation between a young lady and Doctor
follows. (The lady speaks first The computer's responses are printed in italics.)
Men are all alike. In
what way!
They're always bugging us about something or other. Can
you think of a specific example?
Well, my boyfriend made me come here. Your
boyfriend made you come here?
He says I'm depressed much of the time. I
am sorry to hear you are depressed.
It's true. I am unhappy. Do
you think coming here will help you not to be unhappy?
I need some help, that much seems certain.
What would it mean to you if you got some help?
Perhaps I could learn to get along with my mother. Tell
me more about your family.
My mother takes care of me. Who
else in your family takes care of you?
My father. Your
father?
You are like my father in some ways. What
resemblance do you see?
You are not very aggressive, but I think you don't want me to notice that.
What makes
you think I am not very aggressive?
You don't argue with me. Why
do you think I don't argue with you?
You are afraid of me. Does
it please you to believe I am afraid of you?
My father is afraid of everybody What
else comes to mind when you think of your father!
Bullies. Does
that have anything to do with the fact that your boyfriend made you come here?
Doctor is a quite primitive program as natural-language programs go. It employs
a lot of tricks and stock phrases. It has no mechanisms for actually understanding
sentences. Instead it seeks out keywords that are typed and does some simple
syntactical transformations. For example, if the program sees a sentence of the
form "Do you X!" it automatically prints out the response "What makes you think
I X'" When Doctor cannot match the syntax of a given sentence it can cover up
in two ways. It can say something noncommittal, such as "Please go on" or
"What does that suggest to you?" Or it can recall an earlier match and refer back
to it, as for example, "How does this relate to your depression?" where depression
was an earlier topic of conversation.
In essence Doctor is a primitive cold reader. It uses stock phrases to cover up
when it cannot deal with a given question or input. And it uses the patient's
own input to feed back information and create the illusion that it understands
and even sympathizes with the patient. This illusion is so powerful that patients,
even when told they are dealing with a relatively simple-minded program, become
emotionally involved in the interaction. Many refuse to believe that they are
dealing with a program and insist that a sympathetic human must be at the control
at the other end of the teletype.
Sociologist Harold Garfinkel has supplied another instructive example (19C17).
He conducted the following experiment. The subjects were told that the Department
of psychiatry was exploring alternative means to therapy "as a way of giving persons
advice about their personal problems." Each subject was then asked to discuss
the background of some serious problem on which he would like advice. After having
done this the subject was to address some questions which could be answered "yes
or "no" to the "counselor" (actually an experimenter). The experimenter-counselor
heard the questions from an adjoining room and supplied a "yes" or "no answer
to each question after a suitable pause. Unknown to the subject, the series of
yes-no answers had been pre-programmed according to a table of random numbers
and was not related to his questions. Yet the typical subject was sure that the
counselor fully understood the subject's problem and was giving him sound and
helpful advice.
Let me emphasize again that statements as such have no meaning. They convey meaning
only in context and only when the listener or reader can bring to bear his large
store of worldly knowledge. Clients are not necessarily acting irrationally when
they find meaning in the stock spiels or cold reading. Meaning is an interaction
of expectations, context, memory, and given statements.
An experiment by the Gestalt psychologist Solomon Asch (1948) will help make this
point. Subjects were given the following passage and asked to think about it:
"I hold it that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing, and as necessary
in the political world as storms are in the physical." One group of subjects
was told that the author of the passage was Thomas Jefferson (which happens to
be true). The subjects were asked if they agreed with the passage and what it
meant to them. These subjects generally approved of it and interpreted the word
rebellion to mean minor agitation. Bur when subjects were given the same passage
and told that its author was Lenin, they disagreed with it and interpreted rebellion
to mean a violent revolution.
According to some social psychologists the different reactions show the irrationality
of prejudice. But Asch points out that the subjects could be acting quite rationally.
Given what they know about Thomas Jefferson and Lenin, or what they believe about
them, it makes sense to attribute different meanings to the same words spoken
by each of them if one thinks that Jefferson believed in orderly government and
peaceful processes, then it would not make sense to interpret his statement to
actually mean a bloody or physical revolution. If one thinks that Lenin favors
war and bloodshed, then it makes sense, when the statement is attributed to him,
to interpret rebellion in its more extreme term.
Some recent research that my colleagues and I conducted might also be relevant
here. Our subjects were given the task of forming an impression of a hypothetical
individual on the basis of a brief personality sketch. In one condition the subjects
were given a sketch that generally led to an impression of a nice, personable,
friendly sort of fellow. In a second condition the subjects were given a sketch
that created an impression of a withdrawn, niggardly individual. Both groups of
subjects were then given a new sketch that supposedly contained more information
about the hypothetical individual. In both cases the subjects were given an identical
sketch. This sketch contained some descriptors that were consistent with the friendly
image and some that were consistent with the niggardly image. The subjects were
later tested to see how well they recognized the actual adjectives that were used
in the second sketch. One of the adjectives, for example, was charitable. The
test contained foils for each adjective. For example, the word generous also
appeared on the test but did not appear in the sketch. Yet subjects who had been
given the friendly impression checked generous just as frequently as they checked
charitable. But subjects in the other condition did not confuse charitable with
generous. Why! Because, we theorize, the two different contexts into which charitable
had to be integrated produced quite different meanings. When subjects who have
already built up an impression of a "friendly" individual encounter the additional
descriptor charitable, it is treated as merely further confirmation of their general
impression. In that context charitable is simply further confirmation of the nice-guy
image. Consequently when these subjects are asked to remember what was actually
said they can remember only that the individual was further described in some
way to enhance the good-guy image, and generous is just as good a candidate for
the description as is charitable in that context.
But when the subjects who have an image of the person as a withdrawn, niggardly
individual encounter charitable, the last thing that comes to mind is generosity.
Instead, they probably interpret charitable as implying that he donates money
to charities as a way of gaining tax deductions. In this latter condition the
subjects have no subsequent tendency to confuse charitable with generous.
The cold reading
works so well, then, because it taps a fundamental and necessary human process.
We have to bring our knowledge and expectations to bear in order to comprehend
anything in our world. In most ordinary situations this use of context and memory
enables us to correctly interpret statements and supply the necessary inference
to do this. But this powerful mechanism can go astray in situations where
there is no actual message being conveyed. Instead of picking up random noise
we still manage to find meaning in the situation. So the same system that enables
us to creatively find meanings and make new discoveries also makes us extremely
vulnerable to exploitation by all sorts of manipulators. In the case of the cold
reading the manipulator may be conscious of his deception; but often he, too,
is a victim of personal validation. BACK
TO THE TOP
LOONIE
BIN "SOUL WINNING" METHODS
First, I note some very poignant
comments of the author above, which he did not apply to "soul Winning," but I
shall:
1. Ray Hyman's comment:- "Almost
without exception. the defenders of astrology with whom I have contact do not
refer to the evidence relating to the underlying theory. They are convinced of
astrology's value because it "works." By this they mean that it supplies them
with feedback that "feels right"--that convinces them that the horoscope provides
a basis for understanding themselves and ordering their lives. It has personal
meaning for them."
