–– Richard Peskett

The audio version of this article is available here: YouTube, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
Do you ever, like me, struggle to share the gospel of Jesus Christ with black Africans? I speak often to men and women about Christ—on the streets and in the stores—and even though we are speaking the same language, and they smile, and they agree with me, and they take a tract when offered to them, yet I usually come away convinced that we were speaking at cross-purposes. I failed again to effectively share the gospel.
“Speaking at cross purposes” means talking with someone about different things without realising it.
Most Africans are “incurably religious people.” They mention “God” more often than the Europeans with whom I grew up. Africans praise “God” for the rain, and for good health. “God is good,” I might say, and people reply, “All of the time.” But how many of these same people actually know God — the One who reveals Himself in His creation, in the Scriptures, and most clearly in the person of Jesus Christ?
Continue reading