"Evangelism, then, is sharing the good news with others. The good news is Jesus. And the good news about Jesus which we announce is that he died for our sins and was raised from death, and that in consequence he reigns as Lord and Saviour at God's right hand, and has authority both to command repentance and faith, and to bestow forgiveness of sins and the gift of the Spirit on all those who repent, believe and are baptized. And all this is according to the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments." (p. 54-55)
In this book, John Stott seeks to define and discuss five key terms: "mission," "evangelism," "dialogue," "salvation," and "conversion." His treatment of all but "salvation" are very good and helpful, especially the first two. I thought his discussion of "salvation," and the corresponding interaction with liberation theology and the like, is somewhat lacking due to the total absence of the law in that chapter. Stott still encourages social reformation, but he separates it from the salvation that Christ accomplished. From my perspective, a more robust covenantal theology (that includes Deuteronomy 28) and the connection of the dominion mandate with redemption would have helped in the discussion of salvation.
Criticism aside, this is a great book. It is clear, thoughtful, balanced, and has some very helpful definitions and applications.
"If we truly love our neighbor we shall without doubt share with him the good news of Jesus…Equally, however, if we truly love our neighbor we shall not stop with evangelism…God created man, who is my neighbor, a body-soul-in-community. Therefore, if we love our neighbor as God made him, we must inevitably be concerned for his total welfare, the good of his soul, his body, and his community….To sum up, we are sent into the world, like Jesus, to serve." (p. 29-30)
"…the reason for our acceptance of social responsibility is not primarily in order to give the gospel either a visibility or a credibility it would otherwise lack, but rather a simple uncomplicated compassion." (p. 30)
"When any community deteriorates, the blame should be attached where it belongs; not to the community which is going bad but to the church which is failing in its responsibility as salt to stop it going bad. And the salt will be effective only if it permeates society, only if Christians learn again the wide diversity of divine callings, and is many penetrate deeply into secular society in order to serve Christ there.
"To this end I would personally like to see the appointment of Christian vocation officers who would visit schools, colleges, and churches not to recruit for the pastorate only but to set before young people the exciting variety of opportunities available today for serving Christ and their fellow human beings. I would also like to see regular vocation conferences, not missionary conferences only with accord the top priority to becoming a cross-cultural missionary, nor ministry conferences which concentrate on the ordain pastorate, but mission conferences which portray the biblical breadth of the mission of God, apply it to today's world, and challenge young people to give their lives unreservedly to service in some aspect of the Christian mission." (p. 32)
"…convertedness as a condition matters more than conversion as an experience." (quoting J.I. Packer on p. 114)