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- "Soul
winning" as we know it in Campus Crusade, D. James Kennedy, and Fundamental Baptists
like Jack Hyles is heavily aimed at making the soul winner FEEL GOOD. The
"soul winner" is given the sense that he is carving notches on his gun
with a view toward party time at the Bema Seat, of judgment of the works of the
saints.
Also, the "soul winner" is given a routine, which will be discussed shortly, which
is aimed at making the person being "read" feel good rather than making him into
a sinner and guilty, which he is. Everyone is to have the warm fuzzies throughout
the cold reading session.
2.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Some
philosophers distinguish between "persuasion" and "conviction." The distinction
is subtle. But for our purposes we can think of subjective experiences that persuade
us that something is so and of logical and scientific procedures that convince,
or ought to convince, us that something is or is not so." and "The field of personality
assessment has always been plagued by this confusion between persuasion and conviction."
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- Real
biblical "soul winning" will deal with real hard facts of life (I am a damned
sinner guilty before God's law) as defined by God and the Word of God, and how
that makes us feel is determined by whether we are ready to deal with reality
or if we are still looking for a good time. Much "soul winning" starts out
with the rational, "Come let us reason together," then when the going gets tough
and the witnessee starts squirming, the technique quickly turns to, "Well then,
how do YOU want to feel toward God?"
3.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Assessment
psychologists have always placed more reliance on their instruments than is warranted
by the scientific evidence. Both psychologist and client are invariably persuaded
by the results that the assessment "works." and "But the lack of adequate validation
has not prevented the use of and reliance on, such instruments.
Steve Van Nattan's comment:-
So
it is, that Gothard's big red book, Campus Crusade's witness manuals, D. James
Kennedy's classy witnessing book, and Hyles' little yellow "soul winning" guide
are tools which are based in presumption, not in hard biblical doctrine and theology.
Many assumptions prevail, and the tools of "soul winning" thus prevail.
A close comparison of the later day tools of the trade and the real soul
winning of the Lord Jesus Christ and the Apostles in the New Testament will make
a very schizophrenic study indeed. Ner the twain do meet.
4.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "The
widespread acceptance of myths about Bigfoot, the Bermuda Triangle, ancient astronauts,
ghosts, the validity of meditation and consciousness-raising schemes, and a host
of other beliefs is based on persuasion through personal validation rather than
scientific conviction."
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- Here
we have a stone wall of doubt in science. There is really no scientific
evidence that a soul has been saved. The only proof is the work of the Holy
Spirit in the heart of a genuine believer and the changed life outwardly, which
may not yield much to the scientific study method. So, many "soul winners"
lack hard evidence of salvation in the witnessee, and the "convert" may NEVER
show up at the church house for further treatments of either biblical discipleship
or more tricks on his emotions. For this reason, the witnesser has to hype
the results on the basis of the method. "We asked the 5 questions, the witnessee
gave the right responses, he prayed, well sort of grunted at the right times,
so carve a notch on your gun handle groupies. THAT IS HOW IT WORKED IN HAMMOND,
INDIANA. Don't schmooze me otherwise. On the basis of this hype Jack
Hyles claimed to win 300 souls a week to the Lord. No one believes that
but Jack's deacons, but tell me, are YOU guilty of this at times? Think
about this. What are you CALLED to do? Who brings the harvest? Who
gets the Glory for the work? Bad question eh? I thought so :-)
5.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Cold
reading" is a procedure by which a "reader" is able to persuade a client, whom
he has never before met, that he knows all about the client's personality and
problems. At one extreme this can be accomplished by delivering a stock spiel,
or "psychological reading," that consists of highly general statements that
can fit any individual. A reader who relies on psychological readings will usually
have memorized a set of stock spiels. He then can select a reading to deliver
that is relatively more appropriate in the general category that the client fits-
a young unmarried girl, a senior citizen, and so on. Such an attempt to fit the
reading to the client makes the psychological reading a closer approximation to
the true cold reading."
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- I
hope you read the rest of the above article. This ought to terrify some
of you readers. you are nothing but con artists. You have gotten good
at "reading" souls and sinners. They were NEVER made into sinners, not really.
They only had to go far enough with the sin issue to satisfy YOUR conscience.
Broken? NEVER? They just followed along agreeing with your "reading"
of them. Clever? Yes, but devilish. It has nothing to do with
"soul winning."
6.
Ray Hyman's comment:- (1)
that we all are basically more alike than different; [ SVN- Read
that, All men are sinners and feel some sort of guilt. ]
(2) that our problems are generated by the same major transitions of birth, puberty,
work, marriage, children, old age, and death; [ SVN- Read that,
"All people will admit that life is a puzzle to them at some time, especially
death. ]
(3) that, with the exception of curiosity seekers and troublemakers, people come
to a character reader because they need someone to listen to their conflicts involving
love, money, and health. [ SVN- Read that, All people will respond
to sympathy and sincere attempts to make life more understandable, even if it
means God has to get somewhat involved. ]
Steve Van Nattan's comment:-
Friend,
you just read the three foundational aspects built into EVERY canned "soul winning"
plan. If you want to pay $300 to $2000 to get this down pat and try it up
three city blocks in Dallas, go ahead. You are not going to end up being a
"soul winner" in the Pauline model when you get home to Paducah. That is why so
many of you have the big red book on the coffee table, but you have not said a
word about Jesus Christ in a casual contact, in the market place, in months. You
have to be in the program, with the troops, under the hype, to knock on a door.
Otherwise, you are a wimp.
7.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "The
cold reader basically relies on a good memory and acute observation. The client
is carefully studied. The clothing- for example, style, neatness, cost, age- provides
a host of cues for helping the reader make shrewd guesses about socioeconomic
level, conservatism or extroversion, and other characteristics. The client's physical
features--weight, posture, looks, eyes, and hands provide further cues. The hands
are especially revealing to the good reader. The manner of speech, use of grammar,
gestures, and eye contact are also good sources. To the good reader the huge amount
of information coming from an initial sizing-up of the client greatly narrows
the possible categories into which he classifies clients. His knowledge of actual
and statistical data about various subcultures in the population already provides
him the basis for making an uncanny and strikingly accurate assessment of the
client." and "The reader, after a suitable interval, will usually feed back the
information that the client has given him in such a way that the client will be
further amazed at how much the reader "knows" about him. Invariably the client
leaves the reader without realizing that everything he has been told is simply
what he himself has unwittingly revealed to the reader."
Steve Van Nattan's comment:-
Ever
hear that before? It has NOTHING to do with the Holy Ghost. It has
to do with the perceptional skills of the "reader" type "soul winner." Philip
met the Eunuch, and there is nothing about what Philip thought about the Eunuch.
