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I got off at George Street
Rev. Dave Smethurst.
This all started a
number of years ago in a Baptist church in Crystal Palace in South
London. The Sunday morning service
was closing and a man stood
up at the back and raised his hand and said: "Excuse me pastor can I
share a short testimony?"
The pastor looked at his
watch and said "You have three minutes". The man proceeded with his
story: "I've just
moved into this area. I
used to live in Sydney Australia. Just a few months back I was visiting
some relatives and I was walking
down George Street. You
know where George Street is in Sydney going from the Business Area out
to the Rock the colonial area.
A strange little white
haired man stepped out from a shop doorway, put a pamphlet in my hand
and said: "Excuse me sir,
are you saved, if you die
tonight are you going to heaven?" "I was astounded by these words. No
one had ever asked
me that. I thanked him
courteously and all the way home to London this puzzled me. I called a
friend and thank God he was
a Christian and he led me
to Christ." The Baptists love testimonies like that. Everyone applauded
and welcomed him into
their fellowship.
The Baptist pastor flew
to Adelaide, Australia the next week and 10 days later in the middle of
a three day series in
a Baptist church in
Adelaide, a woman came up to him for some counseling. He wanted to
establish where she stood with Christ.
He said "I used to live in
Sydney and just a couple of months back I was visiting some friends in
Sydney doing some last
minute shopping down George
Street. A strange little white haired man stepped out of a shop doorway
and offered me a pamphlet
and said "Excuse me madam,
are you saved, if you die tonight are you going to heaven?" "I was
disturbed by
those words. When I got
home to Adelaide, I knew this Baptist church was on the next block form
me. I sought out the pastor
and he led me to Christ. So
I am telling you that I am a Christian."
The London pastor was
now very puzzled. Twice in two weeks he had heard the same testimony. He
then flew to preach in
the Mount Pleasant Church
in Perth. When his teaching series was over the senior elder of that
Church took him out for a meal
and he asked the elder how
he got saved. "I grew up in this church from the age of 15. I never made
a commitment to Jesus,
just hopped on the
bandwagon like everyone else. Because of my business ability grew up to a
place of influence. I was on
a business trip to Sydney
just three years ago. An obnoxious spiteful little man stepped out of a
shop doorway, offered me
a religious pamphlet cheap
junk and accosted me with a question: "Excuse me sir, are you saved, if
you die tonight are
you going to heaven?" I
tried to tell him I was a Baptist elder. He wouldn't listen to me. I was
seething with anger
all the way home from
Sydney to Perth. I told my pastor, thinking that he would sympathize,
but he agreed. He had been disturbed
for years knowing that I
didn't have a relationship with Jesus, and he was right. My pastor led
me to Jesus just three years
ago."
The London preacher
flew home and was soon speaking at the Keswick conventions in the Lake
District and he threw in these
three testimonies. At the
close of this teaching series, fours elderly pastors came up and
explained that they too had been
saved between 25 and 30
years earlier through that same little man on George Street, offering
them a pamphlet and asking that
same question. The
following week he flew to a similar Keswick convention in the Caribbean
to missionaries. He shared the
same testimonies. At the
close of his teaching three missionaries came forward and said that they
had also had been saved
between 15 and 25 years
earlier by that same little man's testimony and asked us the same
question on George Street in Sydney.
Next he stopped in Atlanta,
Georgia to speak at a Naval Chaplain convention. Here for three days he
spoke to over 1000 Naval
Chaplains. Afterwards the
Chaplain General took him out for a meal and he asked the Chaplain how
he became a Christian. "It
was miraculous. I was a
rating on a Naval battleship and I lived a reprobate life. We were doing
exercises in the South Pacific
and we docked at Sydney
harbor for replenishments. We hit Kings Cross with a vengeance. I was
blind drunk, got on the wrong
bus and got off in George
Street. As I got off the bus, I though I saw a ghost as this man jumped
out in front of me, pushed
a pamphlet in my hand and
said "Sailor, are you saved, if you die tonight are you going to
heaven?" The fear of
God hit me immediately. I
was shocked sober, ran back to the ship and sought out the Chaplain. He
led me to Christ. I soon
began to prepare for the
ministry under his guidance. I am now in charge of 1000 chaplains who
are bent on soul winning today."
Six months later that
London pastor flew to a conference for 5,000 Indian missionaries in a
remote part of NE India. At
the end the head missionary
took him to his humble little home for a simple meal. He asked how he
as a Hindu came to Christ.
"I grew up in a very
privileged position, I worked the Indian Diplomatic Mission and I
traveled the world. I am so glad
for the forgiveness of
Christ and blood covering my sin. I would be very embarrassed if people
found out what I got into.
One period of diplomatic
service took me to Sydney. I was doing some last minute shopping, laden
with toys and clothes for
my children. I was walking
down George Street when a courteous white haired little man stepped out
in front of me and offered
me a pamphlet and said
"Excuse me sir, are you saved, if you die tonight are you going to
heaven?" I thanked him
very much but this
disturbed me. I got back to my town, sought out our Hindu priest. He
couldn't help me, but he advised me
that to satisfy my curious
mind, I should go and talk to the missionary in the mission home at the
end of road. That was good
advice because that day the
missionary led me to Christ. I quit Hinduism immediately and began to
prepare for ministry. I
left the Diplomatic Service
and here I am today, by God's grace in charge of all these missionaries
who have together led
100.000 people to Christ.
Eight months later that
London Pastor was preaching in Sydney. He asked the local Baptist
Minister if he knew of a little
elderly white haired man
who handed out tracts on George Street. He replied "Yes is do, his name
is Mr. Genor, although
I don't think he does it
any more because he is so frail and elderly." Two nights later they went
to meet him in his
little apartment. They
knocked on the door and this tiny frail old man greeted them. He sat
them down and made them tea. He
was so frail that he was
slopping the tea into the saucer as his hands shook. The London preacher
sat there and told him of
all these accounts from the
previous three years. This little man sat with tears running down his
cheeks. He told them his
story. "I was a rating on
an Australian warship. I was living a reprobate life. In a crisis I
really hit the wall. One
of my collegues, to whom I
gave literal hell, was there to help me. He led me to Jesus and the
change in my life was night
to day in 24 hours. I was
so grateful to God; I promised God that I would share Jesus in a simple
witness with at least 10
people a day. As God me
strength I did that. Sometimes I was ill and couldn't do it, but I made
up for the days I missed it
at other times. I wasn't
paranoid about it. I have done this for over 40 years. In my retirement
years, the best place was
on St. George Street where I
saw hundreds of people a day. I got lots of rejections, but a lot of
people courteously took
the tract. In 40 years of
doing this, I have never heard of one single person coming to Jesus
until today."
You know, I would say
that he has to be commitment. To show gratitude and love for Jesus to do
that for 40 years and not
hear of any results. That
simple little non-charismatic Baptist man witnessed to perhaps 147,000
people. I think that God
was showing that Baptist
pastor from London was the tip of the tip of the tip of the iceberg.
Goodness knows how many more
had been arrested for
Christ. Doing huge jobs out in the mission fields. Mr. Genor died two
weeks later. Can you imagine the
reward he went home to in
Heaven?
I doubt his face would
ever have appeared on Charisma Magazine. I doubt there would ever have
been a photograph and a
write up in
Decision magazine. No one except a little group of Baptists in Sydney
knew about Mr. Genor, but
I tell you his name was
famous in Heaven. Heaven knew Mr. Genor and you can imagine the welcome
and Red Carpet and the fanfare
that he received when he
went home to Glory.
..."The harvest truly is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out
laborers into His harvest." Matthew 9:37-38
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