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Herb, an
evangelism leader, recalls revival in small Utah town
SALT LAKE CITY (BP)--Vernal was
like many small towns in Utah in the early 1980s. About 85 percent
of the population - roughly 10,000 people -- claimed membership in
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, while the First
Baptist Church had a Sunday morning attendance of only about 70.
But beginning in 1984, something
happened in that town of about 12,000 unlike anything Southern
Baptists in the region have seen before or since. A new pastor with
a fresh vision for the community came to town. A prominent couple
left the LDS church and began telling others about Christ. It became
routine and expected in the church to build on friendships with
Mormon neighbors and share Christ.
By the end of five years, 450
Mormons had paid the enormous price of leaving the LDS church and
acknowledging the Christ of Scripture through the ministry of First
Baptist Church. Other Christian churches in the community also
shared in the harvest.
"To be honest, I don't think
we were aware of the enormity of what was going on," said Herb
Stoneman, pastor of First Baptist at the time and now evangelism
director for the Utah-Idaho Southern Baptist Convention. "God
was just moving, and we were simply letting him move through us.
There was deep commitment on the part of everyone in the body to
that altering of life that was going on.
"It was a situation where
every Sunday someone new was coming to know Christ. ... . I think
some Sundays I could have said, 'Olly Olly Oxen Free,' and people
would have come down the aisles. The word of ministry was going out
in the homes, and we were simply the gathering ground in the
church."
Stoneman came to the church in
January 1984, and it was in February that former Mormons Dennis and
Rauni Higley - once among the leaders in the local LDS organization
- joined First Baptist and began teaching a course on witnessing to
Mormons.
Meanwhile, Stoneman placed a bold
challenge before the small congregation. In order to better reach
into the community, he asked members to invite as many friends and
neighbors as possible for an event called "Roundup
Sunday."
"We set an absolutely
unreachable goal of 250 people for worship ... but on that Sunday
morning we had 278. We blew the doors off the place, and suddenly
the body of believers gained a vision that the work at Vernal could
really impact the community."
Much of the early effort was aimed
at "inreach," or reaching inactive members. But the
results went far beyond their expectations.
"Something strange happened in
the course of the inreach," Stoneman said. "The church
became united ... in doing something to touch its community. By the
time the event arrived, our numbers had already increased, and
people were asking their friends and their neighbors about coming to
church."
At one point when there had not
been a baptism for just two weeks, Stoneman heard concerns about
whether something was wrong in the church.
"We became so certain of God's
hand on people's lives. It seems almost arrogant now, but we would
almost anticipate that they were going to be saved," he said.
In one case, he remembers a church
member coming to him with a seemingly impossible dilemma. Her son
was going to be baptized into the LDS church on his upcoming 8th
birthday, and her LDS husband had said he would divorce her if she
didn't allow the baptism. Stoneman said her husband would give his
life to Christ before then. "That's a pretty bold statement to
make ... but I just really believed God was going to break (the
man's) heart and change his life."
One Sunday morning, the man came to
the church, angry and planning a disruption because of his wife's
renewed interest in Christianity. But before the invitation even was
issued, the man came down to the front, weeping. "I don't know
what I'm doing here," he said, minutes before he accepted
Christ.
In another case, an LDS couple that
had accepted Christ wanted to be baptized, but their daughter had
told them they would never again see their granddaughter again if
they did. It took a while, but one day they made the decision. They
did not even want to wait until the next Sunday out of fear of
changing their minds, and about 60 people came out on a weekday
afternoon to witness the baptism, Stoneman said. Today, their
daughter and several family members have accepted Christ.
Others were not so fortunate. The
Higleys, who Stoneman said were a catalyst for the revival, were
forced to leave town after two years because their businesses were
boycotted. Several men were divorced by their wives at the urging of
the LDS church, Stoneman said. LDS doctrine teaches that the wife's
eternal destiny is dependent on her husband, he said, which served
to encourage divorce and remarriage. But the persecuted individuals
counted the prize of salvation worth the cost, and as a result they
became some of the most faithful Christians Stoneman has
encountered.
The revival even resulted in a
change in the way individuals withdrew from the LDS church in the
area. In the beginning, the only way of leaving was to go before a
"bishop's court" of top church leaders and be
excommunicated, Stoneman said. New Christians began to use this as
an opportunity for sharing their testimony, however, and church
leaders eventually changed the process to eliminate the need for a
hearing.
About two years into the revival,
the Vernal church organized a bold campaign to distribute to every
home a paperback book presenting the case for the historic Christian
gospel. The title, "God's Word: Final, Infallible and
Forever," actually addressed only the first section of the
book, which sought to counter Mormon claims that the Bible is
flawed. Other sections were titled, "The Mormon Illusion"
and "From Mormon Illusion to God's Love."
"We prayed about whether it
was too confrontive, but we already had a reputation in the
community. ... After you've been labeled as the Whore of Babylon,
how much worse can you get?" Stoneman said.
Within 24 hours after the 6,000
books were distributed, LDS leaders had issued a directive that the
books were to be burned. But many were read, and people responded.
Stoneman said some Mormon residents even came by asking for extra
copies.
What did Stoneman learn from the
experience? It wasn't a sure-fire evangelistic method for Mormons,
as many have sought from him. But it is a principle of evangelism
that applies to Mormons or anyone else that needs the gospel.
"The first characteristic is
one of being totally in love with the lost. You have to love lost
people enough to expose yourself as far as your own weaknesses.
"There's no such thing as
being effective in evangelism and at the same time being a silent
witness," he added. "You must say what you believe and you
must make certain people know there's a difference ... . People come
to Christ when people come to them and tell them of their need for
Christ."
He uses Jesus Christ's approach
with the woman at the well as a model; Jesus first established a
point of contact, then he took the opportunity to share the good
news.
"I had an opportunity to win a
lot of men to Christ while at the gymnasium playing
basketball," he said.
While casual confrontation is
essential, he said, it should be done in a spirit of love. "I
find a lot of people try to encounter cultists with angry words, and
I haven't seen many of them being successful in leading people to
Christ." |