He had to see some things about him, but the great point in Acts 8 is that
the Holy Spirit was ready, the Eunuch was ready, and Philip OBEYED. THAT
IS ALL, GROUPIES!!! Other than that, Philip's knowledge of the Word of God was
the only other variable. He had to know how to start in any part of the
Old Testament and get to Messiah Christ, which he did. Did you ever hear
of a "soul winning" program which taught people to use their Bibles so well that
they could get from the genealogies in Numbers to Jesus Christ? You were
taught the pat answer from Hyles, "Well, I would like to talk about that part
of the Bible with you some other time, but right now, I want to stay in Romans...."
8.
Ray Hyman's comment:- The stock spiel-- "Cold
reading" is a procedure by which a "reader" is able to persuade a client, whom
he has never before met, that he knows all about the client's personality and
problems. At one extreme this can be accomplished by delivering a stock spiel,
or "psychological reading," that consists of highly general statements that
can fit any individual. A reader who relies on psychological readings will usually
have memorized a set of stock spiels. He then can select a reading to deliver
which is relatively more appropriate in the general category that the client fits-
a young unmarried girl, a senior citizen, and so on. Such an attempt to fit the
reading to the client makes the psychological reading a closer approximation to
the true cold reading.
Steve
Van Nattan's comment: This
is a spiel which can be memorized and which the author above, and other researchers,
proved would work on nearly anyone with positive reuslts. Positive results being
that the person read would believe the spiel was based precisely on his life,
even though the spiel was used on thousands of other clients.
This must have given you some concern if you care about your witness. I
wonder sometimes if I am just rattling off things I know are true of anyone. Do
you? If not, you are a "reader" not a "soul winner." Every soul is
different, and the Holy Spirit is the only "reader" who should be at work. Our
task is to help the sinner confront the issue between him and God, NOT just coax
admission of sin out of him. many people will admit to sin, but the ONE
BIG ISSUE between them and God must be identified. That will reduce the results
greatly from the numbers gained by stealth, but it will assure that you have a
thinking sinner under conviction and serious about damnation versus salvation.
Say, tell me, what are YOU after in your zeal? Numbers or candidates
for glory? If you want to really see a soul born new, then stay with them, and
treat each one as unique.
9.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "One
danger of playing the role of reader is that you will persuade yourself that you
really are divining true character. This happened to me. I starred reading palms
when I was in my teens as a way to supplement my income from doing magic and mental
shows. When I started I did nor believe in palmistry. But I knew that to
"sell" it I had to act as if I did. After a few years I became a firm believer
in palmistry. One day the late Dr. Stanley Saks, who was a professional mentalist
and a man I respected, tactfully suggested that it would make an interesting experiment
if I deliberately gave readings opposite to what the lines indicated. I tried
this out with a few clients. To my surprise and horror my readings were just as
successful as ever. Ever since then I have been interested in the powerful forces
that convince us, reader and client alike, that something is so when it really
isn't."
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- Now,
what do you suppose would happen if you went banging on doors, and you told the
people there that they were really very good by nature. They do have some
quirks of behavior which they do not really approve, but on balance, they do a
lot more good than bad. Then ask them if they feel they are often made to
feel guilty for things they didn't do. Tell them that God wants them to
enjoy life, and Jesus lived His life to show them how happy they can be. Ask
them if they can believe that. If they say, "yes," ask them to pray with
you for more joy like Jesus had.
Do you suppose you would have results? Of course you would. Look at
how Robert Schuyler has used the spiel above to fill his cathedral. Now,
how do you know that your spiel is any different? Are you just working the
prospect around in another direction without anything to do with the Holy Spirit?
Do you see how important it is to use the model of only Jesus and the Apostles
as our guide to "soul winning?"
10.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Make
creative use of the latest statistical abstracts, polls, and surveys."
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- That
was point two in the rules of "reading."
Have you ever been in on one of these "surveys" which is supposed to help you
later win souls door to door? I have heard of this many times. What
a trick. This may be good in sales and fortune telling, but you and I are
supposed to be looking for personal opportunities that we can turn into "soul
winning" experiences that are personal, one on one. This does not need surveys,
it needs love for sinners-- personal love that goes mile after mile , month after
month, to win just one soul. We are going to spend eternity with these folks
we witness to. They are not a lot of sausages, four inches long, with a
twist in the middle. Wake up saint.
11.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Use
a gimmick such as a crystal ball, tarot cards, or palm reading.
Steve Van Nattan's comment:-
The
use of palmistry, say, serves two useful purposes. It lends an air of novelty
to the reading: but, more important, it serves as a cover for you to stall and
to formulate your next statement. While you are trying to think of something to
say next, you are apparently carefully studying a new wrinkle or line in the hand.
Holding hands, in addition to any emotional thrills you may give or receive thereby,
is another good way of I detecting the reactions of the subject to what you are
saying (the principle is the same as "muscle reading")." Jack
Hyles encourages us to hold the prospect's hand, man or woman, and tenderly ask
to pray for them. This will be used of their emotions, and possibly a devil,
to stir feeling, anything from comfort to sexual lust. After we pray for
them, assuming our libido is not also messed up, we then ask them to pray with
us. Mesmerised by hubris, there is a very good chance they will comply.
If the prayer we help them pray is subtle enough, they will pray right along
as we hold their hand. Hey, what if the man a Christian man is praying with
is a queer? Interesting thought groupies. I Cor. 7:1-2
12.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Have
a list of stock phrases at the tip of your tongue."
Steve Van Nattan's comment:-
That
is what EVERY "soul winning" scheme or program tells you. Some try to get
biblical by asking you to memorize a set of verses like the "Romans Road." The
problem is, what do you do with a Jew you meet at the auction? How do you
deal with a Jehovah's Witness? You didn't take the time to learn anything
about them and their zeal. Romans means nothing to the Jew, and the JW thinks
it is shallow. There is no substitute for just reading the Bible over and
over so you can find your way to something for everyone the Lord brings your way.
And, if you get it from personal Bible reading rather than a seminar in
Dallas, your conversation will be fresh from the Lord who just blessed you a couple
of hours ago.
13.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Use
the technique of' "fishing."
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- This
is simply a device for getting the subject to tell you about himself. Then you
rephrase what he has told you into a coherent sketch and feed it back to him.
One version of fishing is to phrase each statement in the form of a question.
Then wait for the subject to reply (or react)."
If you think this is what Jesus meant by "fishers of men" then you are a sick
puppy friend. Fishing for souls is not "reading" and feeding back a lot
of garbage. Spiritual fishing is seen in Jesus-- investing your life in
the life of the lost-- maybe for months or years. Are you "fishing" like
the fortune tellers above?
