A few weeks ago, while walking in the parking lot at Wal-Mart, my daughters and I found two five dollar bills on the ground. My first thought was, "Nice, free money!" My second thought was, "Wait a second, this might be a Christian trick."
That's a weird thing to think when you find money on the ground, but before I picked it up, I tried to see from a distance if the money was real or not. My fear was that I would get my hopes up, grab it and then realize it was a salvation tract disguised as money.
That happened to me once and even as a Christian, I found it kind of traumatizing. And it's not that I hate tracts. I think tracts can be a good thing. I don't like that sometimes people, myself included, beat them up like some sort of Christian piƱata, making fun of the people that hand them out. I think for some people, handing out tracts is an honest expression of worship. The truth is that there are probably people reading this site today that could easily say, "Someone giving me a tract on the street really meant a lot to me."
But is there anyone that picks up what appears to be a ten dollar bill, flips it over, finds out it's actually a message about the Bible and says, "Phew, I thought this was free money for a second. Let's see what this John 3:16 is all about instead?"
I doubt it. The first reaction is probably anger. Followed by embarrassment for falling for a trick. Followed by throwing the tract away or bringing it home to show all your friends and family members how mean Christians are.
There are really only two ways to fix this problem. We can either stop creating tracts that are disguised as money or we can create an even worse tract so that when people do get the fake money tract they can at least say, "Wow, I don't like this fake money but at least it's not as bad as that other tract I hear is going around."
I would like to pretend that this blog is powerful enough to make number one happen but let's be honest, it isn't. So instead, I think we should lean into option number two as hard as we can.
What would be worse than fake money? I thought long and hard about this because there's already a fake parking ticket tract going around. Abraham Piper wrote about that a few months ago. After much consideration and a desire to be topical and relevant, I decided that the worse tract we could create right now is a fake pink slip. With as many layoffs happening and as many people finding their jobs "eliminated" or my favorite new term, "sunsetted," I think a little tract that looks like you're getting fired would be most horrible.
Imagine you come back from lunch and there's a note on your keyboard. It's pink, it's official looking and across the top in a font that looks all serious it says, "Please pack your things and leave the keys to your desk in one of the drawers." You open it up and inside it says …..I'm not sure.
That's the challenge with writing a bad tract, you have to make a wild segue from "you're fired" to "here's Jesus." Here are a few headlines I think we could use on our fake pink slip tract:
1. "You might not have been fired, but speaking of fire, imagine how hot hell might be."
2. "You might still have a job, but did you know your real job is to worship the Lord?"
3. "Your job wasn't eliminated, but you know that fear in your heart that you just felt when you thought it was? God wants to eliminate that."
4. "Want a job you can never lose? Become a follower of Christ."
5. "Who knows when you’ll get fired, but today you could be hired … for the Lord’s army that is."
6. "Want to work for a Jewish carpenter?"
Those are horrible, but unfortunately not far off from what happens sometimes. Let's stop trying to trick people into Jesus. I would love everyone that reads this blog to become a Christian and know the insane life transforming joy that I sincerely believe a relationship with Christ offers, but I have to trust that God is big and beautiful and powerful enough not to need me to help Him out by tricking people into His arms.
I think I've run across some of those headlines before! I hate tracts, period. For one thing, they aren't exactly environmentally friendly. In NYC you could see them tossed all over. I think it's one of the worst forms of evangelism, however well-intentioned. I'm trying to imagine someone who would be moved by the usually inane summing up of faith they contain. And I'm not entirely sure that handing out a piece of paper can really be thought of as making a connection with someone.
ReplyDeleteI TOO found one in a Wal-Mart parking lot this week. Maybe it's a conspiracy. The one I found was supposed to be $100, not just $10. I say supposed to be because I had already spent every last dime in my head before I actually picked it up.
ReplyDeleteThe whole $100 thing takes it to a whole new level. When it's a fake $10 bill I'm mildly annoyed, when it's a fake $100, it's like they just took away my grocery bill for a week...evil evangelists.
It reminded me, in bold print, that "the love of money is the root of all evil", and also said that "no amount of riches can satisfy like the gift of eternal life".
Both of those statements are true, but neither of them bought me dinner...just sayin'.
w.v. ouslybo
-shortened slang for obviously bogus
"If the tract were more ouslybo, I wouldn't have been so angry."
I've yet to meet anyone who can say "Someone giving me a tract on the street really meant a lot to me." I say that person doesn't exist.
ReplyDeleteOne of my friends is that person. They got handed a tract on the way to commit suicide and it made them reconsider and not do it
ReplyDeleteI think it's be better to give out real money instead of money tracts. Think about it, if you stood at a Wal-Mart door and gave people, say, $20, they'd ask why you were doing it and then you could tell them something simple like, "I wanted to bless you". Being Christ is always better than telling Christ. Make them think, and make them feel the way Christ makes others - us - feel. Just a thought.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen the $10 tracts here in Australia, but there are plently of $1000000000 ones... they are JW's and are given out at christian events and Christian youth rallies to Christians, from people standing outside in the street.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure what their purpose is... are they anti-Christian?
hm.. I'm yet to see a tract that didn't make me cringe...
I am literally praying that tract-makers read this post. You know something is very wrong when you, as a Christian, run into someone giving out tricksy tracts, and find yourself wanting to scream with disappointment/embarrassment.
ReplyDeleteJon, While this post is humorous, I think you really need to rethink your view on money tracts and "tricking."
ReplyDeleteThe fact of the matter is that the gospel basically "tricks" everyone. People tend to think they are righteous, good and otherwise worthy of some kind of rewards in the afterlife. The gospel causes them to realise that actually, they aren't good, but they are sinners and need salvation.
Christ himself used such "tricks" often, because they show a contrast between people's false perceptions and God's absolute and objective standards. It is a powerful way to present the gospel - but it is also consistent with the revelatory nature of the gospel: those things which seemed true, correct and secure are in fact built on sand.
This is not to say I support all tracts, all money tracts or some of the ways people use them to evangelise. I don't. But I think your criticism here goes beyond that, taking to task a legitimate way of creating a contrast between spiritual wealth and poverty. This is a common theme in the bible (2 Cor 6:10, 8:9; James 2:5; Rev 3:17) and while of course it is open to abuse (as is any good thing in the hands of we sinful men), let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater here.
Christina, there is an Aussie Christian version of the $1,000,000 note. I found it on the floor at church one day.
ReplyDeleteIt tells you off for stealing and being greedy. If you can be bothered reading any further it does tell that Jesus saves!
I think they are good conversation starters - but I'd like to change gospel angle they take
Hmm. One day my freshman year of college, I thought I found a hundred dollar bill near the library. Turns out it was an advertisement for a club. So not only is this idea annoying, it's just a ripoff of a secular idea.
ReplyDelete"Feel like your world just ended? Well, it didn't, you're not fired - but one day the whole world WILL end! Choose Jesus as your eternal 401K!"
ReplyDeleteYour stated objective is to make a tract so bad it is worse than the tract that pretends to be money. But the psychology of the pink slip is just the opposite. Instead of the person being dissapointed that it isn't what he thought it was (money), he is relieved that it is not what he thought it was (pink slip). So he might LIKE the pink-slip tract because it means he is not fired.
ReplyDeleteColin -
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment, I think you raise some good points. I hope that this post did not seem as if I was saying I was against "creative ways of sharing the gospel" because I'm certainly not.
But I do disagree with you in the idea that "The fact of the matter is that the gospel basically "tricks" everyone." I think the gospel reveals truth, it clarifies, it sorts through an expectation and presents the reality. That to me is the opposite of a "trick." When Christ spoke to the woman at the well for instance he dialoged with her in a way that related to what she was doing. She was getting water so he engaged her in a discussion about water and revealed to her a deeper truth, "Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life." He didn't trick her. He engaged her where she was, in what she was doing and related the word of God to her in a tangible way.
