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Join ‘Each One Win One’ and Share Jesus Christ with the World

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Teammates!

How many souls did you win for Jesus Christ last year? How many times did you share the love of Jesus with someone else last month? Last decade?

No worries. Whatever our answer, the following holds true: We can all do more work towards our great commission!

Our playbook tells us what our calling and purpose is, and it also sheds light on the challenges inherent in our call.

In Matthew 28:18-20, we are called and commissioned:

18 And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth.

19 Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:

20Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world. Amen.

But, here’s the challenge in Jesus’ view (Matthew 9:37-38):

37 Then saith he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the laborers are few;

38 Pray ye, therefore, the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth laborers into his harvest.

Join the Each One Win One Pledge!

Be an active solution to the harvest problem.

each one win oneLet’s be the team members who rise up as consistent, intentional laborers who work in the soul fields of our families, on the job, on public transportation, at the mall – everywhere the Spirit leads you and directs your opportunity to share the love and gospel of Jesus Christ.

We want teammates everywhere to join us in our “Each One Win One” campaign!

If you are intentional about learning and growing in your soul-winning game, take the E1W1 pledge with us and let’s play to WIN MORE SOULS!

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HIGHLIGHTS

They Changed Their Minds about Slavery and Left a Bible Record

Two businessmen’s unusual conversion in 1700s South Carolina led them to liberate the people they put in bondage. At first glance, William Turpin and his business partner, Thomas Wadsworth, appeared to be like most other prestigious and powerful white men in late 18th-century South Carolina. They were successful Charleston merchants, had business interests across the state, got involved in state politics, and enslaved numerous human beings. Nothing about them seemed out of the ordinary. But, quietly, these two men changed their minds about slavery. They became committed abolitionists and worked to free dozens of enslaved people across South Carolina. When most wealthy, white Carolinians were increasingly committed to slavery and defending it as a Christian institution, Turpin and Wadsworth were compelled by their convictions to break the shackles they had placed on dozens of men and women. In an era when the Bible was edited so that enslaved people wouldn’t get the idea that God cared about their freedom, Turpin left a secret record of emancipation in a copy of the Scriptures, which is now in the South Carolina State Museum. Perhaps it’s not surprising that this story of faith and freedom is mostly unknown. The two men were, after all, working not to attract attention. Neither had deep roots in Charleston or close familial ties to its storied white “planter” dynasties. Turpin’s family was originally from Rhode Island, and Wadsworth was a native of Massachusetts who moved to South Carolina only shortly after the American Revolution. Both had public careers and served in the South Carolina Legislature, but their political profiles were not particularly high. Neither of them appeared to give any of their legislative colleagues the sense that they were developing strong, countercultural opinions on one of the most ...Continue reading...

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Topics

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