When we separate or divorce incarnational evangelism
from informational evangelism or vice versa, we commit a great blunder. The Bible
warns about the danger of this dichotomy in both James and the first Epistle of
John 3:16-19. Both evangelistic strategies were integrated in the ministry of
Jesus. He modeled it for the disciples and us. Therefore, if we pit one against
the other, we misrepresent Christ. A believer cannot keep the good news of
Christ's salvific work to himself/herself. Neither can a believer ignore the
material nor physical needs of others. When we do that, we become the
proverbial rich fool in Luke 12, and the rich man and Lazarus in Luke 16.