I completely agree with you about the need to show a contrast between spiritual wealth and poverty but I feel like Christ did that through relationship, not tricks.
Thanks for adding to the conversation
Jon
I HATE TRACTS! I have honestly destroyed thousands of them in my lifetime. Why have I come in contact with so many? am I someone's special project? NO!
ReplyDeleteI work with an independent baptist minister (who can't find a church who will pay him full time so he is a janitor at my office). He feels the need to place them on every conceivable surface in our office, so when I find them on the back of my mens room toilet or on the sink or taped on the paper towel dispensor, they all get flushed. I haven't asked him to stop because my boss does not want him to quit (because he is a GREAT janitor), so everyone in my office just goes around and cleans them off of everything when he leaves at lunch.
The reason I hate them so much is they accomplish NOTHING except to push people further away from the good news. I have yet to come across one tract that talks about the love of Christ, or the charity of his followers. Instead they are manipulative, and use scare tactics to try to bring people in. Its really not effective. They are just wrong.
Think of how many copies of the Bible could have been printed with all the paper and ink that have gone into tracts. I would guess in the millions. Think about it...
I used to hand out tracts when I first became a Christian. I remember a friend and I went to a Bikers' house. They weren't Hells Angels but they came close. We were too chicken to go to the door so we just scattered them in their front yard and trusted God with the rest.
ReplyDeleteI've once had someone hand me a religious book in the street (and a very badly printed one at that) and then ask me to make a donation towards the cost of it.
ReplyDeleteThere are so many factors to consider when considering whether or not tracts are good or bad. I don't think a blanket statement in either direction is fair. Are there scenarios imaginable where tracts could be helpful to the cause of Christ? Yes. Are the others where tracts are hurtful to the cause of Christ? Again, yes. I appreciate your post, Jon, and didn't take from it that you thought tracts are inherently good or evil. More than anything else, thinking about what you said and reading some of the more intentional and well thought out comments has caused me to realize that I need to share the gospel more. So thanks.
ReplyDeleteThis is only tangentially related, but every time I hear or read "Jewish carpenter" I think of a conversation from a TV show (Simpsons? or a movie?) when someone says something similar to "I just received some life-changing advice from a Jewish carpenter. You know, the one who sometimes sells stuff out of the back of his car in the 7-11 parking lot."
ReplyDeleteDeek -
ReplyDeleteThanks for your feedback. This is the kind of post I get nervous writing because I don't want to make blanket statements but I do want to honestly share what I think about a particular form of tracts or version of sharing the gospel. And I'm going to get things wrong. Sometimes I'm going to throw an idea out there that is horrible, and the comments and people that engage in the conversation actually help me reframe an idea that I hadn't thought about from enough angles. And it'e never fun to publically make a mistake that loads of people see but at the same time if we don't share our ideas in a community we often clutch tightly to broken ideas much longer than we should.
I feel good about this particular idea but welcome the chance to see it and any other idea from different perspectives.
Jon
Hilarious. Very hilarious.
ReplyDeleteThe church I'm a part of has a little stand of tracts in the lobby, because the 65 and over crowd is head over heels with them. Great titles include: "Touched by the Master's Hand" (a bit creepy, I think) and "What do you do to have to go to Hell?" (the inside is blank, which means "you don't have to do anything to go to Hell").
While I am not a fan of tracts and generally get a good laugh perusing the tracts I come across, I am always skittish to call them unbiblical or a bad evangelism method. Because there is always someone, somewhere, who got saved by a tract.
We can't draw a deep line in the sand on this. Every time I think about this, some questions run through my head: Can God still use a tract to save someone? Absolutely. Could we go about making less-tricky, more (I hate to use the word!) relevant tracts? I think so.
Thanks for the post, Jon.
I too hate tracts and don't believe that they EVER get read. In my younger days, working as a busboy, I received a tract left by a diner which read, "Here's a tip" and looked like a dollar bill. Wow. This is awesome! What did we do with the tract? Into the garbage disposal along with all the other leftover food. BTW, they didn't leave any money--no real tip. Forget the tracts--they're usually quoting the Bible in KJV, and sound like they were written a hundred years ago.
ReplyDeleteBut wait, the most interesting, well-written, and creative tracts I've ever seen come from Jews for Jesus--and they call them Broadsides. They are meant to get people thinking about Yeshua, and I suspect that they are doing the job, better than we might expect.
I once saw one which was a kind of 10 funny jokes with a direct segue from the one about an englishmen, and Irish and an American to 'Jesus loves you' etc.
ReplyDeleteVery bad!
We once paid a window cleaner to come to our house and wash all the windows. Across the bottom of the bill he handed us it said 'Your window's are clean, but is your soul?'
ReplyDeleteI had a landlord in West Texas who's business card had a picture of Jesus on the back with the following quote "If you meet me and forget me, you will have lost nothing, if you meet Christ and forget Him you will lose everything!"
Do people think this actually works? Can anyone imagine Jesus wandering around Galilee handing out those terrible Chick Tracts?
What is totally not cool are the people who think it is "cute" or "useful" to leave these things as tips.
ReplyDeleteI'm not going to jump into the tract debate right now, but here is a link to actual testimonies of people whose lives were changed after being presented the gospel through a tract.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.atstracts.org/storylist.php
Similar to the Aussie commentors, in Canada we have a $1 million track, so it's probably better than a $10 or $100, since I doubt anyone falls for it being legit. I have honestly never even read the back of one of them, so I guess that says a little something about their effectiveness?
ReplyDelete"FREE STUFF INSIDE
ReplyDelete100% Completely Free
No Cost to You"
Then open it up and it would have
"Eternal Life
Jesus Paid it for You
Live Forever with Jesus
Your Free Ticket to Heaven"
I see a future in Christian tracts for myself.
great post jon...i have struggled with the "tricking" people into his arms or really the scaring of people into his arms. i always wonder what are they saved to or just saved from...if we stir the emotions, what happens when they are gone? is there not enough in what is given to entice?
ReplyDeleteI think the reason people have shuch a bad picture of tracts in their heads, is because there are so many poorly made ones out there. You have to remember, it's not the tract that saves somebody (or even the "relational conversation" for that matter), but the Gospel of Jesus Christ that saves. If a tract gives a clear picture of the Gospel, then it's a good tract. If it doesn't, don't use it.
ReplyDeleteSome people can worship through giving out tracts...some think they can't. Some people can worship through singing old school hymns...some think they can't. Some people can worship by changing diapers in the nursery...some think they can't.
ReplyDeleteDon't put limititations on the work of the gospel. Don't limit it in your life, and don't limit it for other people by saying that you hate tracts. When you do that you turn the gospel into what you prefer.
I have never handed out a tract. But I have been handed one before and kindly handed it back so that they could give it to someone else whose story might end up on that website that Hucklebuck mentioned above. Don't underestimate the gospel. It will take a lifetime to unpack everything there is to know about Jesus...and then you get an eternity to try to do it too.
However, if I had to put something on a tract, I would put the question they ask you when you walk into a resturant:
"Smoking" or "Non-smoking" - where will you sit in eternity?
I think handing people something that tells them about Christ is not a bad thing at all...however I have yet to see a tract that wasn't cheesey and doesn't make Christians look really dumb. I agree - we need to quit with the antics and just tell people about Jesus. He speaks for Himself.
ReplyDelete#2, #4, and #5 are unfortunately way too similar to taglines used in tracts I've actually seen...although I sort of understand why people hand out tracts, I think they often (if not almost always) miss the point, and they do tend to make Christians look really cheesy.
ReplyDeleteOkay, so I'm going to be honest here - my friends and I (one of whom taught Sunday school every week) used to make fun of tracts like nobody's business in high school, mostly because we were often handed them at the drive-thru window where we worked (Taco Bell!).
ReplyDeleteI know, I know, the underlying message is well intentioned and nice, but UGH. There's nothing like being told you'll burn in the firey depths of hell to really sell an idea.
