Jesus was a strategic broadcaster. Whenever crowds gathered around the Savior, it wasn’t long before He sat down to teach them about His kingdom. But how did Jesus teach the masses? He told stories. A farmer sowed seed in a field (Mark 4:1-8); a seed sprouted without anyone knowing how (Mark 4:26-29); a mustard seed grew into a tree that provided shade (Mark 4:30-32). These stories were often left hanging without a punch line or explanation. All Jesus said to the crowds was, “Anyone with ears to hear should listen and understand” (Mark 4:9,23).

Jesus had a different approach with His disciples. He explained the meaning of the parables (Mark 4:10-20). Mark tells us this was Jesus’ communication strategy: He broadcast faith-eliciting stories to the crowd, but explained their meaning only to those who wanted the answer (Mark 4:33-34). Those with “ears to hear” left behind the unbelieving crowd to become Jesus’ disciples.

For the past 20 years, an interesting experiment has been taking place in Australia. Select Christian radio stations have been using Jesus’ approach. These stations have blended Christian music with mainstream music. Instead of playing wall-to-wall preaching programs, relatable announcers befriend the listener and elicit spiritual interest with testimony-type interviews and brief “God spots.” The gospel is offered to these audiences “as much as they [can] understand” (Mark 4:33). Those who want to know more receive personal attention.

This broadcasting format, once considered to be controversial, is now accepted and successful. Non-Christians comprise more than 60 percent of some station’s audiences, and many people have experienced transformed lives.

But this way of reaching people isn’t original—the stations have simply been following the Master Broadcaster!

NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: 2 Samuel 15:1-37