14.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Don't
be a afraid to flatter your subject every chance you get. "
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- This
is a very big item in Jack Hyles' system of "soul reading." Flattery is
one thing Hyles is openly proud of. He flatters sinners, preachers, his
secretary, virtually anyone who will listen. It works folks. And it
is NOT the method of Jesus Christ. You cannot find flattery as a technique
for anything in the Bible, and Solomon condemns it violently.
15.
Ray Hyman's comment:- "Finally
remember the golden rule: Tell the client what he wants to hear.
Steve
Van Nattan's comment:- Sigmund
Freud once made an astute observation. He had a client who had been to a fortune
teller many years previously. The fortune teller had predicted that she would
have twins. Actually she never had children. Yet, despite the fact that the reader
had been wrong, the client still spoke of her in glowing terms. Freud tried to
figure out why this was so. He finally concluded that at the time of the original
reading the client wanted desperately to have children The fortune teller sensed
this and told her what she wanted to hear. From this Freud inferred that the successful
fortune teller is one who predicts what the client secretly wishes to happen rather
than what actuary will happen (Freud 1333)."
This is exactly what is happening in ALL faith healing meetings. The healer
first reads verses which sustain what the audience wants to see happen. Then,
in the healing line, the head slapper give them what they want. Healing
does not occur, but the sucker who got touched feels better or thinks he will
some day because of the "touch" of the healer. He will even go back over
and over to keep trying to get the real healing.
This can be used in witnessing by trying to make salvation a sort of magic pill
to be swallowed to cure the sorrows of life. Repentance and confession of
sin need not be taught for the person to feel better and even drop by the church
house once a year from then on. They may even give a "testimony" once in
a while that sounds a lot like a shrink got to them rather than Jesus Christ.
Only a fool preacher would think salvation has come to this person.
16.
Steve Van Nattan's comment:- In
that last of the article above the author shows that people respond based on what
they have experienced in life and what they perceive is the context of the question
or statement. The alleged "soul winner" can then phrase questions and observations
in such a way that the sinner can manipulate his own concepts of the discussion.
If the "soul winner" is only interested in getting numbers, he will be tempted
to accept the sinner's interpretations at mid-conversation in order to reach the
alleged objective-- praying for salvation.
I met a pastor who had a machine which would call through the phone book and mechanically
ask a series of questions. The pastor had set up about 5 or 7 leading questions
which gave him an idea if he had a real prospect or not. What a trick. I
listened to several "exciting responses" he had. They were people like the
author above talked about who would get so involved with a machine that they developed
a personal response to the machine al a pastor's voice. What a sorry
way to use people. This is in fact Fundamentalism a la Ignatius Loyola where
the end justifies the means, and the Holy Spirit is not even needed.
CONCLUSIONS:
Some of
you readers will now say, "You have just found a parallel between 'soul winning'
and fortune telling which is not literal." I think not friend. Why?
Answer: I see that thousands are "won to Christ" every year in many
programs and in many Fundamental churches, yet only a small fraction of those
end up getting baptized and becoming faithful to the local church. Jesus
lost one in twelve-- Judas. This modern witnessing ploy must be losing eleven
in twelve or more. It is a mockery to go on and on with this nut house program
that makes a bystander of the Holy Spirit as we go up and down the city banging
doors and doing "soul readings" under color of witnessing.
I have heard many stories of men who went back to "follow up" on those "reading
sessions" alias "soul winning," only to literally have the alleged saved sinner
spit in his face. Why is this? Answer: The alleged won soul
went back into his house, and he realized he was no different than before he had
his soul read. He then, with his rational mind, figured out that he had
been conned just like he was by the Amway salesman, the Hoover vacuum dealer,
or the fat lady at the circus. His final emotion was not the joy of salvation.
It was white hot hate for "them blankity blank Babtists."
A lot that passes for "soul winning" is just lust for approval by the church family
and personal need for vindication as one of the inner circle of hard workers.
This gets old eventually, and the "soul winner" ends up dropping out of
the format, being seen as backslidden, and then he moves to another church where
he can start growing in the Lord. Sometimes the weary saint just goes home
to mope for a year or two. I have seen this, and it is pitiful, especially
when one of his "converts" finds him home on Sunday watching Charles Stanley.
Sluff it
off if you like, but you will never do this "soul reading" con job again without
remembering this article, and you will answer to God for your tricks.
1.
COMMANDS TO "WIN SOULS"
Proverbs
11:30 The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life; and he that winneth souls
is wise.
Solomon was not going door to door and soliciting attendance at the temple. What
did he mean?
James answers for us: James 5:20
Let him know, that he which converteth the sinner from the error of his way shall
save a soul from death, and shall hide a multitude of sins.
Mark
16:15 And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to
every creature.
Preach implies that this is no mind reading exercise. Preach in the New
Testament context meant going to the Word, studying it to show one's self approved,
then declaring it to get a verdict. And, few there be that find it when
done this way. Acts
1:8 But ye shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and
ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea, and in Samaria,
and unto the uttermost part of the earth.
We receive power after the Holy Ghost come on us, not after going to some champion
cracker eating "soul winning" clinic. These programs are meant to gove the
sloppy saint confidence in himself when he actually is a rebel against the Holy
Spirit. Sin and rebellion are in his life, and he wants to be accepted as
powerful in the church. The program gives him this prestige, even if he
never wins a soul to Christ.
At Hyles Anderson, most of the students lie about the number of people they have
won to Christ week by week so that they are perceived as prospering in the work.
At a huge Fundamental church in Michigan I recall seeing a group of the "in" crowd
in the foyer one Sunday evening. They were exalting themselves, ladies in
firs and men in $300 suits, speaking rather loudly about their recent accomplishment
of going through the witness program of a noted campus ministry. They were
worthless as tits on a bore hog, but they had been given the "soul winner's"
badge of glory, and they now needed nothing else to pass right on into the presence
of the Shakhinah (which is used in the historic pagan sense).
1
Corinthians 9:19 For though I be free from all men, yet have I made myself servant
unto all, that I might gain the more. 20
And unto the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that
are under the law, as under the law, that I might gain them that are under the
law; 21
To them that are without law, as without law, (being not without law to God, but
under the law to Christ,) that I might gain them that are without law.
22 To the
weak became I as weak, that I might gain the weak: I am made all things to all
men, that I might by all means save some. 23
And this I do for the gospel's sake, that I might be partaker thereof with you.
Paul did not have the opportunity of attending a "soul winning" program, so Paul
just made friends every way he could. He found Lydia and her prayer meeting,
he mended tents and talked to camel herders, he philosophied on Mars hill, and
he got down on his haunches and stuck his fingers into the greasy roast bore Publius
the barbarian offered him. All things to all men. This is NOT a program,
it is a way of life. Not door to door, but day to day-- all day long-- looking
for every possible way to take any sinner, great or small, into the glory with
Jesus. And, Paul left local churches of real saints in his wake wherever
he went. Luke
8:38 Now the man out of whom the devils were departed besought him that he might
be with him: but Jesus sent him away, saying,
39 Return
to thine own house, and shew how great things God hath done unto thee. And he
went his way, and published throughout the whole city how great things Jesus had
done unto him. John
9:24 Then again called they the man that was blind, and said unto him, Give God
the praise: we know that this man is a sinner.