Suffice to say they didn't convince me that I should get into this whole Christianity business. So, no, I don't think tracts are a good method of evangelism...and if you're not a good evangelist, that's okay, you can do other stuff.
You know, in college, when I received a lot of my training in evangelism and so forth, one thing I was taught was that the main purpose of a tract was to keep you "on track" in your face-to-face presentation of the gospel to the person you were witnessing to, whether that person is a stranger you've accosted on the street or your roommate or whatever, and that just leaving them lying about is of distinctly secondary utility.
ReplyDeleteAnd I suppose that standard for functionality creates a different definition for what's a "good" or "bad" tract - not everything printed will be equally useful in facilitating a conversation.
That said, I'm not terribly fond of them and can't say I've ever witnessed by using them. And I agree that the cash ones are a fairly obnoxious sort of bait-and-switch, but I'm sure all the creators were going for was attention.
Money tracts are a step up from Chick tracts. Those things are awful. Tracts are not all a waste, however. I have known people who eventually got saved because of reading a tract. I have met plenty of Christian immigrants here who were ecstatic to see the Gospel in their language.
ReplyDeleteHate sure seems like a strong word to me re tracts. Perhaps rather than tossing them, you all could just save them for a week and then give them back to the janitor nicely. Ask him to use use them elsewhere where others mayn't have had the chance to hear the Gospel. I'm amazed that a believer could hate a piece of paper with the Gospel of Jesus Christ printed on it. It may be poorly written, but still... You could also get some better-done tracts and give them to the janitor to use. I just don't understand throwing them all away since, if you left them there for one day, he wouldn't have to replace them the next. If you are really worried about the environment as you claim, that would make a whole lot more sense.
Concerning the "anti tract" discussion; I too went on a similar rant with the Chairmen of our Elders (and if Elders are holy, the Chairmen must be the holiest of them all). He gently (of course he did it gently, he was the Chairmen of the Elders)reminded me that Campus Crusade for Christ missionaries from our church were growing a vibrant college ministry in Kentucky using The Four Spiritual Laws as the foundation of their outreach.
ReplyDeleteTracts may seem antiquated, but there is a whole generation out there who have not seen them, who do not have a built-in bias against them, and who are receptive to them.
I too dislike the bait-and-switch, but lets not throw all tracts out with the bait-and-switch bath water.
@drredhead - talk to your HR person. They can have a non-confrontational chat with this person and gently remind them that the company isn't a fan of anyone distributing religious literature in workspaces, but that he can feel free to pin a single tract to the bulletin board in the break room (or some other neutral space).
ReplyDeleteI've seen local politicians give out a version of this...all about how the other guy is wasting our $$...
ReplyDeleteJust make the $5 tract into a voucher for $10 if they attend your church that Sunday.
ReplyDeleteMy church has a tract that I use when evangelising. It has the "10 ways to get to Heaven" on the front. I use it as a tool to start conversation. I might say, "Excuse me, do you have a minute to take this survey?" Then I proceed to ask them which of the 10 things do they think can get them to heaven. Most of them answer "Read your Bible," "Be a good person," and so forth. I then go on to explain that only #10 "Believe in Jesus Christ as Savior" is the correct answer. I think it's a great ice-breaker for street evangelism.
ReplyDeleteI don't mind tracks at all. In general they do a lot of good for many people. Think about it. Who hasn't seen those old black and white silent movies where a woman is tied to the tracks and a train is coming? There are 2 benefits here:
ReplyDelete1) There's a guy who get to be a hero and save her life, and I don't care what Tina Turner sang, we do need another hero
AND
2) People in other states get very important resources like lumber, coal, and circus animals. Even hobos.
We would have none of these things if it were not for tracks, God bless 'em.
What about the obviously not-money money tracts? I think those are some of the worst ones. Last year at an outdoor concert I attended a man was walking around with a big tear-off notepad of $1,000,000 tracts. Only they didn't look like real dollars, they were like the oversized novelty checks people win on gameshows. He was walking around going up to people saying "I'd like to give you $1,000,000" while handing you the tract. It was very awkward because how do you refuse such obviously fake giant sums of money?
ReplyDeleteOn the back it said something clever like "Are you disappointed this isn't real money? Believe in Christ and gain a relationship that is priceless!!" Needless to say the ground after the concert was quite littered with fake money.
I also used to work in Christian retail and we'd get an influx of people buying the Halloween tracts to hand out to trick-or-treaters. Those were almost like a double edged tract that first condemned you for participating in Halloween and then tried to save your soul.
I hate that as a Christian I cringe when I see tracts or people giving out tracts. I know I shouldn't and I commend those people for making an effort and doing what they think is right, but I just don't think it is a good and effective tool. It annoys people and most likely has the opposite effect.
those are horrible, and i'm pretty sure i've seen at least three of them on the sign in front of a little baptist church near my house.
ReplyDeleteHey Jon and all other readers.
ReplyDeleteFirstly, just wanna say I love your blog, it's a hilarious read.
But just wanted to defend tracters (hehe sounds like tractors). Anyhoo, I just think if you're gonna diss people who give out tracts, make sure you're doing some kind of evangelism yourself(this isn't directed to you Jon, but all Christians in general). If you don't like the tracts that are out there, maybe design a new one! Whatever you do, make sure you're at least doing something.
I'm posting from Australia, and for a few years, my friends and I have been giving out the aforementioned Aussie $1000000 tracts on Australia Day (the aussie version of Independence Day). We give them out telling people straight up they are Gospel Tracts - no deception involved.
I would say that 95% of people will take the tract, just because of how cool it looks. Some people have even come running after us to ask for more. People think the tracts are great, and many times we have looked back at a whole heap of people reading the gospel message on the back. Which is pretty awesome.
The tracts, though they look like an Aussie $100 note, are quite obviously not legal tender (they have a picture of Ned Kelly on it - a famous bank robber from ages ago). People see the tracts as some kind of novelty and have told us they will keep it.
In the years following, we have continued to give those tracts out on Australia Day again, and we've heard some people say to their friends 'Take one! They're really cool, I got one last year'.
So I would encourage all readers to find a tract that you like, carry them with you, and see how God leads you to give them out!
I love the ones from www.livingwaters.com / www.wayofthemaster.com. I would also highly recommend the evangelism courses that they have online there too. I don't work for these guys, but their resources have been a HUGE blessing to me.
Hope this comment will be take in the right way :)
I'm not a fan of the tract in place of the tip or the tract scattered all over the lawn of the scary biker guy (although that did make me laugh), but I think they have some purpose. I think they were effective as a follow-up, as long as they are straight forward and not corny. If you actually take the time to share the Gospel with someone, and the are not quite there, it can't hurt to give them a tract to take with them. Of course, it would be more helpful if you put your name and phone number on there, because they may prefer talking to you over the church secretary at the number listed on the tract.
ReplyDeleteI also like chick tracts for various reasons, but one outshines them all. I hate using public restrooms for #2, so it's always an uneasy time when the ninja poo sneaks up on me in public. When I find a chick track in the stall, I feel like God's telling me that everything's going to be okay. I read every track I come across in the bathroom stall, because hey, I'm not going anywhere for a minute anyway. Relief + free comics + God's presence = a good time in a public restroom.
I totally agree with savingrc, hate is a really strong word when talking about pieces of paper with the gospel written on them - even if they look bad.
ReplyDeleteAnd Jewda, dude, that's a bit gross - but I agree that Chick tracts are great. They may look like innocent little comics, but they pack a mighty punch!
Oh my goodness. I need to tell everyone I am so sorry for my first comment. I completely misunderstood. My husband called and explained my faux pas. Make NO mistake - I am completely OPPOSED to tracks. I do not advocate drug use in any way. Track marks are ugly and sharing needles passes disease. Please, JUST SAY NO!!!
