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Podcast: Evangelism Leadership in the Church

In this issue of our podcast, The Front Burner, we talk with Jim Donohue, the evangelism pastor at Covenant Fellowship Church in Glen Mills, PA. We ask Jim what he means when he calls himself an “evangelist,” and how he spends his time at the church.  We also asked what a church with a limited budget was thinking when they hired an inexperienced, young guy to be a full-time evangelist.

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Q&A: Can You Help Our Church With Outreach?

Q.  Tim, if you could suggest just a few things our church could do to improve our outreach, what would they be?

A.  Sure, there are a few things I’d suggest.  The Philip Center does not like to hand out “evangelism in a box” solutions that fit all churches.  Each church is different and will have its own set of barriers to evangelism.  But having said that, there are factors common to healthy church outreach.

First, examine the preaching of the Word from the pulpit.  Is it rich, Christ-centered preaching.  This isn’t a sermon that tacks on a gospel invitation, but preaching that points to the human predicament of sin, our inability to overcome our sin, the cross, repentance, forgiveness.   Showing the relationship of a biblical text to the gospel and to the disease of our hearts — and doing that year after year — makes our churches the salutary soul hospitals they are designed to be.  One good resource for this is Brian Chappel’s Christ-Centered Preaching: Redeeming the Expository Sermon. A steady diet of gospel-rich preaching of the Word, when it connects to the heart of the non-Christian is one of the best things a church can do toward fruitful evangelism.  The same preaching will likewise shape the contours of the Christian’s heart as well — helping him to better understand the transformation taking place in his life and enabling him to communicate that to others.

Second, pay attention to individuals.  Keep an eye out for the people in your church and outside of your church (usually those in relationships with people in your church).  Each one is loved by God and precious.  I choose the word “individual” to reflect the language of Henry Trumbull’s book, Individual Work for Individuals (an out-of-print gem from 1901).  It’s easy to overlook individuals in our great desire to reach many.  Slow down and take the time to observe who is spiritually open.  Given our culture’s distaste for church, the fact that a non-Christian is in a church is likely an indication of some degree of openness.  But look beyond who is in the church building and see who is in relationships with your people.  Inspire and equip the Christians to pay attention to their friends, family,  co-workers, neighbors — one at a time.  So many of our outreach initiatives are designed to reach people, but when those individuals express interest, we move on to the next initiative.  Look, listen, listen more, love and respond to who they are and what they are thinking and feeling.  Care for them as individuals patiently.  The story of the lost sheep is a poignant reminder of Jesus’ love for individuals.

Third, evaluate your outreach leadership.  There are two crucial issues here.  One has to do with the pastor.  Is he a champion for evangelism and is he doing it himself?  These are crucial.  If not, humbly begin to pray for him, that God would move his heart for the lost.  While I’m not a big fan of the solo pastor model of church leadership, it is nevertheless crucial for the lead pastor or elder to actively model and champion evangelism. Mark Dever’s book, The Gospel and Personal Evangelism is a great resource for this.  Second, a church that is eager to grow in outreach should seek to identify and train someone who is the Ephesians 4:11 equipping evangelist.  This likely should not be the person who naturally and effortlessly leads many to Christ.  Those in your church who do that are a wonderful gift, but they are rarely good equippers of the rest who are fearful and unequipped to share their faith.  This leader is very important to the long-term outreach health of a church and his role in your church cannot be overlooked.  I have heard church planting pastors say that they would make that the second or third hire the next time they plant.

Evans 2010[1]_2

Bauer Evans: Pastor to Pastors

I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by his appearing and his kingdom: preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching. For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths. As for you, always be sober-minded, endure suffering, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry. 2 Timothy 4:1-5.

As he writes this passage to Timothy, Paul is facing the end of his life. He paints a final picture of pastoral ministry for Timothy that he hopes will be enduring.  He focuses on those priorities he knows Timothy will be tempted to drift from and even neglect in the day-to-day pressures of ministry.