25 He answered and said, Whether he be a sinner or no, I know not: one thing I
know, that, whereas I was blind, now I see.
You don't have anything to witness about if you haven't been to Jesus for salvation
and for daily cleansing. A lot of "soul winners" are not even born again
themselves. This is the case with certain famous world evangelists. They
have given the Gospel to millions, yet it is exceedingly rare to find a saint
in a church who is really born again who was saved at a one of these great crusades.
I have met one in my whole life. Why? Answer: The great
world evangelist is doing an exercise in futility. You can have the numbers
like these mass soul winners and have nothing to really talk about but blubbering
platitudes. If this is you, you better get on down to Calvary, confess your
sinfulness to Jesus, and believe in His death and resurrection for you. THEN
you can have something to broadcast around town-- something even the alleged evangelist
may not know about.
2. EXAMPLES
OF SOUL WINNING Philip
Acts
8:26 And the angel of the Lord spake unto Philip, saying, Arise, and go toward
the south unto the way that goeth down from Jerusalem unto Gaza, which is desert.
27 And he arose and went: and, behold, a man of Ethiopia, an eunuch of great authority
under Candace queen of the Ethiopians, who had the charge of all her treasure,
and had come to Jerusalem for to worship,
28 Was returning, and sitting in his chariot read Esaias the prophet.
29 Then
the Spirit said unto Philip, Go near, and join thyself to this chariot.
30 And
Philip ran thither to him, and heard him read the prophet Esaias, and said, Understandest
thou what thou readest?
31 And he said, How can I, except some man should guide me? And he desired Philip
that he would come up and sit with him.
32 The place of the scripture which he read was this, He was led as a sheep to
the slaughter; and like a lamb dumb before his shearer, so opened he not his mouth:
33 In his humiliation his judgment was taken away: and who shall declare his generation?
for his life is taken from the earth.
34 And the eunuch answered Philip, and said, I pray thee, of whom speaketh the
prophet this? of himself, or of some other man?
35 Then Philip opened his mouth, and began at the same scripture, and preached
unto him Jesus.
36 And as they went on their way, they came unto a certain water: and the eunuch
said, See, here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized?
37 And
Philip said, If thou believest with all thine heart, thou mayest. And he answered
and said, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.
38 And
he commanded the chariot to stand still: and they went down both into the water,
both Philip and the eunuch; and he baptized him.
39 And when they were come up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord caught
away Philip, that the eunuch saw him no more: and he went on his way rejoicing.
This has to be one of the most important passages on biblical soul winning in
the Bible. Philip was called of the angel to stop everything and go to ONE
MAN, not a whole town, or "I plan to hit every door in town." One man in
the desert warranted a trip away from the work of a pastor or deacon in a local
church. Also, I see that Philip knew his Bible so well that he could start
where the Eunuch was and head right for Jesus. Also, I notice that baptism
must have been part of the story, for the Eunuch knew about it. Finally,
I see that Philip made sure the Eunuch was saved BEFORE he bapitsed him. AND,
Philip baptized the man at once, not after "a period of proving himself." There
has to be much more in this story. Study it yourself and memorize it if
you can. Paul
Acts
17:16 Now while Paul waited for them at Athens, his spirit was stirred in him,
when he saw the city wholly given to idolatry.
17 Therefore disputed he in the synagogue with the Jews, and with the devout persons,
and in the market daily with them that met with him.
18 Then
certain philosophers of the Epicureans, and of the Stoicks, encountered him. And
some said, What will this babbler say? other some, He seemeth to be a setter forth
of strange gods: because he preached unto them Jesus, and the resurrection.
19 And they took him, and brought him unto Areopagus, saying, May we know what
this new doctrine, whereof thou speakest, is?
20 For thou bringest certain strange things to our ears: we would know therefore
what these things mean.
21 (For all the Athenians and strangers which were there spent their time in nothing
else, but either to tell, or to hear some new thing.)
22 Then
Paul stood in the midst of Mars' hill, and said, Ye men of Athens, I perceive
that in all things ye are too superstitious.
23 For as I passed by, and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with this inscription,
TO THE UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto you.
24 God that made the world and all things therein, seeing that he is Lord of heaven
and earth, dwelleth not in temples made with hands;
25 Neither
is worshipped with men's hands, as though he needed any thing, seeing he giveth
to all life, and breath, and all things;
26 And hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face
of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of
their habitation;
27 That they should seek the Lord, if haply they might feel after him, and find
him, though he be not far from every one of us:
28 For in him we live, and move, and have our being; as certain also of your own
poets have said, For we are also his offspring.
29 Forasmuch then as we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the
Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art and man's device.
30 And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all men every
where to repent:
31 Because he hath appointed a day, in the which he will judge the world in righteousness
by that man whom he hath ordained; whereof he hath given assurance unto all men,
in that he hath raised him from the dead.
32 And when they heard of the resurrection of the dead, some mocked: and others
said, We will hear thee again of this matter.
33 So Paul departed from among them.
34 Howbeit certain men clave unto him, and believed: among the which was Dionysius
the Areopagite, and a woman named Damaris, and others with them.
Now, there goes the "plan." There is almost NO parallel between Philip's
experience and Paul's on Mars Hill. Philip found a men reading a Bible.
Paul met men worshipping many gods. Philip found a man wanting to
know the truth. Paul met men trying to evade the truth by hugging sophistry.
Philip was told directly by God where to go. Paul had to go find a
place to witness. Philip got to baptize a new believer. Paul was mocked
and only got a group of interested folks who believed but needed a lot of teaching.
What did these two events have in common? Answer:
The Lord Jesus Christ and His resurrection,
and just about nothing else. When
I hear of some saint witnessing in some very peculiar way, if he is teaching Jesus
Christ and Him crucified and resurrected, and if he is making sinners into sinners
before he calls for repentance, I am all for him. Go for the verdict I say.
Methods are really determined by the time, place, people, their beliefs
or non-beliefs, and a thousand other things. One thing is changeless-- Jesus Christ
and faith in Him and His work for salvation.
I once went to town in Grant, Michigan to do some shopping for my wife. As
I got out of the car at Gene's Market, I pulled a Jack Chick tract out of my pocket
and asked the Lord to lead me to someone to give it to who needed it. As
I went through the door into the store, I checked to see what tract I had
pulled. Ugh. It was in Spanish, and I could see no Spanish folks in
the store. I figured I had blundered, but I kept watching for a Spanish
person. There were a number in the area working the orchards. Well,
I could not give away the tract. I went back to the car at the far end of
the parking lot thinking I must be to blame or the Lord would have lead me to
the person of His choice. I figured wrong. God has never let me down
when I have asked for someone to talk to about Jesus or to give a Gospel
tract. As I was loading my groceries into the station wagon (it was nearly
dark), a couple of fellows came walking around the car and scared me stiff. But
guess what? They were a couple of Spanish fellows walking to town to buy
groceries. I asked them if they could read Spanish. "Si" they said.