ReplyDeleteso some people say, "I don't like tracts" and some people say, "tracks CAN be effective" but i'd like to know about the ratios involved here. (yes, i realize number crunching in christianity is often discouraged, but i'm american like that)
ReplyDeletehow many people are turned away from Christianity and Christians because of them vs. the number of people who came to know Christ because of them?
also, there is a distinct difference between (what I would call obnoxiously leaving them about) and using them to start conversations with people.
and i think there are some groups of people who are more receptive to them than others. For example, I saw tracts designed for children being given out to children in Romania, and they loved them! they didn't see very many printed materials. so they treasured those pieces of paper! most people and especially younger generations in the states aren't likely to be attracted to outdated looking materials, especially.
oh. and THE FAKE MONEY AS A TIP THING HAS GOT TO STOP! too often it's combined with no tip at all. Sure you could say to yourself, hey, maybe this is bringing someone to Christ. or maybe you've just been ungrateful. and maybe the person you didn't tip was already a Christian. or maybe you're just making people think bad thoughts about you: causing them to sin in their hearts. just sayin'. maybe.
My wife used to be a waitress and you would not believe how many people left the money ones as a TIP. Here these men and women make LESS than minimum wage and rely on tips to help buy groceries and help their families and you leave them a Jack Chick tract about gays going to hell? Please.
ReplyDeleteAbout 10 or 11 years ago there was a teenage who was hit and killed when he ran onto Glenway Avenue in Cincinnati, OH to retrieve a $100 bill that ended being a bible tract.
Stacy, you are cracking me up! You have become my new favorite blogger (sorry Jon)
ReplyDeleteI think I have trackaphobia. We had to learn to use a track when I was in youth group (yes, there was a "right way" apparently). As you went through the "Romans Road" it unfolded into a cross. After a few practices with a friend, we had to switch with someone we didn't know very well and I ended up with this much older guy I had a HUGE crush on. It didn't go well. Years later I was helping my mother-in-law clean the church and we found like, three extra boxes of them. I ran screaming from the room!
wv:traoul - when a track makes a statement that really turns the reader away from Christ. That track just committed a traoul against Lucy. (The really bad tracks often commit technical traouls, two of which can lead to an automatic ejection!)
I agree. We need to try to have a winsome witness -- not one that might leave people with a bad taste in their mouths.
ReplyDeleteI think tracts in general are fine, but are most effective when used as a supplement to personal evangelism--when you can sit down with a person and lead them through the four spiritual laws or what have you.
ReplyDeleteI think too many people use tracts as a type of fire-and-forget spiritual missile. We fire off the missiles and say, "there, I've evangelized."
There's a lot of personal growth that happens in evangelism that just doesn't happen through spreading tracts. If I leave 1,000 tracts in a parking lot and 1 person comes to know Christ, I'll never know. And if 850 people laugh and ridicule the tract, I'll never know that either--and there is value in experiencing both.
Them are my two cents. Tracts are great as a tool or supplement to evangelism, but are a very poor substitute.
i use to work sunday lunches at this pizza place and the sunday church crowds were the worst. they would never tip and always leave tracks. One imparticular i will never forget was when i was waiting on a ten top and they left me two dollars and a 'fake money' track. Im now christian, but at the time i was athiest. I was so pissed I called the preacher (his church name and number were represented on the back) and told him he needed to have a sermon on tipping. for a long time that made me feel at ease for not believing because i did not want to be one of those people.
ReplyDeleteHmm...Good thoughts. I personally don't care for tracts but in some rare instances, I'm sure the Holy Spirit uses them. Although I will say in our society using silly tricks is a real turn off no matter what your message is. My main problem is when people say use them as an "easy" way to share about Christ. Yeah...it's easy to hand out a tract to someone, but much harder to live out your relationship with Christ before the world. And personally, I think living it is much more effective.
ReplyDeleteHey Jon, the pink slip tract is probably the funniest thing I have read on this site ever.
ReplyDeleteI have a friend who is a waiter at restaurants and he despises the money tracts. All the waiters at his restaurant hate to work Sunday lunch because Christians are the worst tippers. And that is coming from a Christian waiter! He also says that he tries to let the "Christian" patrons at his table know that he is a Christian because they will tip him better. That is sad. My name is Jeff, btw, I just didn't want to sign up for a Google account.
"Preach the gospel and if necessary, use words" - St. Francis of Assisi
I cannot tell you how many times I received money tracts INSTEAD of tips when I worked in a restaurant. Everyone, including myself (a believer), hated waiting on "church people". Very rarely would we make 15% on a table of dressed up people on a Sunday morning -- and if we got a glance of the tip and got excited, then it was often a tract. If you're going to leave a tract with a server, then leave at least a 20% tip with it. If you really want the tract to be given a chance, leave 25-30% tip. And be nice! In Texas, servers only make $2.13 an hour.
ReplyDeleteThat might be a good idea for a blog. "Being stingy with our money after we've tithed" or "being lousy tippers." :)
I used to put tracts in grocery bags with a bottle of water, crackers, small can of tuna and a granola bar. We'd give the bags out to homeless people who congregated at stoplight intersections. Then one day we were at the stoplight long enough to see them take the bag back to the group and rifle through everything, throwing the tract on the ground and trading the other "more valuable" things with other people.
ReplyDeleteI failed to mention something in my first comment. If you leave a tract instead of a tip, God's probably not happy with you. After all, He's the one that said not to steal, and that's what you're doing. When you sit at that table and have someone wait on you, you are essentially agreeing to pay for their services (whether they are a good waiter or not, by the way). When you cheat them out of their fair wage, you have stolen from them and worse yet, you associate God's name with the theft. To obey is better than sacrifice and/or leaving tracts.
ReplyDeleteI live in Miami, we dont have tracts or christians handing out tracts, we dont really have churches. Anyway I thought this was hilarious! Man how else can we piss off the rest of the world. Jesus loves you!
ReplyDeleteJust heard about these...someone passes out ones for a million dollar bill on them...is there even a million dollar bill?? and how stupid did I feel not knowing THAT!
ReplyDeleteWhat Klif said...
ReplyDeleteI encountered something similar on my college campus years ago. This table was set up in the quad and the folks there had sodas and balloons and all those other freebies that make college students so very happy. This guy was yelling out something about a "free trip" to anyone who stops by the table. Yup, you guessed it. He meant Heaven. He was handing out those little green pocket sized New Testaments.
I was SO mad. Not that I felt duped (which I kinda did when I went over there) but that now all my college buddies would now have reinforced ammo for how lame and tricky Christians can be. You want people to get a "free trip"? Then love them like no one has ever bothered to before. Serve them like no one has ever cared enough to before. They'll see your works and praise your Father in Heaven. I think I read that somewhere...
Good post Jon!
Remember, people are not offended at the vessel... you proclaiming the gospel or a gospel tract. They are offended by the message of the cross... them not being righteous in themselves and needing the righteousness of another. Jesus called us to be fishers of men. The "fish" will jump into the nets, we just have to throw a net out there and a gospel tract that uses the law lawfully to point out sin and gives the gospel to show the grace that has been shown to us makes a great net!
ReplyDeleteOh and regarding the bait and switch comments...that cracks me up! All these church sending 20,000 mailers telling their unchurched neighbors to come to church to find out how to have great sex and then getting a legalistic message of following these 5 steps. Maybe a 30 second alter call where, oh yeah, Christ died for your sins, ask him into your heart and you can go home and have a "don't come a knockin' if this trailer is rockin' life!"
Sister Cin
@anon at 7:55,
ReplyDeleteIn my experience passing out tracts (which isn't much), it seems that the only people that wouldn't accept them are Christians. So I unfortunately can't give an exact number, but my unofficial acceptance ratio would be 9:1.
@jewda,
LOL! That cracked me up!
