Books

5 Ways Nonbelievers Are Drawn to God Without Knowing It

How the Bible’s doctrine of humanity gives us hope for reaching even the hardest of hearts.

Priscilla Du Preez / Unsplash

Daniel Strange has spent years helping Christians connect their faith to an increasingly secularized culture, first from his teaching post at London’s Oak Hill College and currently as director of Crosslands Forum, a new center for cultural engagement and missions. In his latest book, Making Faith Magnetic: Five Hidden Themes Our Culture Can’t Stop Talking About … And How to Connect Them to Christ, Strange discusses five “itches” everyone is looking to scratch—five needs we all share and that only Christ can fulfill. Evangelist Glen Scrivener spoke with Strange about how this framework can aid our outreach to nonbelievers.

Making Faith Magnetic: Five Hidden Themes Our Culture Can't Stop Talking About... And How to Connect Them to Christ

When we think of evangelism, we usually think of people who need to begin a relationship with God. In your book, though, you say everyone is in a relationship with God already. What do you mean?

Often in evangelism, we worry, “How can I make any kind of connection?” We need to realize what the Bible says about people. All people are in a covenantal relationship with God. It’s not always a good one, but they are in a relationship with the God who created them.

I’m not naive. I recognize there are levels of hardness of heart. I don’t deny that at all. And that hardness can be culturally specific and bring with it certain challenges depending on the culture. But we need to remember there are universal truths the Bible declares about human beings. For instance, the Bible says they are “without excuse” regarding their capacity to know God (Rom. 1:20). It says this because they—humanity—are all in a relationship with him. I mean they know him, and yet they don’t know him—it’s a paradox. But it’s also a point of connection we can use.

You mentioned the phrase “without excuse” from Romans 1. How should this chapter shape our thinking about outreach?

Humanity is playing a cosmic game of hide-and-seek. And we think that God is hiding while we’ve honestly been looking for him. But according to Romans 1, we’re the ones who are hiding, and God is jumping up and down and Christ is saying, “Here I am.” It can’t be clearer.

And that means that in evangelism, there is always an unmasking that has to happen—not God’s unmasking but ours, because we are the ones hiding. We “suppress the truth,” as Romans 1 puts it (v. 18). And Paul says, “God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.”

I appreciate the point made by missiologist and theologian J. H. Bavinck, Herman Bavinck’s nephew: Even though we suppress the truth, we have both a sense of dependence and a sense of accountability. In Bavinck’s thinking, those realities—dependence and accountability—are inescapable. We all experience them, even as we suppress them. And so Bavinck takes those two realities and derives from them five points, five implications of what it means to be made in the image of God.

You describe these five realities as “magnetic points.” In other words, they are inescapable aspects of living in God’s world and they are—or they ought to be—attracting us to Christ. What are the five magnetic points?

The first one is called totality. It’s the idea that we want to be connected to something or someone. On the one hand, we think of ourselves as insignificant, just a speck in the universe. But then we connect with something or someone—it could be a particular cause or my national identity or an LGBT rally or a comic convention. And when we get that sense of connection, we suddenly realize we’re significant. So we’re all asking, how do we find this connection?

Secondly, there’s the norm. Is there a right way to live? We all have standards and rules, even though they might not be Christian rules. In other words, there’s a norm we’re measuring ourselves against. We see this, for instance, in the dynamics of contemporary “cancel culture”—whatever we might think of the norms being enforced, they are certainly being enforced. Another example I give in the book is goth culture, where everyone has to be different in the same way. A student recently told me that apparently, if you’re an experienced goth, you can wear baby pink, but if you’re new to the goth world and you wear baby pink, you’ll be seen as an outsider. So we’ve all got these norms.

The third magnetic point is deliverance. Meaning, is there a way out? We all think there’s something wrong with the world, but the reason we think it’s wrong and the form of deliverance we hope for are completely different. And in an ultimate sense, we still ask whether we can be delivered from death itself.

The fourth point is destiny—this interplay we experience between feeling like we are puppets and feeling like we have freedom. J. H. Bavinck has this great line that says, essentially, “We both lead and undergo our lives.” Am I in charge, or am I simply the result of my DNA, my educational system, my ethnicity? People who’ve got no time for God will often talk quite superstitiously about how things are meant to be for them—their destiny.