Paul calls Timothy to 1) preach the Word, 2) be sober-minded, 3) endure suffering and 4) do the work of an evangelist.  Why did Paul call Timothy to do the work of personal evangelism?  The reason, I believe, is because he knows Timothy’s example in personal evangelism is indispensable to his church’s faithfulness in the work of evangelism.

I wonder what Timothy thought as he read Paul’s letter:

“Don’t I have enough work?  Now I have to do the work of an evangelist too?”

“I just need to find the right guy and then I won’t have to worry about this anymore.”

I have a pastoral gift, not the gift of an evangelist.”

I know I need to change in this area – I’m going to make it happen this time.” (But his guess is that there will be a big push in the beginning and a fizzle at the end.)

Friends: Paul called Timothy to do the work of evangelism because He knows Timothy’s example in personal evangelism is indispensable to his church’s faithfulness in the work of evangelism.

What does this have to do with me? Imagine if on Sunday I told my congregation I hadn’t read the Bible devotionally for a month. How would they feel about the message I was about to share? Or if I confessed I hadn’t prayed to God in over two months? Would their confidence in my pastoral leadership waver? Absolutely! So what happens when I tell them I have not shared the Gospel with a non-believer for a month? Three months? Maybe a year? Would they be as astonished and concerned for my spiritual welfare as they are for the spiritual disciplines of Bible intake and prayer? They should be … God certainly is.

Friends, pastors lead by example. Our example is indispensable when it comes to developing an evangelistic church. Without a consistent example from us, the church will grow complacent in their call to reach the lost. Yet some of the most effective preaching being done today is by pastors who are spending time with non-believers, learning about their lives, hearing their questions and sharing the gospel with non-believers during the week. As these pastors share these conversations with their congregations in their sermons, they are inspiring and equipping the church in how to talk to non-believers about the gospel, and imparting faith for them to do it!

May I suggest to you that what will move evangelism to the front burner in your congregation is often the ‘missing ingredient’ in most churches that aren’t growing in evangelism. What will move personal evangelism to the front burner in your congregation’s ministry is your personal example in personal evangelism. Through your example your church will be equipped and inspired to grow in theirs.

How does a pastor grow in personal evangelism?

First, have a plan. What do date nights, church meetings and soccer games all have in common? Give up. They are all planned ahead of time. Is personal evangelism included? Is it evident from your schedule that this is a priority? If ‘no’, what’s your plan?

What is my plan for personal evangelism?
-    Start small: plan to host non-believers in your home once a month
-    Redeem the time: devote lunch time once a month to go out and share the gospel at the mall or common
-    Make a goal: first, plan to do it on Fridays at the mall, in the evenings.
-    Include others: second, Saturdays during the day do a service project and share.

By transferring these priorities to my calendar, over time I am growing in faithfulness in my daily life. I am slowing down to pursue conversations with others while at the gym, while in Cumby’s, during my son’s baseball games.

Second, practice. Doing evangelism is the best way to grow in evangelism.

“We must expose ourselves to both biblical content and real life context, to knowledge and experience, to training and practice. Too often, there is an overemphasis on content and knowledge at the expense of practical experience. We will do well to pay heed to the words of nineteenth-century English philosopher Herbert Spencer who said, ‘The great aim of our education is not knowledge but action.’ So don’t fall into the trap of thinking that if your conviction level is lagging, you must first work on building your convictions before you go out and do evangelism. No, the best way to build convictions about evangelism is to go out and do it as you are processing the biblical information which fuels your convictions.” (Mark McCloskey, Tell It Often, Tell It Well (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Inc, 1992))

Third, pursue accountability. “Growth in grace is a community project,” says Tim Lane.

Is there someone in my life who demonstrates faithfulness in personal evangelism? Could I build him into my life to help me to grow? To receive specific encouragement? To be challenged to change? To go witness with?