I know handing out tracts are a great thing but when you are at Indy for the 500 I am not sure. They end up being the target for all the ridicule that goes on. The problem is that everyone feeds on this and the people that want to stop and ask questions feel embarrassed. They were handing out cards that look like trading cards.
ReplyDeleteI just wish they would try a different tactic.
I know they are still doing a great thing for God. Plus they are some of the most bravest people on earth.
Tithing vs. Tipping? Great topic idea!
ReplyDeleteThat's not exactly what I said. And not what I meant.
ReplyDeleteCheck out this blog post.
@Bruce - while it's certainly true (and Biblical!) that people are offended by the scandal of the gospel, I don't think it follows that they aren't offended by the vessel. Personally, I find it pretty offensive when people try to manipulate me, insult my intelligence with gimmicks, or treat me like a project instead of a human being - all things that Christians do (with or without the help of tracts) and justify in the name of fulfilling the Great Commission.
ReplyDeleteI don't doubt that God honors and blesses pure-hearted intentions, even when we fumble the execution, but I can't say I'm convinced that such intentions exist very often.
(Your second paragraph, though - right on with that.)
4 and 5 were hilarious.
ReplyDeleteJon – good, though provoking post.
ReplyDeleteIf I may add to your response to Colin's argument about "tricking,": First off, let's be honest and use the right word - "lying."
"Hey, guy who's out of work and wondering where the next meal is coming from, here's five bucks for you... NOT! Hee, hee, sucker! Okay, now let me tell you about the love of Jesus..."
Contrary to Colin’s belief that Jesus lied his butt off to people, hoping to dishonest them into heaven, He never did that. In fact, He made clear that the father of lies was not the Father of Heaven, but rather the guy working against heaven.
(And make no mistake, the guy who is out there lying for G-d is in actuality working for the devil, whether he knows it or not.)
Once we’ve convinced ourselves that it is okay to be a little deceitful as long as the goal is good – evangelism in this case – then it becomes easier to become more deceitful.
Have a couple of people been turned on to G-d by a disingenuous tract? Sure.
Have even more people, but the boatload even, been turned off to the whole idea of a two-faced Christianity by dishonest tracts? Yep.
In the history of restaurants, have one or two waitresses found the “tip” of a misrepresentative tract to contain the words they needed at the moment? Maybe.
Have hundreds, if not thousands, of waitstaff declared that they would never darken the door of a “worship house” that trains its congregants to be cheap and condescending? Oh yeah.
And from there, we start believing the lies we tell to trick people into Jesusfication. “Believe in Jesus and you will never have a problem again.” “Believe in Jesus, and you can sin all you want and not worry about the afterlife, because G-d loves a grateful sinner!” “Believe in Jesus and you will make lots and lots of money, because that is the root of all happiness!”
Slippery slope. Slippery slope.
This would be a good blog topic..."Being Wait Staff vs. Human Responsibility" Will bad tips and gospel tracks left prevent the lost server salvation?
ReplyDeleteWhat if the server was left a 4% tip, a gospel tract and a winning (unknown at the time left) Power Ball ticket. What then?? Gospel tracts... good or evil????
Is "server" a politically correct term?
I'm not a big fan of tracts, I call it "hit and run evangelism." Someone handed me a tract without even once asking about my relationship with the LORD... sigh.
ReplyDeleteMy sisters were servers (and yes Bruce that is the PC term :) ) they'd get the money tracts all the time.
ReplyDeleteMy favorite of all time is the 100 million dollar bill tract. They're out there. The bookstore I used to work at sold them.
I wonder how the homeless hungry person feels when he finds the $100 tract on the ground...he goes from, "Alright, I get to eat this month!" to "@$@%#$%#@ Christians! I'm STILL HUNGRY!"
ReplyDeleteMoney tracts seem like they'd do more harm than good...
One reason why I’m very cautious about tracts is that although they advertise a relationship with Christ, they are probably the most non-relational way to introduce Christ. At least at huge events and concerts there's a talking head on the video screen that looks like a person talking about Christ...with tracts it's just words...it's like saying, "Hey! Start a relationship with Christ...but you're going to have to do it on your own because I only had time to leave this little booklet and didn't have time for a conversation."
I'm a youth pastor and the youth ministry world has been turned on it's head the past couple years moving toward a relational based ministry instead of a programmatic one. Now I’ve never handed out tracts, but I could definitely see them being affective if they are a) written well, not corny; b) treat people like they're people instead of lost little children; and c) handed out as a supplement to an authentic conversation. Those that hand them out can't be afraid to invest in the people that they are handing them to...if they are, then it comes of as cheap and heartless.
my .02$
WV: bractuf
-what a person with their jaw wired shut wants to do when they're really angry.
"I'm soooo angry I just want to bractuf!"
Even worse than fake money tracts: fake arrest warrant tracts... even better if the name of the person you're witnessing to is on the fake arrest warrant.
ReplyDeleteIt could say that they're wanted say that they've been charged with the crimes of lust & gluttony. And if they hate someone - that's a capital murder charge! It should say that they are scheduled to appear in the highest of high courts on Sunday. There is no jury of their peers because they were born guilty. But all charges will be dropped if they ask for forgiveness 'cause Jesus all ready paid the death sentence.
Worse than fake money tracts?
ReplyDeleteHow about a water table on the side of the road during a marathon with empty cups with a piece of paper at the bottom of each cup saying "Jesus is the Water of Life...if you drink of Him, you'll never thirst again."
wv: phest
a party in Philadelphia
"Hey, are you coming to the Philly Phun Phest?"
SFL, I friggin' love you.
ReplyDeleteAnd good idea, Anna.
That is all.
Here's a fun twist...For a number of months a few years ago on the college campus where I work a campus evangelist would stand on the stairs in the busiest part of campus and offer students REAL money as he preached his message. He'd typically give out $5s and $10s. It was interesting to watch the wary students walk by him and refuse the money, assuming there was a catch. The students who did take the money seemed genuinely grateful and, I'm guessing, became quite a "witness" for the guy on the stairs.
ReplyDeleteNo time to read all the comments today, unfortunately, but I have to agree with you John.
ReplyDeleteI'm a Christian and the money tracts even make me mad. So if that's supposed to make someone come to Christ, I don't think it's going to work very well. But that's just me...
Oh, and if you leave one on the table for a waitress, that's the worst thing ever. Just sayin'.
My senior year of college, I was a waiter and one of two Christians on staff with a bunch of ex-cons and current-cons in a Mexican restaurant. One lunch, a caring, Christian customer decided that the $100 tract was tip enough for any waiter. Eternal life, right? There are some things money can't buy, for everything else, there's fake money tract! Yeah, good thing I got the stupid thing instead one of the other waiters!
ReplyDeleteHey people, actually Jon did write a post about the tipping thing once, check the archives, its a fun read. I have been given tracts and was utterly offended because the very act made me feel judged. No I was not hating on the gospel because I never got far enough to read it. I just looked for the beseedy trash bin, which I noticed was littered with tracts on and around it already. The only way I can see a tract ever being useful is as an adjunct to a conversation, and I don't mean a conversation started just to explain the tract.
ReplyDeleteI used to work as a waitress at Bob's Big Boy (a coffee shop) years ago. Nobody wanted to work Sundays. The Christians would come in before or after church all at the same time, were generally very picky about everything, would run you ragged, and then leave a tract in place of a tip. It was infuriating and embarrassing as the non-Christian servers would mockingly read the tracts aloud in the break room and curse the church people. The excuse church people used was that "we are trying to be good stewards of the Lord's money."
ReplyDeleteI have radically overtipped on Sundays ever since. And never, EVER have I given a tract to anyone anywhere anytime. I think they're just manipulative. (Ever read a tract from Chick Publications? Puh-leeeze.)
I can't believe there are people in here that say they LIKE Chick Tracts. Chick Tracts are the most hateful judgmental disgusting things I've ever seen and the exact opposite of what Jesus preached in the Gospel. If Jesus saw what was being handed out in His name, He would weep. Jack Chick will have a lot to answer for in the next life.
ReplyDelete"Chick Tracts are the most hateful judgmental disgusting things I've ever seen..."
ReplyDelete"Jack Chick will have a lot to answer for in the next life."
Are you being judgmental of Jack Chick? Seems ironic.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteAm I just out of the Christian loop? What are Chick tracts? I work at a church and I've never heard of them. Can someone enlighten me please? And I've never even heard about leaving a track for a tip...how...weird. I always just give a huge tip, I see it as being generous with the money God's given me.
ReplyDeleteHey guys,
ReplyDeleteMost of the time, when I've handed out tracks, it's been obvious that it wasn't money. This must have been a really weird track to actually look real.
Most of the time the tracts are like one million dollars or zero dollars, and obviously not real. Or they're weird colors. IE: We handed out a bunch of "Santa Bucks" that segwayed into the naughty/nice list and sin.
Klif said...
I've yet to meet anyone who can say "Someone giving me a tract on the street really meant a lot to me." I say that person doesn't exist.
Hate to break your bubble. Here's an amazing story about how one man can make a difference:
http://www.freecdtracts.com/testimony_11.htm
(using tracks, interestingly enough)
> < > Brian
PS: Really, listen to the story about the little man on George Street.
From Rik,
ReplyDeleteWhoa, whoa, whoa...
Jon,
I must say I love to read a lot of your posts (now that the obligatory niceties are aside), but there have been a few that have brought concern to me.
Good tracts and bad tracts can and should be judged on their visual presentation (money, pink slips, etc), but this judgement is miniscule (there is no spell check here) in comparison to their actual presentation of the Gospel.
In my experience, these million dollar bill tracts have a short but perfect Gospel presentation. While, many many others seem to sell Jesus to the lost with "come to Jesus for a better life, more fulfilled life, carefree life, etc."
I think so long as the Gospel is being placed in the hands of the lost God is being glorified.
Certainly, there are some limits to how one presents the Gospel, money tracts are not pushing any envelopes.
What do you think?
I love the arrest warrant tract and the empty cup table during the race. You just got Punk'd by Jesus!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWell, I was about to post a link to the amazing testimony from George Street, but I see that Brian beat me to it.
ReplyDeleteHere it is again on YouTube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxQeGKzqV5E
For Bad Alice and those others out there who "hate tracts" please take time out of your day to be inspired by this dedicated man of God.
Carrie,
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chick_tract
Jack Chick is an ultra-conservative fundamentalist nut.
Jon, thanks for the thoughtful response. I know from reading your site that we definitely agree on the fundamentals of evangelism - there just seems some disagreement here over the means.
ReplyDeleteThe woman at the well is a great example of exactly what I mean by "trick." Despite the method Christ used there, which you accurately describe, the philosophy of the discourse was to take knowledge that she had, and subsequently change, alter, or otherwise redefine that knowledge in a radical way. In a sense this isn't "clarification" - in the way you describe it - that is, to take existing knowledge and make it less blurry or easier to see. Doctrinally speaking, every intent of our heart is evil (Gen 6:5. and "There is none righteous, no, not one... there is none who seeks after God." (Rom 3:10-11). Clarifying that existing knowledge is not going to lead to salvation.
So we do need to be "tricked" in the sense that our world must be turned upside-down by the gospel. Of course we don't need to be victims of underhandedness or deception. But I think a money tract has its place - provided that it is used as tracts should be used - as an ice-breaker for an gospel conversation. In other words - let people know that you are handing them a "gospel message" or a "gospel tract."
I suspect that many people's qualms with money tracts (but who agree with the ideas of evangelism and sharing the gospel) lie more in broader disagreements over means - in fact, this is evident in the comments - where most are expressing problems with tracts in general (not specifically "money tracts.")
I think this goes back to not throwing the baby out with the bathwater - simply because a thing can be abused does not mean it should be categorically avoided (for comparison, see: gifts of the spirit, guns, spandex).
The only time I was ever in favor of a tract was when I took a mission trip to another country and the language barrier was an issue. The tract had English and the other language side by side so I could make conversation with people who didn't speak English.
ReplyDeleteOther than that, I usually think tracts are a poor form of drive-by evangelism. I think it would be nice if our lives were more attractive and less a tract-leave. It would give us credibility to open our mouths and speak truth rather than leave it on a table in the form of a fake $10. Not to be harsh - just keeping it real. ;-)
w/v - dogissub - what the mutt gets at Subway
I love you, Stacy from Lousville;)
ReplyDeleteHow about we write to the people that make these these tracts suggesting they make it very clear in the instructions they give that the tracts should never under any circumstances be used instead of a proper tip?
ReplyDeleteRhonda: My father was one of the people who bought those Halloween tracts! It was the most humiliating day for us kids when we returned to school. Our house was vandalised, my siblings and I were harassed and I seriously was ashamed. If you as a parent choose to give them out, you could at least give candy as well. Plus you should really talk with your children about why you are doing it and ask them to help you give it out. I would have declined, but didn't have the option and also didn't have any ammunition for the harassers, so I was miserable.
ReplyDeleteLater in life, I was a server and constantly had people leave me tracts. They never engaged me in conversation, nor did they leave a tip.
"Gosh random penny pinching customer, I already have a heart full of Jesus, but a 10% gratuity would be really helpful for me to pay for the mission trip I am saving for!" Notice how I didn't even ask for the customary 15% because God only asks for 10%. See what I did there? ;-)
Here's a thought... rather than tacky tracts, why not hand out Bibles?
ReplyDeletehttp://xxxchurch.com/getinvolved/theindustry/jlps/index.html
My sister to me at the Rise Up conference in St. Louis:
ReplyDelete"I'm only wearing my nametag so someone doesn't come up and start witnessing to me."
--
I wasn't wearing my nametag and a very polite girl (probably about 14 years old) gave me a tract. It wasn't fake money, but I do believe it had a bloody cross on it.
I used to send tracts in the envelope with payments. The tract said "Paid in Full" I didn't do this to 'trick' anyone into thinking my bill was paid off in its entirity. They knew it wasn't. But I prayed that someone opening the mail might read it and at least have their interest peeked. Did it work? I don't know. But wouldn't it be neat, if when I get to heaven someone comes up to me and says "I read a tract that you sent with your bill payment, and because of that, I found Jesus." I think that if just ONE person is saved from a tract, then it is worth all the tracts ever printed!
ReplyDeleteAs a waitress, I see a lot of tracts. Both myself and my co-workers have received tracts with or in place of our tips. Often the tracts look like legitimate $5 bills folded up. I fully support spreading the gospel, and for some people, tracts are their best opportunity. However, I do not support the people who leave the tracts in place of a tip. The ones that look like money have a message on the folded inside that reads something like "Disappointed? You wouldn't be if you had Jesus in your life." To that my only response was, "Yes, I am disappointed and I already have Jesus in my life. I'm not working this job to gain salvation, I'm working to earn a living." Sometimes people forget that.
ReplyDeleteThe sad thing is, sometimes the other servers who get these tracts in place of tips get a terrible glimpse at Christians- people who come in to eat, smile and make nice, tell you how wonderful you were, and then leave nothing for a tip. I think a greater way of exhibiting the Gospel is being a great customer, voicing your appreciation for good service, leaving a reasonable tip, throw in a tract if you so desire, and then tell a manager what great service you got (this is, of course, assuming you did indeed receive good service.) I think people would be more receptive to the message if it came with a positive experience.
On the flip side of things, I once received a $100,000,000 bill with an advertisement for a local magician. I vowed to hire him if ever the appropriate event arose. It has not yet, but I still have that ridiculous $100,000,000 bill.
to be fair, i read about 20 of the comments before i got tired, so if no one reads this... OK...