I told them, with a strange conviction I cannot forget, that Jesus told
me to give them this little book to read. They read the title, grinned from
ear to ear, and thanked me profusely. It was only planting the seed, but
it was a day I shall never forget. I have a kind of feeling, do you like
feelings? I feel I shall see one or both of them in the glory.
Method?
Get tracts ready and in your car etc. Put them in your pocket.
Ask God for the right person. Believe He will do it. Hand them
out like you are giving a cancer cure to a dying man. That's it. It's
easy if you belong to Jesus Christ.
I gave a tract to a fellow in a parking lot who was waiting for his wife. That
is one of my favorites, and sometimes I get to talk about Jesus because they want
to know who I am. "Are you one of them d____Mormons?" "By the
grace of God, I sure am not-- what church do you attend?" Got him going
:-)
Well, this guy looked bored, so I handed him one. "Say, you look bored,
Here is something to read while you wait for your wife." He took it
and sized it up real quick. He then said, "Thanks anyway, but I am born
again, and I think you probably should give this to someone else who needs the
Gospel." Well, just before reaching for it, I said, "Have YOU ever given
a tract to anyone?" Answer, "You know, I never have, and I should. I
WILL keep this and I want to give it to someone to be a witness."
I won't ever forget that one. Your witness, spontaneous and sincere, will
sometimes jump start a saint who is not in the battle on the front line. What
a blessing to see a saint get up and join the race with you.
There
is no soul winning territory assigned to you like Avon carves up the world and
assigns it to their people. The whole world is out there and ripe unto harvest.
Ask God for souls. He will give them to you. BUT, each one will be
different, each one will act different, each one will have different issues, and
each one is loved by my Jesus as a unique work of divine art. Jesus Christ wants
them back, and you and I better keep pointing them to Jesus. Forget the "Romans
Road" and the "Four Spiritual Laws." Get ready to be the best friend
each sinner needs, and show them Jesus Christ.
3.
Who wins souls?
Matthew
9:37 Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the
labourers are few; 38
Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth labourers into
his harvest.
The Lord of the harvest is the ultimate soul winner.
He takes the harvest. He sends the workers into the harvest AT HIS
WILL to do the work for Him. I wish some folks would get that right. First,
they would not need to be sent by Jack Hyles anymore. They could just trust
Jesus, the One they trusted for salvation and who didn't let them down them. Second,
soul winners who knew who was really in charge would stop worrying about how many
they got-- how many notches on their gun. A preacher named Jim White preached
a sermon, after telling a line of stupid jokes for 45 minutes, about how he wanted
to whip every other Fundamentalist in town at "soul winning." What a waste
to time, his and everyone else's. He will win just as many as Jesus gives
Him to win, and no more. To make "soul winning" into a contest of game is
the sport of fools. I suspect this guy is using some "soul reading," as
we saw above, to get his numbers up. "Soul
winning" is NOT a bass fishing contest. The Lord of the harvest is Jesus
Christ. Let us look full in His wonderful face, so that the things of earth
will grow strangely dim, and we will then see the harvest he has given us.
Matthew
9:13 But go ye and learn what that meaneth, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice:
for I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.
Stop
wasting your time with "good godly folks." Go look for dirty greasy sinners.
That is who Jesus is going to win, and if you want to take the harvest with
him, you better find some down and out losers. So many dummies go to the
nice part of town to go "soul winning." Waste of time groupies. Try
some tax collectors an whores. They KNOW they are sinners. They are
easy to make into sinners in their own eyes too. Acts
26:23 That Christ should suffer, and that he should be the first that should rise
from the dead, and should shew light unto the people, and to the Gentiles.
Romans
4:25 Who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification.
Romans
5:6 For when we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly.
So you want some credit for "going soul winning" do you? Well, to get the
credit, you first must be sinless, then get yourself crucified, and then raise
from the dead at your own power. Then you must go to heaven with your sinless
blood and offer it to Jehovah God on the heavenly mercy seat. Just do that,
and you can take the credit for "soul winning." Otherwise, bow your knee
and humble yourself in gratitude that God has chosen us worthless sinners to do
anything for Him. The birthing of a saint into eternal glory is NOT my job.
My job is to preach Jesus everywhere I go, then give God the glory. You
see, if you get the credit for the witnessing, then when they cuss and reject
Christ, you have to take responsibility for that too. Oh, they didn't tell
you that at the "soul winning seminar" in Dallas did they? Give God the
glory, and the verdict can be believe or reject-- either way, you are God's,
and it is up to Him to get the glory, which He will.
Pitch that stupid red book from Gothard, the posh padded book from D. James Kennedy,
and chairman Hyles' little yellow book. Stuff some Gospel tracts into your
pocket, ask God for souls, and go talk about Jesus every chance you get. That
is the whole of the "soul winning program."
If you can get this into your head, you have it in a nutshell :-)
Do it !!!!!
BACK
TO THE TOP
WHEN
THE SINNER IS NOT GETTING THE POINT THE
CONFRONTATION OF THE SINNER WITH GODHere
is a audio link to the web
illustrating the wrong way to convince a sinner. First,
we must avoid the rush to the "sinner's prayer" under any circumstances.
To rush a sinner to the prayer without confronting him with his need is to damn
him to hell, and he will go thinking he is born again. Here
are several ways sinners were confronted: Jesus
and the Pharisees No one KNEW the Law of Moses better than the Pharisees. But,
no one blasphemed it worse. The Pharisees needed to confront the fact that they
had destroyed the Law, made it of none effect by their traditions, and would go
to hell for it. If Jesus had loaded them up with Moses Law, they would have made
him king. This is the Fundamentalist preacher today. He has made the Gospel and
the law of Christ of none effect with his man made standards, tithing, church
membership, trashy preaching, and "many other such things ye do...."
