MentorNet 85
Help New
Believers Overcome Struggles and Tell Friends about Christ
Let love lead the
way
The task of helping new
believers become strong and active in their faith requires more personal attention
than doctrinal teaching. New believers normally grow in Christ rapidly, proving
more able to meet challenges, when they remain part of an interactive, loving,
small group.
Their small group may be
their own family gathered for daily devotions, other believers of the same
congregation who form a permanent small group, or a special group geared to the
needs of new believers.
Put new believers
to work
Newly reborn Christians sense
their true identity in Christ more readily, when they work together with other
believers who love them. Simply listening to good teaching provides little
help, and new believers quickly become passive listeners, if they are not an
active part of a body. So, give new believers specific things to do for Christ,
such as:
·
Accompany
an older believer on prayer walks or witnessing to friends.
·
Hold
joyful parties to which they invite friends, to tell them about Christ, in a
non-preachy way.
·
Visit
friends and relatives to share about their new faith.
·
Do
some kind of work that is common in maintaining healthy church life.
·
Serve
needy folk nearby, in some practical way.
·
Visit
the sick, prisoners, or anyone else who might be suffering, or who needs a
friend.
Let new believers
express their hopes, fears and feelings in a safe environment.
New believers often need to
talk freely about their problems in a loving group that is not judgmental, that
does not deal with issues merely in a philosophical or doctrinal way.
Assign a “big
brother” or “big sister” to every new believer.
Sooner or later, all new
believers have struggles with living out their new faith in a hostile world,
where Satan is often in control. At such times, struggling believers must have
a sympathetic, understanding “big brother or sister” who meets regularly with
them.
So, provide to big brothers
and sisters a short, simple checklist of things the new believer should learn
to practice. Such a list makes it possible for any conscientious believer to
serve as a big brother or sister.
Be patient with new
believers’ inevitable shortcomings.
Most new believers still have
bad habits, lack spiritual maturity, and remain unable to defend their faith
logically. So, allow them time to grow, helping them take their own “baby
steps.”
·
In
close fellowship with other believers who are full of joy, new believers will
share their experiences and feel a sense of forgiveness, knowing that Jesus is
real and that his promises prove true.
·
Let
even the newest believers tell others what they have discovered about Jesus,
along with any testimony of having joy, of a healing, or of an answered prayer.
Even if such testimonies may seem to older believers to be simplistic and void
of depth. Nevertheless, older believers should be rejoicing
at these early signs of growth.
Remember your own early
experience as a new believer, and the ways in which you tried, failed,
succeeded and grew strong in faith.
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