Then the final magnetic point is kind of a supermagnetic point: transcendence. Which means: Is there a way beyond? Who is the one who connects all these magnetic points? Who’s the one who gives us the norm? Who’s the one who gives deliverance? And who’s the one who’s ultimately in control? In the book, I talk about secularized religious experiences. They make us ask questions like: Are John Lennon’s “Imagine” lyrics right? That “there’s no heaven,” and “above us, only sky”? Or is there something else?

Now the exact nature of these magnetic points will differ in different cultures, and we need to understand that. But I’m arguing that these are universal questions, and each of them are answered in Christ.

Which brings us to the second part of the book. How does Jesus answer the five points?

This is very important. We must get to talking about Jesus. He is the way to connect: the Vine himself. He is the way to live: the Way himself. He is the way out: the Resurrection and the Life. He is the one in perfect control: the Good Shepherd. And he is the way beyond: the Light of the World—the great I Am. No wonder Jesus can say, “When I am lifted up from the earth, [I] will draw all people to myself” (John 12:32). He is the “Marvellous Magnet,” as Charles Spurgeon called him, and the magnetic points all lead to him.

What are some of your hopes for the book?

Christians seeking to share their faith want to know: How do we get traction? In our conversations with others, how do we connect? Actually, the Bible gives us a doctrine of humanity that tells us there will always be a point of contact in any kind of culture. There are universal “itches” to scratch.

We need to think deeply about what they are—for our own sake as much as theirs. And then we can ask: How does Christ relate to these? As for the results? At the end of the day, it’s only the Lord who can make a dead heart alive, but I hope people find this framework helpful as they give a reason for the hope they have.

Also in this issue

The Gospels are silent about most of Jesus’ life on earth. Perhaps no time of year are we more aware of that than during Advent, when perennial questions resurface: When exactly did those Magi visit? What was Christ’s childhood like? His education? Did his family live in relative comfort, or in penury? At the center of all these questions is the void in what we know about Joseph. But what little information we do have offers a lot to explore. Our stories this month reexamine Joseph’s spirituality and the trade he passed on to his son. PLUS: Why there’s still plenty of Christ in Christmas.

News

The Secret to Deradicalizing Militants Might be Found in Middle Eastern Churches

News

We’ve No Less Days to Sing God’s Praise, But New Worship Songs Only Last a Few Years

News

All I Want for Christmas Is a Song that Mentions Jesus

Why I’m Losing My Millennium

Editorial

Visitors to Those in Prison Are Getting Screened Out

This Christmas, Hold on to the Right Things

Testimony

I Used to Run with Drug Addicts and Prostitutes. Now I Share the Gospel with Them.

Old Testament Israel Can Do No Wrong. Except When It Can’t Do Anything Right.

No One Took Christ Out of Christmas

News

D Is for Discipleship. E Is for Eschaton.

News

Gleanings: December 2021

Why We Put Christ Above Clicks

Excerpt

If a Social Issue Matters to God, the Church Should Be Praying About It

How Archaeologists Are Finding the Signatures of Bible Kings, Ancient Villains, and Maybe a Prophet

In 2022, Let’s Take T.S. Eliot’s Advice

Joseph’s Simplicity Was Actually Spiritual Maturity

Reply All

Our December Issue: When God’s Word is Silent

My Boss Is a Jewish Construction Worker

Review

Disowning ‘Evangelical’ Is a Denial of Responsibility

Review

A Requiem for the Disappearing Christians of Iraq, Syria, Egypt, and Gaza

5 Books on the History of Christmas

New & Noteworthy Fiction

View issue

Our Latest

Review

Becoming Athletes of Attention in an Age of Distraction

Even without retreating to the desert, we can train our wandering minds with ancient monastic wisdom.

Christ Our King, Come What May

This Sunday is a yearly reminder that Christ is our only Lord—and that while governments rise and fall, he is Lord eternal.

Flame Raps the Sacraments

Now that he’s Lutheran, the rapper’s music has changed along with his theology.

News

A Mother Tortured at Her Keyboard. A Donor Swindled. An Ambassador on Her Knees.

Meet the Christians ensnared by cyberscamming and the ministries trying to stop it.

The Bulletin

Something Is Not the Same

The Bulletin talks RFK’s appointment and autism, Biden’s provision of missiles to Ukraine, and entertainment and dark humor with Russell and Mike. 

The Black Women Missing from Our Pews

America’s most churched demographic is slipping from religious life. We must go after them.

The Still Small Voice in the Deer Stand

Since childhood, each hunting season out in God’s creation has healed wounds and deepened my faith.

Play Those Chocolate Sprinkles, Rend Collective!

The Irish band’s new album “FOLK!” proclaims joy after suffering.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube