We need to bear a positive witness to
members of the cults.Be convinced. Conversation with the cultist
is not for the uncertain. The Christian needs to be just as convinced about
his faith in Jesus Christ and his commitment to that relationship as the
cultist is about his dogmatics.
Consider your attitude toward cultists. Make sure that it is one of
love. The Spirit helps us see others as G-d sees them and to treat them with
respect and love. Remember the admonition of 1 Peter 3:15-16.
Be courteous. Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses expect rebuffs when
they visit house to house. You will surprise them by being kind. Rejection
by Christians simply confirms their belief that they represent the one true
church.
Seek to gauge the cultist's commitment to his faith. Seek to
understand what the person’s faith means to him. Every religious group has
within it a range of persons from the devout to the nominal.
Stress personal experience. Center on their personal experience, not
on the doctrinal beliefs of their group. Ask about their experience:
sometimes it will be given readily, sometimes hesitantly. Listen to see if
their testimony is canned or memorized, or if it comes from the deepest
wells of their beings. Members of cults who believe in salvation by works
rarely have a sense of personal assurance, because they never know when they
have worked enough to attain salvation. Emphasize your own experience in
Christ, and your own assurance of redemption as His gift.
Be clear. The same words are used by different religious groups to
mean different things, so be clear in your use of language. You should know
enough about other faiths to know their code words. Also be clear in the
language you use about your faith.
Check for changes. (These changes are listed on other handouts in this series.) When you talk with a
member of a cult, check what he believes about basic Christian beliefs. One of the
rules of good interfaith witness is that you do not tell another person what
he believes; you ask him. Check for (1) authority, (2) the view of Christ,
(3) the view of man, (4) the concept of redemption and how one enters that
realm, (5) how he views you as a Christian, (6) the church, (7) and the
Bible.
Compliment where you can; challenge where you must. You do not build
your own faith by tearing down the other person’s. If there are beliefs or
activities you can commend, do so.
Be careful in the way the Bible is used, either by you or by the cultist.
“Consider the context” is a good rule. Every time a Jehovah’s Witness quotes
a passage of Scripture to you, read it with him out of your Bible.
Examine the paragraph, the page, the book, to see if the meaning of the
verse has been modified by the cultist.
Share your testimony. Express your own faith in Christ. Tell of your
personal spiritual experience. Interpret for the cultist what it means for
you to be a Christian and a member of your local church. The more your
testimony uses terms that have meaning to the cultist, the more the Holy
Spirit can use it for his purposes. Share your faith in words that are
designed to reach the cultist. Stress assurance of salvation with the
millennial groups, for they have little confidence in this area. Stress the
divinity of Christ to the mind group, and the call for complete dedication
of all that you are — mind, body, soul, action.
Start with your neighbor. Share your faith first with your
neighbor who is a member of a cult group. You will have more opportunity for
continuing contact.
Do not close off contact. Effective interfaith witness leaves the
door open for other opportunities to share and converse. Be ready to
minister, to listen, to go back.