For me, my friend Todd is that person. Last year, at the conclusion of the Philip Center’s training, my friend Todd suggested we take some time to review what we had heard and come with a plan to ‘just do it’. He suggested we use our lunch times once or twice a month to go out and share the gospel. As time went on, and he continued to grow in faithfulness in personal evangelism during the week, he began to ask if I had the opportunity to share with anyone that week. When I didn’t he would ask what I could do the following week to insure I was spending time with non-believers. What a difference it makes to have a friend who is both inspiring in his example and caring enough to encourage me to keep growing to.

Fourth, pray for a heart for the lost.
Continue steadfastly in prayer, being watchful in it with thanksgiving. At the same time, pray also for us, that God may open to us a door for the word, to declare the mystery of Christ, on account of which I am an in prison – that I may make it clear, which is how I ought to speak. Colossians 4:2-4

“The Holy Spirit will move them by first moving you. If you can rest without their being saved, they will rest too. But if you are filled with agony for them, if you cannot bear that they should be lost, you will soon find that they are uneasy too. I hope you will get into such a state that you will dream about your child or your hearer perishing for lack of Christ, and start at once and begin to cry, ‘O God, give me converts or I die.’ Then you will have converts.” (Charles Spurgeon, The Sermons of Charles Haddon Spurgeon Vol. 22, (London: Passmore & Alabaster, 1876), 143-144)

Paul calls Timothy to do the work of evangelism because He knows Timothy’s example in personal evangelism is indispensable to his church’s faithfulness in the work of evangelism.

Friends, God is patient with us. He knows our frame, that we are weak; and He is poised to give us more of His grace to move us along! Paul’s letter to Timothy ends with this encouragement: “The Lord be with your Spirit – Grace be with you.”

God is going to give us more grace to grow during our time together. He will give us wisdom and faith to implement an evangelistic strategy, beginning with our personal example, that will move evangelism back to the front burner of the church we are privileged to serve.

A Challenge given by Bauer Evans (Crossway Church, Plainville, MA) at the Planning for Outreach Workshop, June11, 2009.

Europe

Missions Strong, Outreach Weak

Is your church strong in foreign missions but weak in local outreach? If so, you’re not alone. As they say, it’s easier to write a check than share your faith. If this is true at your church, here’s an idea that might help: a reverse missions conference.

A reverse missions conference puts the emphasis on “Jerusalem” rather than “the uttermost parts of the earth” (Acts 1:8). The desire is not to weaken foreign missions — not at all. After all, the Mission of God involves all venues of the Acts 1:8 mandate. As someone said, “Missions is simply evangelism gone cross-cultural.” But such a conference, if your church holds an annual missions week, can help restore interest in the local part of the Great Commission.

Some time ago, The Philip Center helped lead a church through this kind of conference, and it went very well. Here are some of the details.

Title: Go Local!

Schedule:

* Thursday: Planning meeting for leaders of outreach small groups
* Thursday evening: Focus Group (click here for more)
* Friday: Church and town leaders meeting. The church provided lunch at town hall and asked the town leaders how the church might meet needs in the town.
* Friday evening: Video of on-the-street interviews about God and religion, followed by a discussion on how to reach spiritually lost people.
* Saturday morning: Men’s, Women’s and Youth Breakfast: “Sharing Your Faith”
* Saturday evening: Dinner and main speaker
* Sunday morning: Services with main speaker
* Sunday after the service: “Where Do We Go from Here?”

An essential element: have someone in place to keep the momentum going from the conference. If the conference is inspiring, be sure that you have someone in the church who can champion outreach and keep it moving forward. And then be sure to provide evangelism training so that those who are inspired by the conference are equipped to share their faith.

LarryD1

Engage! Conference in the Rear View Mirror

Report from Dave Gadoury — Senior Pastor, Cranston Christian Fellowship:

Over seventy leaders representing nineteen churches from Rhode Island and nearby Massachusetts met on October 15 for a five hour conference to foster a prayer-care-share lifestyle in their churches.  As a result, seventeen pastors committed themselves to living and modeling that lifestyle and to a united initiative that will call their people to ministry to people in need outside of their churches.