Fundamentalist preachers need to be confronted with the fact that they are going
to hell clean and tidy and lawful. It is a case of the beam and the mote, and
only the roughest treatment will save any of them. Philip
and the Eunuch This was a devout man who understood the Law of Moses and his
place as a sinner needing a sacrifice. He needed to see that Jesus Christ was
the Messiah and fulfilled the sacrifice once for all. The
rich young ruler He kept the law from his youth, and Jesus did NOT contradict
him or try to convince him that he was a sinner. Jesus went to the man's issue
with God-- wealth. The man could not have peace with God and keep his fist closed
over his possessions. Aquila
and Priscilla and Apollos Apollos was a believing Jew, knew Messiah had come,
but did not know about the death and resurrection. He did not get a lesson in
his sin and violation of Moses' Law. He got a lesson in the risen Christ. That
is ALL! The
Jews in the upper room They were eager and law keeping Jews. They needed to
see that they, as a nation, had killed the Messiah. This caused terror and a total
void for hope. Christ then filled the void as they (believing Jews) were converted
and baptized. The
Romans They had the good life and rule of law-- They needed to confront the
fact that their mighty law and power would not keep them out of hell. The way
Paul taught them was to exalt the law of Moses. They understood their guilt and
condemnation. The
Philippian jailer He needed to see the power of joy in suffering. He caused
plenty of suffering, and this was the thing that convinced him. Paul
on the road to Damascus Blameless-- He needed to learn that he was attacking
the God he claimed to serve Paul
on Mars Hill Paul never mentioned the Law-- He confronted them with the resurrection.
They believed life was a party with the gods, and it would go on and on forever.
Every
one of these people would have passed with flying colors if they were approached
on some other issue. The soul winner had to find the thing in which they had deceived
themselves, and the sinner was helped to confront his own heart. Why do some people
come easily to Christ, believe in their heart the Lord Jesus, and confess it with
their mouth? It may well be that they have found themselves guilty on all counts
and go straight to Jesus Christ. Why do some people battle with some particular
sin or possession? It is because they refuse to "sell all" and follow
Christ. They must be arrested at that point and NOT allowed to move on to pray
ANY prayer until the raging battle is won for Christ or self. The
reason that Hyles, Crown College, Pensacola Christian College, Lee Roberson, most
Sword of the Lord pastors, and a hundred other groups cannot find more then 20%
of the people who walked their aisles is that they skipped the confrontation of
the sinner with his sin and went straight to the "sinner's prayer."
The did not make sin "exceedingly sinful." In effect, these Fundamentalists,
have damned these people to hell, for these alleged converts can now coast along
secure in their "little prayer." And, they will drop into hell by the
thousands. It
is story time. I love to tell how people came to Jesus Christ. Art
Barton and the Black whore in Pensacola. Art
Barton was street preaching in Pensacola. Some brethren were doing the usual,
shouting at cars at a signal. Art walked the street and confronted people (much
more chance of results). As he came along, a young Black lady was coming to enter
a whore house. Art sized her up in a flash based on life knowledge, "Is that
what your Mama taught you to do with your life?" The Black lady stopped short
and went to pieces. She groaned, wrung her hands, and admitted she was being wicked.
Art tried to talk about Jesus, but the lady knew about that. She then walked on
and around the corner, and all the way around the block. Art waited, and when
she came back, he kept asking her if she was pleasing God and her Mamma. Now,
this story does not end like most hero stories. The Black lady went into the whore
house in the end. The thing is, Art planted the thought in her mind. The Holy
Ghost could then lead her to someone else and on to salvation. The lesson we learn
from Art is that he did not use some canned plan. He went right to the heart of
any Black girl in America, her Mamma. That got her attention like nothing else
could. Mr.
Posey Brother Posey
told me that he was plowing with a mule in Mississippi one day at age 18. He was
out in the middle of a cotton field. He got to thinking about his religion, and
realized he really had none, though his parents were born again, and he had been
active in church life. He then realized he had never asked God to deal with his
sin. He also realized, from hearing it many times, the he was bound for hell fire.
Brother Posey fell on his knees in that field and cried out to God for mercy and
confessed his faith in Jesus Christ. Classic testimony, right? I enjoyed hearing
brother Posey tell it. The next story is very different and shows how sin is the
issue, but not always hell. Pop
Rand and teen age girl Pop
Rand was a short strong man. He had worked hard in businesses that did not pay
well, but he always provided for his family. He and his wife always had their
home open to the young people of the church. Three generations of youth were blessed
by them. I was in the last group. Pop's wife went to be with the Lord, but Pop
could not stand doing nothing for the young people. He would put on a big polka
dotted bow tie and show up at youth events with a big grin. The kids loved it.
He also invited the boys to his home for spaghetti dinners. He would solicit cookies
and cake from the widows in the church, and he cooked the spaghetti. It was Mennonite
spaghetti, but we did not complain. We had all we could eat. He then showed up
his ancient photo collection. Whenever we left Pop, or he left us, he would tell
us, "You are the most godly and the best bunch of youth Immanuel Mennonite
Church has ever had." He really did love us, and we knew it. Pop
had a heart attack and had to go to the hospital. He nearly died, but he recovered
and finally went home. The next Sunday evening Pastor Epp asked if the youth wanted
to go cheer up Pop Rand. He was a bit depressed. We were eager to go because most
of us were scared God would soon take him home. When we got there we sang a while,
Pastor Epp prayer for Pop, and as we got ready to go Pop said it again, "You
are the best bunch of Christian kids Immanuel Mennonite Church has ever had."
I was troubled. I knew some kids there were a mess, and some were not saved at
all. I also knew I was no great model of Christ. It was a bitter and sweet moment,
and all of us were quiet for a while dealing with similar thoughts. The
next Sunday evening Pastor Epp said one of the young ladies had confessed her
faith in Jesus Christ and wanted to give a testimony. She came from a troubled
home, but she and two sisters had become very faithful. Her testimony was short
and thought provoking. She said that when Pop Rand said we were the best bunch
of Christian youth the church had ever had, she knew she was not born again. She
said she felt horrible that she had deceived Pop Rand into thinking she was a
real Christian. She said she wanted to be a real Christian so she would not be
deceiving Pop Rand anymore. There
is Step One-- She confronted her sin. There
is Step Two-- She confessed her faith in Jesus Christ, AND publicly. That is as
good as it gets, folks.
No
fear of hell, but plenty of shame for sin. My friend, people do not all come to
Jesus Christ by some plan and for the same reasons. Sodomite
on the railroad I
was pastoring in Yermo, California, and we got many hobos and drifters at our
door. This was because the Union Pacific Railroad went right through our town,
and I-15 to Vegas went on the other side of our town. One day a fellow came to
the door. He was maybe 23 years old at the most, dressed in black pants and white
dress shirt, and he was rumpled, but he did not look like a hardened rail bum. He
said he was hungry, and I sat him at our picnic table on the lawn. As my wife
made sandwiches, we talked. I finally told him he did not look like a lifer bum
or hobo, and I asked how he came to be riding the rails. He became ashamed in
his look, but I ignored that and asked him to tell me about it. He told be he
was born again, and he had gotten saved at the altar at Moody Church in Chicago.
He said he was a sodomite, but the pastor and people at Moody Church had been
loving and helped him start in victory in the Christian life. He said he had total
victory. Then,
he one day decided he wanted to see San Francisco..... Step One (below), right?
