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August/September 2010 Issue
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Encouraging
Evangelism in Your Own Community and Around the World
by Bobby H. Welch
Below are a couple of testimonies
from First Baptist Church of Naples, Florida. The first shows
that if your church is a soul-winning church, it can be the catalyst
in your community to win your world to Christ. We must become
intentional in these days. The second will hopefully encourage
you to "keep on keeping on."
Partnering for the Sake
of the Gospel
Our desire in our evangelistic strategy is to train sister
churches in our community, equipping them to also have a community-wide
outreach out of their place of worship. We are truly committed
to being evangelism multipliers. Evangelism is all about multiplying
sharing Christ with another and that person sharing Christ
with another and so on.
We are now training two churches in evangelism. To do this,
we host one or two of their key leaders and have them participate
in our evangelism outreach every Sunday night. The goal is for
them to complete training and then to recruit a team from their
church that they will lead. Then the team goes through training
at our church each week, but when they visit, they will visit
their church prospects. We will continue to train their teams
until they have enough teams to break away and begin their own
evangelism on their church campus. We are excited about building
the Kingdom work, and what greater way to accomplish this than
by helping other churches capture the vision.
This also works overseas on mission trips. You can have a team
building a church or doing medical work while at the same time
another team can train the pastor and some leaders to do evangelism.
You give them the basics, leave them some materials, and take
them out to see how it works. In English-speaking countries, they
love using their hand for the acrostic FAITH to share the Gospel.
Now is the time to be aggressive in reaching people ... here
and beyond.
Creating a Culture of Evangelism
You never know what the long-term results of an evangelism
visit might be. Several months ago, one of our team leaders, Lou,
met a man named Mike on a visit. When he asked him if he knew
what it takes to go to heaven, he gave him a clear answer. He
invited Mike to Sunday School and to sit at his table in Men's
Ministry. Mike began to attend regularly and brought his family
with him. One night, Mike came forward with his family to join
the church, and I hooked him up with another evangelism leader,
Tim, for decision counseling.
The next Monday, our pastor, Dr. Hayes Wicker, and I were on
our way to camp with our minister of education, Lewis Howard.
Providentially, Hayes asked me to buy some snacks for the trip
at the 7-11. When I went inside, there were two deputies taking
a report on a shoplifting incident. I decided to check out the
drinks, and although I was innocent of any wrong doing, I felt
that I shouldn't be hanging too close to such an intense situation.
So you can imagine my surprise when I pulled out a drink, turned
to the left, and there stood one of the deputies who proceeded
to tell me that he needed to talk to me. I have to admit that
I was a little concerned until I realized it was Mike from church.
Later, Mike began to tell me how he had been living a lie and
that earlier when I asked him the question he just told me what
he knew to be the answer. But after counseling with another trained
leader during an invitation at church, he realized he was lost,
but again did not say anything. Now he wanted to know if I would
pray with him to receive Christ. Long story short, Mike prayed
to receive Jesus, and knows he's going to heaven now.
Isn't it wonderful when a church is filled with trained evangelism
leaders who go out, bring them in, disciple them, and all along
the way create a culture of real evangelism, follow up, and discipleship
in a church. If we had not followed up and discipled Mike into
the church, but had just left him after the visit, he would have
remained lost. All that to say, keep after the ones you visit.
Don't give up so easily. If they are a Christian, as Mike said
he was, get him in the church where he belongs. If they are lost,
go back and visit again or invite them to a Sunday School outing
stay in touch.
Now is the time to take steps. Let's all recommit to taking
the Gospel out into the world and encouraging other Christians
to do the same!
Bobby H. Welch is pastor emeritus of First
Baptist Church, Daytona Beach, Florida, Strategist for Global
Evangelical Relations with the SBC Executive Committee, former
president of the Southern Baptist Convention, and originator of
the FAITH evangelism strategy.
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© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
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