WITNESSING AND TESTIMONY
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In Scripture, “witness” and “testimony” are truth-terms, not technique-terms. A witness gives honest attestation to reality—Christ’s person and work—and the believer’s life is meant to function as corroborating evidence, not as a staged performance. Modern usage often drifts: “witnessing” becomes a program (“going witnessing”) and slides into scripts, pressure tactics, and “closing the deal,” while “testimony” can become a stylized personal story that subtly shifts the center from Christ to the speaker.
Harris’s The Witnessing Church (1837) represents an older, weightier framing: the church is a body of witnesses, and witness is not a department but part of what the church is. It must be integrated—doctrinally true, morally consistent, and practically unified—so that hypocrisy and rivalry amount to false testimony.
From an Old School Baptist perspective, the danger in modern evangelistic toolkits (booklets, scripts, decision-driven systems) is decisionism—treating conversion as a predictable output of the right method, and then granting assurance on the basis of a moment, a prayer, or a completed outline. Your document lists the typical distortions: reduction of the gospel into steps, pressure toward immediate “right now” decisions, confusion of gospel-news with a procedure, and detaching evangelism from the church and durable discipleship. Old School Baptists rejected precisely this “machinery” logic: Black Rock insists on “Thus saith the Lord” for church practice and condemns invented tests and revival measures that can produce professions without the new birth.
So the critique is simple: keep “witness” as Christ-centered attestation—truth spoken plainly, life consistent with confession, and all of it dependent on the Spirit—rather than a reproducible workflow that manufactures visible responses and calls them salvation.