ReplyDeletethat being said,
i work at a mega church, but love church plant philosophies, i think that might give me some varied audiences...
so with the tracts... totally with you on "pretending to be money but not" really? that's the worst possible way i can imagine to converse with someone that is already sceptical.
can tracts be powerful... absolutely - esp. when passed along by someone that actually loves you, and wants your best.
i think the key is DO YOU LOVE PEOPLE? if you do... pass things out. if you don't... monitor yourself, get it clear.. and then pass things out.
anyway. i love your boldness. and i see you not bending to naysayers... but keep it up. and keep talking to your beloved about it all, because she will encourage you which will make it easier.
One of the worst 'witnesses' I've
ReplyDeleteever seen was when my non-Christian friend got handed one of these instead of a tip after serving a party of 20 on a Sunday after church. It wasn't pretty.
(the worst was when I overhead a woman who'd just come from church tell her kids she'd get them a free meal by pretending the lipstick on her glass wasn't hers. She was extremely rude and the only customer to ever bring me to tears. We told her she wasn't welcome there anymore. Believers -- be kind, tip well, and make up for this kind of representation!)
Passing out tracts without sharing the Gospel is sorta like demonstrating compassion without sharing the Gospel. We can be the "Hands & Feet of Jesus" but if we're not also the "Mouth" of Jesus, how is that sharing the Gospel?
ReplyDeleteAs for tracts "tricking" people, I think this happens in many ways including the seeker-sensitive, emergent-purpose-driven, best-life-now church methods. Consider all the silliness that goes on within some of these churches. Consider the promotions and clown-act entertainment on stage. Is this not "tricking" the un-churched person into coming to their church in order that they might like Jesus?
One could argue that both methods have the potential of reaching the lost for Christ. Maybe that tract you left on a bench led someone to Christ. Maybe that funny drama at church led someone to Christ.
Personally, I think we need to spend more time sharing the actual Gospel instead of trying so hard to attract people.
~ktf~
John
1 Tim 6:6-10
ReplyDelete6But godliness with contentment is great gain. 7For we brought nothing into the world, and we can take nothing out of it. 8But if we have food and clothing, we will be content with that. 9People who want to get rich fall into temptation and a trap and into many foolish and harmful desires that plunge men into ruin and destruction. 10For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.
-----------------------------------
So what's in your heart when you bend to pick up that money tract...greed for free money or contentment/a desire to return it to the owner???? Check youself...
Anonymous @ 3:34- Thanks. I looked the Chick guy up. Don't know him, so I can't judge him. But can't say I agree with him or some of his methods.
ReplyDeleteThis is hilarious and too true! Being a former server in the Bible belt, we would get fake money tracks all the time -- as tips!!! How are we suppose to make a living off of fake money!?
ReplyDeleteOne time, I put a fake $20 money tract outside of the in Wal-Mart video store I worked at after high school. My friend (of all people) who I was constantly talking about Jesus with, was the one to find it. He excitedly picked it up and right in front of me turned it over and said, "Damn Christians." He threw it down. I sheepishly told him it was I who placed the tract. He shook his head. I wanted to give him $20. That was the last time I placed a fake money tract. I have felt ever since that his reaction would be the same for anybody who found it. *Giving them as tips is just plain sinful.
ReplyDeleteWow Jon, did you stir up the pot or what?
ReplyDeleteMy father, the pastor of the church I attend, puts his tip inside of our church tract. It gives the times for our services, his name and number, plus some verses from Romans. No tricks, straight up communication and an invitation to attend our services.
"Let's stop trying to trick people into Jesus."
ReplyDeleteAnd let's also stop using fear as a motive in bringing people to Christ--no more hellfire and damnation, just love God for his own sake.
Someone might've already written this, but I'm too lazy to read through 109 comments. But the worst thing is to be a waiter and get one of those fake money tracts as a tip. Especially because that usually means that they left no real money.
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm even further at the bottom of the list, so... yea...
ReplyDeleteFor me, If i go eat anywhere and hand out any tract, I make sure I tip really well. Usually more than the estimated %. Funny part is, most people who would hand out the tract instead of a tip doesn't read SCL. Take the complaint to them. (if you can find them)
I have used the 1 million tract (obviously fake) from the way of the master that uses the reflection of the law to share the Gospel... you ask them if they know the answer to the million dollar question...
And yes from some of the earlier posts, I know that hellfire and brimstone is "old-school" but have you ever thought that people need to know what they are saved from in order to be saved?
God is love and mercy, but He is also just, righteous and holy. He is equally infinite in all His characteristics. Don't try to hide some just because they can be scary. The fear of the Lord is the beginning of all Wisdom. Many people have been saved by the "old school" methods. They have their place, just as does relational evangelism.
If they don't see they have a need for a Savior, will they go looking for one?
Just some thoughts that came to my head while reading now that this topic is old. :)
Conres- Conies filled with radishes. gross.
Sure, a tract changed my life.
ReplyDeleteJack Chick made me an atheist.
Maybe, maybe not. We found a tract on our car once when I was a kid. I read it, and the image at the end, of one's whole life and every thought being replayed on a screen in the afterlife as God judged one, left me afraid to think *anything* for years. The other message I drew from that tract was that living a good life, being a good person, didn't matter; you can be the worst sort of person up until the very last second, as long as you do a deathbed repentance. What creepy, hateful stuff, promoting a creepy, hateful god. The God I find my religious friends believe in - the one I tried to find belief for within myself - is one of love and compassion, who encourages people to live lives of love and compassion, not a threatening bogey man.
At our county fair, a local church pointedly placed its anti-Mormon tracts at the end of their booth that was next to the neighboring booth - belonging to the LDS church. This is precisely the passive-aggressive "witnessing" that make such as Chick tracts so laughably hypocritical to many of us.
Are there tracts out there less full of lies, spite, and hate than Chick tracts? Yes, I've received those, too, and believe me, there's no nicer message than "I can't be bothered to talk to you, but I'm going make assumptions about you by giving you this poorly printed, trite, badly written tract. If it doesn't bring you to Jesus, you must be beyond saving!" Spare me.
A good run-down on Jack Chick, focusing mainly on his obsessively anti-Catholic tracts:
http://www.catholic.com/library/sr_chick_tracts_p1.asp
Oh, by the way, the Elder Gods are coming and everyone is doomed!:
http://rubbersuitstudios.com/ptcct.htm
I work as a server, and I've got to say, the absolute most depressing thing is walking away with your check presenter, opening it up to see what LOOKS like a $100 bill, only to realize it's a Jesus Tract in disguise and your table completely ripped you off.. yes. It happens. Far too often. If you're trying to get people to care about your message, Tip Responsibly. Don't tract & dash. ;)
ReplyDeleteI suggest we will honour the gospel if we create something that says 'Hi! Please receive this free gift from a local Christian, who wants you to know that the free gift of God is eternal life. Find out more from...' and attach it to real money.
ReplyDeleteThat way, you eliminate the disappoinment factor, the person is already happier than they were a few moments before, the note is likely to be read, and the people may realise that instead of passing a collection bowl under their nose and seeking a donation, the genuine love of God is a free gift.
I do realise that this would be an expensive tract. But aren't souls worth a bit of an investment?
Bad tracts should just inspire Christians to write better ones - not dump them altogether, which has already been said, I'm just reiterating it.
ReplyDeleteI have been offended by that million dollar tract because it says, "if you have ever told a lie, if you have ever stolen anything then you are a lying thieving, etc. person going to hell." Its language is so bad.
Words fitly spoken are like apples of gold in a setting of silver - Proverbs.
How we say it makes so much difference, but the medium is not bad.
Synchronicity can be an important factor with tracts, you know, when you are crossing a street, or something, and at the moment you ask a certain question, there is that piece of paper lying on the ground? God can use that to speak to you.
The track record with tracts (pun) speaks for itself. Many people have been touched by tracts.
