Fine here you go... I'm sure this will fix everything.
Are you implying that 100% certainty is impossible? I think not, right? I mean when Paul finished Romans, did he release it with the disclaimer, "Not really sure all this stuff is true, but I sure hope it is!"
No, I am not. I have had moments of what I would call absolute certainty. I am saying
personal 100% certainty is not required to be obedient to what God has already commanded us to do. For example, I do not need to praise and pray and wait to know that I should treat people with kindness and respect. And how we treat people is a form of evangelism. If an unbeliever at work asks me a question about Jesus, I don't need to say let me go home and pray and praise and wait until I am 100% certain what the answer should be. 1 Peter 3:15 says we should always be ready to share our hope.
Next question. Is God a respecter of persons? Paul was probably 100% sure of his salvation - and I'm consigned to, say, 99% certainty? Wow. That stinks. Maybe I can rephrase the problem here. When we evangelize, we are counseling people on their eternal destiny. You see the problem, don't you? Why would God want His ambassadors - His supposedly professional evangelists - to advise an unsaved person on his eternal destiny if they themselves are uncertain about eternal destiny? Doesn't make sense. Right? I mean, let's be honest, meaning, let's be honest with the unsaved person. That is to say, since you believe the evangelist is only supposed to walk in, say, 99% certainty, then you should evangelize like this:
"Hi my unsaved friend. Here's some advice about Jesus. But take it with a grain of salt, because I'm not completely sure it will get you saved. I'm not even completely sure that I am in the correct religion."
That is not the typical scenario. I
am certain about my salvation. But where doubt (lack of 100% certainty) comes in is not in MY salvation, but how my unsaved friend will respond. So it usually goes more like this:
(In our mind) "I know, I'm supposed share Jesus with Billy, but I'm not sure how he is going to respond. What if he gets mad at me? What if I mess it up? I'm not good at this kind of stuff. I don't want to lose him as a friend."
God is not a respecter of persons means you are just as empowered and just as anointed to share the gospel with Billy as anyone else. If you are the one best positioned to talk to Billy, God will use you to do so, even if you doubt yourself.
In 2 Cor 12, Paul said he boasted in his infirmities (didn't hide from his weaknesses), because that is when the power of Christ rested upon him, when he was weakest Christ made him strong. When we have doubt, or fear and we do it anyway, Christ strengthens us because it is His power not our own. This wonderful because not only can we be a blessing to others, but it teaches us how to better trust Jesus and deepens our relationship with Him at the same time. There is nothing more impactful than going out of your comfort zone, trusting Jesus, and seeing Him do amazing things through you.
In fact, that's how I currently speak to unbelievers, if they ask me about my religion. I'm totally honest with them - honest about the fact that I am not 100% certain.
I'm glad you're honest. I'm sad you are uncertain. As stated before we are commended to share our hope, I see nothing that says we are to share our uncertainty. Share your hope, be kind, be a light. If someone asks me about my marriage, I can share my insights and advice without sharing every personal detail. I can judge what is appropriate to share or not. That's totally fine. And withholding some personal this is not being dishonest, it's being wise.
Now here's the problem. When I read the book of Acts, I see no evidence of such honesty - no such disclaimers. Rather the apostles talked like this (to paraphrase).
You are exactly right, here is the problem. As I said, I do have absolute certainty in my salvation. I believe the Apostles and the early church did as well. The uncertainty isn't in that part, it's in another part. You are projecting YOUR uncertainty on everyone else, including those in the Bible. Where does it say in the Bible that we should talk to unbelievers they way you do? It doesn't. We are simply supposed to share what Jesus has personally done for us (our testimony, our hope). Because that is something we can be certain about.
"Repent, and accept Jesus as savior. Otherwise you are doomed to hell."
Interesting that you chose this terminology. In Matthew 11, John the Baptist is in prison and hears of Jesus' miracles. At this point John has already interacted with Jesus and baptized Him. He has already said Jesus was greater and that he, John, wasn't fit to bend down and untie Jesus' sandals. Yet look what John sends his disciples to ask Jesus in verse 3: “Are You the Coming One, or do we look for another?” Sounds like John still wasn't 100% certain about Jesus, in spite of the things that had already happened.
I see two options here:
(1) Perhaps I am more honest than they were. I am willing to hedge my words with disclaimers, whereas they were too dishonest to admit their uncertainty.
(2) OR, perhaps they preached with 100% certainty.
Now, as I've demonstrated earlier, NT evangelism is defined as prophetic utterance. Given the very gravity of prophecy, I think #2 is a safer bet.
This is also part of the problem. You only see 2 options. Either you are better than them, or they are better than you.
Option (3): You've got your own issues to work out (as we all do). That's not a reason for others to not share their faith. One can have confidence in their own salvation and still have uncertainty in their direction.
It's called working out our salvation (Phil 2:12). Phil 2 isn't talking about being certain or uncertain it is talking about getting a greater and greater understanding of what our salvation means to us personally and while that is going on God will continually work in us and through us, we don't need to wait to do what is right.
See what I did? I argued my position. I didn't just assert it, fronting the assertion with a series of personal attacks.
Disagreeing with you and pointing out the potential harm of your stand is not a personal attack. Yet I already apologized if I crossed a line. Additionally I've pointed out several times you have indeed personally attacked others, especially their ability understand or their personal spiritual standing. You have yet to apologize or even acknowledge any of it.