Evangelism
Evangelism is hard. But it's even harder if you're all alone. That's where the church comes in.
Evangelism is hard. But it's even harder if you're all alone. That's where the church comes in.
Is evangelism an individual sport or a team sport? Really, it’s both.
When we take a cold, hard look at programs, things just don’t add up.
Whatever your experience has told you about evangelism, take hope from Acts 28:28.
With the best of intentions, practitioners of the altar call and spontaneous baptisms have likely given many unsaved persons false confidence they know Jesus.
The converted and the unconverted need preaching in which the fullness of God’s Word is exposed and the atoning work of Christ explored.
Even though many Christians at your church genuinely want to make God known, they struggle in evangelism. Have you ever wondered why that is?
Programs come and go. A culture endures.
If evangelism is the expectation of every disciple, then every disciple needs to be equipped in evangelism.
Some of our most obvious evangelistic opportunities are with the people who are members of our churches.
In our personal evangelism, to what degree should we explain PSA as we seek to make sense of the bloody cross, the vanguard of our Christian gospel?
You cannot share the gospel of Jesus without mentioning the reality of sin. When we do, we deceive people about what the gospel is.
Do “people skills” matter in evangelism? I think they do, especially in today’s world.