Luke J. Wilson | 01st December 2025 |
General Articles
On Sunday it was St Andrew’s Day and I was in church listening to a sermon about Andrew (and the namesake of our church), that often overlooked disciple, meeting Jesus for the first time. In John’s Gospel, it says:
John 1:40–42One of the two who heard John speak and followed him was Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother. He first found his brother Simon and said to him, ‘We have found the Messiah’… He brought Simon to Jesus.
As I sat there listening to our vicar speak about evangelism and how we should be more like Andrew in bringing people to meet Jesus, something from many, many years ago flickered to life in the back of my mind. A realisation I had long ago that gave me a great sense of freedom. Something I think I had forgotten, unfortunately (so thank God for the reminder!).
There was a point in my life when I finally understood the relief of letting go of a burden I didn’t even realise I was carrying: it’s not my job to convert people. It was never Andrew’s. And it’s not yours either.
Our role — our real and most basic calling — is simply to introduce people to Jesus. We get to be the planters and the waterers, but God is the one who brings the growth. As Paul writes:
1 Corinthians 3:6I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth.
When this truth sinks in, it strips away the pressure, the anxiety, and the awkward “sales-pitch” mentality that we sometimes (without realising it) attach to evangelism.
And this ties into something even deeper: our basic calling as Christians is the Great Commission, Jesus’ final instruction to His followers:
Matthew 28:19–20Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptising them… and teaching them…
But it dawned on me that all of those actions: teaching, mentoring, discipling, baptising; they all come after someone has come to faith.
We are not told to convert people. We are told to make disciples. Conversion is the doorway into discipleship, yes, but that moment of hear...