The “LoveRI” partnership of churches is an LC2C-related movement launched in 2010 with thirty churches participating in service projects, united prayer gatherings, and training events like October’s ENGAGE! conference.  Larry DeWitt, a Mission American Coalition resource speaker and the main presenter for the conference, provided methods and inspiration for helping ordinary Christians have an impact on their world by praying for lost people, caring for them in practical ways, and naturally sharing the good news with them.

At the conclusion, pastors wrote their names and church name on a map of the state, symbolizing their desire to make their churches a lighthouse to the region and its one million people.

“I feel excited about praying for my friends who don’t know Christ.  Excellent information and ideas,“ one of the leaders commented afterwards.

Another said, “I am excited and thankful for the practical ‘how to’ tools to be transformed personally and as the body of Christ.  I can’t wait to see what Almighty God is going to do in our area.”

At least eight of the churches represented are eager to begin implementing some of the ideas, and have agreed to distribute prayer bookmarks in November and to challenge their churches to have a “go to the wall”  Sunday before the holiday season.  Going “to the wall”, they learned from DeWitt, inspires people to write the first names of people who need Jesus on a wall area near the front of a church’s worship place.  This provides accountability, encouragement, a visual reminder, and a means of “keeping the vision alive” in each church.

LarryDeWitt

The Engage! Conference

LoveRI, The Ministry Training Network and The Philip Center are teaming up to present a don’t-miss conference October 15, 2011.

This evangelism equipping conference is for pastors, ministry leaders and all who want to be a part of helping your church engage with others through a lifestyle of “prayer, care and share.” Our communities are full of needs — material needs and spiritual needs — and God has sent his church to follow Christ into the world to address those needs. This conference will challenge us to see those needs and to be practical about reaching out with humble but bold solutions.

Consider this powerful reminder from Paul W. Powell: “The church that loses its sense of mission is in peril of its life. The church exists by mission as a fire exists by burning.  Let a fire cease to burn and it becomes ashes.  Let the church cease to be missionary and evangelistic and it ceases to be a church — and the coldness and dullness of death sets in.”  The Engage! Conference is designed to challenge us all to stay active in obedience to Christ who has called us not only apart from the world in holiness, but also into the world for mission.  The health of our churches and our people depends on it.

Our speaker, Larry DeWitt, founded and pastored Calvary Community Church in Thousand Oaks, CA. Since retiring, Larry has led Cornerstone Network, a ministry with a passion for connecting people with Jesus. Larry speaks with a deep heart for both the pastor and for those outside the church who need to know Jesus. And his life is a living model of what he believes.

The conference will be held at the newly renovated Sheraton Airport Hotel in Warwick, RI.  Check-in begins at 9:00 and the conference will end by 2:30.  The cost is $50 or $45 for groups of two or more, or early registrations — before Sept. 1. Lunch is included.

 

RichSpeaking

Rich Fulton at Iron Sharpens Iron

Recently I had the opportunity to speak at Iron Sharpens Iron Men’s conference in Burlington, VT.  The event sold out with over 500 guys, 100 of whom attended our workshop, titled “Living a Life that Shines a Light.”  In the workshop we looked at key Scriptures about sharing our faith.  I camped out in Colossians 4:2-6 where Paul speaks about open doors and our being prepared to share when God opens the door.  We talked about treating those we relate to with compassion and grace.  The aim was to have the guys concentrate on non-Christians in their everyday lives.  One of the key things that came up in discussion was the follow-up.  I went back to the great commission where Christ commands that we make disciples, not just “get them saved.”  Another question that came up: “What happens when the people I work and live with see me mess up?  Is my testimony ruined?”  I shared about the importance of going back to apologize for mistakes and keeping the relationship open, and highlighting the gospel of grace and forgiveness.  It often makes the other person curious about why we would apologize and care to do the hard work of restoration.

I will be giving the same talk at Portsmouth,NH on April 30 and in Portland, ME on June 4.  Please pray for these events and the men who care to be growing in outreach.


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