No matter how many botched testimonies there are out there, God still works - it's amazing. it just inspires me to be the best I can be.
I have a tract or two that I keep handy - ones I have scoured to find, that have good words.
I also created my own witnessing tool - a collection of pertinent scriptures for sharing the gospel that were suggested by Bill Faye in his seminar on "How to Share Jesus Without Fear."
this was the funniest blog you've ever written.
ReplyDeleteJust to add a little fuel to the fire late in the game. Tract makers (Chick/Way of the Master) need to stop referencing the oft-discredited and now incarcerated Kent Hovind. This does nothing but invite scorn from those outside the church.
ReplyDeleteImagine one that looks like a lottery ticket??
ReplyDelete"by saying that you hate tracts. When you do that you turn the gospel into what you prefer."
ReplyDeleteNot true. Tracts aren't the gospel. They are watered down versions of a fraction of the gospel usually accompanied by horrible cartoons.
I see no need for tracts. As someone else said earlier, we could be sharing God's love with people through true interaction rather than the mere scrap of time it took you to throw a tract at them or hide it in their house, on their car, or strategically place them around someone's job site.
I think anything that makes evangelism easier or more comfortable for US is a sham of what God really wants. He didn't say "Follow me until it gets awkward or inconvenient to share my free of love and grace...but when it does, of course by all means go find a cheap easy shallow way to share me, the Greatest Gift to all humanity."
We are to live as he lived, pray as he prayed, relate to people, engage them, get in their lives. And it doesn't have to be in creating some earth shattering frienship. You can get in someone's life in the 5 minutes it takes to order a sub from Subway.
OK, this is awesome!
ReplyDelete"I think it's be better to give out real money instead of money tracts. "
I think some churches have done things like this. Given groups of people X amount of money & told them to go find ways to bless people with it. Then they come back and share how it was used.
I love this. I am going to look at how I can keep an extra few bucks on me and just hand out cash to people in God's name!
Could you imagine someone leaving a fake $10 Bible tract instead of a tip. That would really cheese off a restaurant server.
ReplyDeleteI have a good friend who refuses to even discuss religion and one of the reasons she gives is because of these tracts. She was a waitress in college and the Christians were the worst customers! They were demanding, condescending and entitled and then would tip in a "money tract". Makes you wonder how much damage these things have actually done.
ReplyDeletewe should all examine our hearts and our level of commitment to the great commission before we comment negatively about tracts. before posting any kind of response on here about gospel tracts, think in your heart of hearts, just between you and God... how many people have you shared your faith with? if someone prays over every "arrow" (i.e. tract) they fire away, do you really think God is not going to make it to hit the target? you are, after all doing His work... PRIDE, that is ALL of our problem, Christians and Pagans alike... think about it. have FAITH! (as for the tipping thing, "by their fruits you will know them", seems they may not have REALLY been Christians after all)
ReplyDeleteTrying to reach the intellect, without verifiable evidence to back up what you are saying, is an exercise in futility.
ReplyDeleteI believe God can use any medium, including those tracts, because He is awesome and delights in using the foolish things to confound the wise.
However, on the whole, I disagree with their very concept because we don't force or beg anyone to accept Jesus. They must see the reality of the truth of God's Word and the power of His Work.
God confirmed Paul's doctrine by miracles. These were proofs of his apostleship and authenticated the message he preached.
What confirms our doctrine today? There must be result, evidence, proof - to toch the heart, not merel mental assent.
http://thetbjoshuafanclub.wordpress.com
This is sneaky stuff. I received one of these things at a Christian music festival from some Kirk Cameron look-a-like and I was highly offended it wasn't actually a million dollar bill. Sadly, I didn't realize that until I tried to buy a vanilla milkshake at Mickey D's. :)
ReplyDeleteDAVID LETTERMAN'S HATE, ETC. !
ReplyDeleteDavid Letterman's hate is as old as some ancient Hebrew prophets.
Speaking of anti-Semitism, it's Jerry Falwell and other fundy leaders who've gleefully predicted that in the future EVERY nation will be against Israel (an international first?) and that TWO-THIRDS of all Jews will be killed, right?
Wrong! It's the ancient Hebrew prophet Zechariah who predicted all this in the 13th and 14th chapters of his book! The last prophet, Malachi, explains the reason for this future Holocaust that'll outdo even Hitler's by stating that "Judah hath dealt treacherously" and "the Lord will cut off the man that doeth this" and asks "Why do we deal treacherously every man against his brother?"
Haven't evangelicals generally been the best friends of Israel and persons perceived to be Jewish? Then please explain the recent filthy, hate-filled, back-stabbing tirades by David Letterman (and Sandra Bernhard and Kathy Griffin) against a leading evangelical named Sarah Palin, and explain why most Jewish leaders have seemingly condoned Palin's continuing "crucifixion"!
While David, Sandra, and Kathy are tragically turning comedy into tragedy, they are also helping to speed up and fulfill the Final Holocaust a la Zechariah and Malachi, thus helping to make the Bible even more believable!
(For even more stunning information, visit MSN and type in "Separation of Raunch and State" and "Bible Verses Obama Avoids.")
Here's another deception that I hate. As a military man people are always saying, "Thanks for your service!" and "I really support you."
ReplyDeleteWHATEVER!
Do you really want to show your support?
Buy me lunch.
-William
This post and most of the comments remind me why I stopped reading this blog and disfriended Jon on Facebook. I cannot stand the judgmental attitude here when most of you are products of an American evangelicalism that is only good for making false converts. Read the Bible, for once in your lives. The gospel is offensive, hell is real, and Jesus is worth laying down our lives for. (It never even occurred to most of you that maybe Jon & Kate are false converts who need to get saved!)
ReplyDeleteThere is a difference between money tracts intended to look like a $20 or $100 (which is illegal anyway) and I can see the problem with that.
But handing out a $1,000,000 with the gospel message is a problem - why? Warning those who continue in sin of a coming judgment is a problem - why?
And for you waiters & waitresses - stop accusing "Christians" of leaving tracts in place of a tip. I guarantee you it is primarily false converts doing that as well.
first time I ran across this site...sound like a bunch of bitter comments. Like some who decided to stay in the upper room and look out the window and make discussion on the events below. The person who started this webblog probably wanted it designed to "strengthen" Christians not bitter people who have been hurt by church goers or want to complain without comfort...either way.
ReplyDeleteI hope you understand that this site is ONE BIG TRACT and the world gets to see "Christians" trashing each other.
I don't know about your original reason to start such a sight but if it is to be constructive...I don't see it.
I see 1 or 2 Christians who are trying to share "the Gospel" any way they can.
Everyone else just loves to take their wolf clothing off and have at it.
"Some indeed preach Christ even of envy and strife; and some also of good will:
The one preach Christ of contention, not sincerely, supposing to add affliction to my bonds:
But the other of love, knowing that I am set for the defence of the gospel.
What then? notwithstanding, every way, whether in pretence, or in truth, Christ is preached; and I therein do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice."
Phil 1:15-18
Please rejoice...I have given out with my family thousands of Million $ Bills...mostly face to face. Most were thankful that anyone gave anything...and if someone is in need we try to give food or anything to help.
"By whom do you cast out demons...
or by what means do you regularly "share the Gospel that leads to everlasting life?"
Please use whatever you have to the glory of God...Everything you type will be use against you on the day of judgement, as well.
Me too.
If even one person gets saved or turns from committing suicide from getting a tract, then it's worth handing them out and there are testimonies of people who Have Been Saved from tracts. Tracts can be used when the giver is in a hurry and multi-language tracts can bridge a language barrier. I don't however think one should use them all the time in place of witnessing and I think people should be careful not to litter.
ReplyDeleteUsing them as a tip instead of money is an awful way to represent Christ. Why not get the gift card tract, place some money in the slots inside and hand that out? It also apologizes for Some Christians that rip people off and then it gives a proper Gospel. People are thankful for kindness.