I knew the rest of the story before he told it. He went to San Francisco, and
he had a couple days of alleged fun. Then those nice queers in San Francisco rolled
him and took all his cash, including his wallet so that he had no ID. Penniless,
he hopped a freight and came down to Barstow, hopped on the Union Pacific, and
here he was. I
assumed he was born again. You hyper-tense Fundamentalists will think that is
crazy. For one thing, Moody Church is not very Fundamental, and anyone who goes
to San Francisco should start over and get saved again, right? Wrong. I am one
of those biblical fools who believe a confession of faith from people if it fits
with Step One and Step Two of this discussion. I hate this notion that it is always
in order to retread a backslider. I
told him the story of Abraham and Egypt and how he had to get all the way back
to Bethel before he had victory and could offer sacrifice to God again. You see,
this man was not MY servant. He was Christ's, and if Christ saved him at the altar
at Moody Church, that was his Bethel. He figured out exactly what I was saying,
and he determined to go all the way back to Moody Church and back to the same
altar and get right with The Lord Jesus. Altars and geography do not make saints
and give victory, but the Bethel principle is very important, wherever it is.
Maybe YOU have a Bethel you need to go back to. I
could have told him to stay and we would help him and find a job. But, Step Two
(below) demanded that he go back to the spot where he first met Jesus Christ and
start over with Jesus right there. I gave the fellow sandwiches and water, and
we prayed together. I hated to send a brother in Christ off on down the rails
like that. There are some really evil men riding the rails today. But, I fully
expect to see that brother in the Glory and hear what Jesus Christ did for him.
So,
what is the conclusion of the matter? Answer:
There are two steps in soul winning: STEP
ONE: Spend time
with the sinner as a friend (like Aquila and Priscilla with Apollos), and learn
what it is that the sinner will not deal with. Don't have a pet method. Use the
Ten Commandments to show the sinner he has broken them and is condemned to hell
by a good God. You
must single out the issue in each sinner's life which he will not deal with. Use
the Word of God, especially the teachings of Jesus in the Gospels, and help the
sinner to the point of decision. Even the way you confront him must be conditioned
by who he is and how he is responding. This
next statement is blasphemy by Fundamental church standards: You are NOT the
one who must finally convince the sinner. If you convince him, you will get a
false decision at best, and you may get your face bashed in at worst. Here is
who you MUST allow to do the convincing: John
16:7 Nevertheless I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away:
for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I
will send him unto you. 8 And when he is come, he will reprove the world of
sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment: This
can only be done by taking the sinner to the Law of God, and make a sinner of
him. Psalms
19:7 (KJV) The law of the LORD is perfect, converting the soul: the testimony
of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple. STEP
TWO: Once the sinner
sees the choice, once he faces the fact that he is a sinner and condemned by God's
Law, point him to Jesus Christ. Again, you are NOT the one who saves souls, so
point them to Jesus and get out of the way. Stop this chatter with stories and
clichés and plans. Jack Hyles and D. James Kennedy do not have a clue what
is boiling away inside your sinner friend. YOU must ask the Holy Ghost to help
you go where that sinner needs to go. That trail must stop at the sinner's besetting
sin, and then end at Jesus Christ and the cross. John
12:31 Now is the judgment of this world: now shall the prince of this world be
cast out. 32 And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto
me. Lift
up Jesus. I
am enraged with all these fools in Fundamentalist Laodicea land who lift up their
local church or the Four Spiritual Laws. Even the Romans Road is blasphemed by
them. There is no Romans Road charm. The Gospel about Jesus Christ is in the four
Gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. It is about time we TAKE THE TIME to help
the sinner see who Jesus Christ really is. By the way, Romans is teaching to the
Church of born again people. Why do you introduce sinners to Jesus there and ignore
the Gospel books? I will tell you why-- you are a lazy fool who will not take
the time, even years, helping a sinner come to the point where HE is convinced
in his soul that he has nowhere to turn but to Jesus Christ.
This
cannot be done in a hurry. Modern
evangelism produces thousands of condescenders who walk the aisle and pray the
prayer. They then believe they are born again. The local church and evangelist
may even get them along to baptism. But, most of them did not confront the real
issue between themselves and God. They are along for the ride, and the preachers
and alleged soul winners don't care if they disappear. They are simply written
off as another backslider. In this way Fundamentalists, just as much as Billy
Graham and the Charismatic circus evangelism, are responsible for sending many
thousands of souls to hell. An
example of this is street preaching. A man stands on the corner and yells at passing
cars and pedestrians. His helpers do not stand nearby and quietly confront sinners
as they walk by. They wave Bible verses on boards. No one is confronted with his
personal issue that is between him and God. If someone is allegedly won to Christ,
changes are about 95% that you will never see him again. Why? Again, the alleged
preachers do not give a damn. They really do not intend to single out a soul,
visit him, stay with him until he deals with his issue against God, and come to
believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the Living God. Street
preaching is the most advanced case of wickedness against the way of Jesus Christ
and Paul. Street preaching is for people who do not care to take the time, or
they just want to be able to show the red badge of courage to the folks at the
church house. Even on Mars Hill Paul singled out an audience and reasoned with
them until he got a verdict THAT FIT THEM. Scatter shot evangelism is a joke.
Jesus did not use it, for he came to SEEK and to save. Whom are YOU seeking? Do
you know your target, and do you single out sinners and learn about them?
A
word about handing out tracts. They
are usually 75% man and 25% Bible. That means you cannot be sure of most of the
message. Also, they are often cheap looking and an insult to a thinking person.
Buy gloss covered Gospels of John from Trinitarian
Bible Society or some other source, and hand them out with your own PERSONAL
note inside with a few questions and John 20:31 on it. This will NOT return to
God void. You will get your reward when you give the Gospel to sinners. Finally,
target one or two people a day at most. Pray about it, ask God to lead you to
two people, and anticipate that one of two people will be ready for the contact.
Don't throw it down on a counter and walk off, you wimp. I saw a preacher do this
to a check out lady. BAH! I hate that. Take
the time to be friendly, watch for the opening, and tell the person that you have
found that Christians do not give the Bible to people. Note that often believers
give out cheap junk. Tell the person that you hope they will read the Gospel of
John and then pass it on. This implies that they are a sort of agent of good themselves.
They will almost never decline. Then pray for that person, and later go back by
and ask if they felt your questions were useful on the insert. That is called,
among fishermen, setting the hook. If they respond, go next to the two steps up
this page. By
the way, preachers are the worst tippers in the world. I have had waitresses tell
me that several times. Church groups are terrible about tipping. I think they
imagine that they don't have to give money to sinners. If you give a Gospel with
a tip, MAKE THAT MINIMUM 20%. Your generosity will be the measure by which the
sinner considers the generosity of Jesus Christ and his salvation. Cheap tip equals
cheap salvation.
Here
is the Gospel used in this pattern-- STEP TWO above. Please
read this article. BACK
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