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The Light of the World

Emmanuel Gill

21 Oct 2022

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Blog

The Light of the World

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Missionary Emmanuel Gill takes the opportunity to talk about the Light of the World, during the Hindu festival of light.

A few years ago, during my door-to-door ministry in my neighbourhood in Harrow, I met a Hindu family. My wife knew the daughter from school, and we got talking to her family about Diwali, asking how they celebrate and what it means to them.

We had a good conversation as they told us what they believed, and explained that Diwali is a festival of light. As we talked, I was able to connect the themes of light and darkness to the Bible, how Jesus claims to be the “light of the world”. The conversation went well and we invited them to the church.

Soon afterwards they came, and as we greeted them they handed us a gift-bag full of sweets “to celebrate the sweetness of life” they said, a Diwali tradition for Hindus. In that moment I prayed they would know the sweet abundance of life that only Jesus can bring.

A row of lights

Diwali is an important annual religious festival celebrated by Hindus, Sikhs and Jains, usually falling between October and November. The exact dates change each year because of the lunar calendar, but this year Diwali falls on Sunday 12 November. The word Diwali (or Deepavali as it’s sometimes called) means “row of lights.” It’s called this because homes and temples are illuminated, fireworks are lit and people gather with friends and relatives for a great feast.

The religious and historical significance of Diwali varies from Hindus to Sikhs and Jains. Hindus commemorate in it the triumphant return of their god, Rama; Sikhs celebrate the laying of the foundation stone of the Golden Temple at Amritsar (the most holy place in the Sikh world); and Jains celebrate the moment their founder, Mahavira, reached a state called ‘Moksha’ (eternal bliss). …But all who celebrate Diwali agree that the underlying common theme among all these stories is the victory of good over evil, light over darkness, peace over war and truth over falsehood.

“I am the light of the world."

This imagery in Diwali evokes important themes from the Bible, which is a ready-made opportunity to point people to Jesus. In John 8.12 Jesus claims boldly, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life.” He also says in the same chapter that if we listen to him “you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”

Diwali’s imagery of truth, goodness and light can be linked to the Lord Jesus’ victory over the darkness of sin that resides in all of us. When I knock on people’s doors, I often meet people searching for truth, so I try to point them to “the way, the truth and the life” (John 14.6), our Lord Jesus. His sinless life and sacrificial death have the power to blot out the darkness of sin from us and grant us the true light of life.

"Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life.”

As followers of Jesus, we are commissioned to witness him and the truth to all those around us. In the Hindu Engagement Training, we encourage participants to do just that through investigating and learning about Diwali, then to approach their Hindu friends asking open questions to initiate spiritual conversation. It’s a fantastic course where many have been equipped to reach the unreached amongst Hindu communities.

Let’s use Diwali, the festival of light, as a wonderful opening to introduce Jesus, the true light of the world.

To find out more about the training we offer for reaching people from other faiths, click here.


Written by: Emmanuel Gill

Emmanuel is LCM's missionary team leader in West London. He specialises in helping churches share the gospel with people of different faiths.

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