Evangelism Course Comparison Guide

Article
03.01.2010

Simply Christianity would be a good introduction for people who are completely unfamiliar with Christianity. You would have to be careful, though, to use biblical words like “faith,” since the course seems deliberately to avoid them sometimes in order to speak the language of the student. The most useful aspect of this course is its session on why the Bible is reliable, along with the supplementary information for that session, though Alpha includes the same information as well.

Alpha is a long course and would probably be better for discipling one who is already a Christian. A decision is asked for by the end of the third of fifteen sessions, even though neither faith nor repentance is discussed until the fourth. My concern is that the course seems to want to ease people into being a Christian almost before they know what’s happened. Repentance and faith are treated in passing under the heading “How can I be sure of my Faith,” which seems like a strange place to handle those. Even then, repentance gets one sentence, and faith gets about a page. Most of the other courses are much better at explaining clearly and up-front that you must repent and believe to be a Christian. My other concern is that by session 6, the course assumes that all the participants are Christians. By that time, the goal is to lead students to be filled with the Holy Spirit and to speak in tongues at a weekend retreat. Even bearing with what is certainly debatable theology in those sessions, it seems a little presumptuous to so solidly assume conversion after only six weeks of an introductory course.

Coming Alive will not be very useful to anyone. It is too long at ten sessions to be an evangelistic course, and the concepts are utterly confusing. Substitutionary atonement is handled, but only as one aspect of the cross along with moral example and others. The course would be immediately confusing to anyone not already familiar with Christianity. The first session asks the student to engage in a little biblical theology to kick things off. Again, very little of the course is actually evangelistic; 70% of it assumes the person is already saved. That means that if the person isn’t converted after three weeks, the rest of the course will be fairly irrelevant.

I was at first excited as I began reading Discovering Christianity. The first couple of sessions were excellent, dealing with Christ’s claims to be God and with His resurrection. The idea was to establish Christ’s authority in the minds of the students. As the course came to discuss the heart of the gospel, though, it dissolved. The authors were reluctant to use the words “sin” or “repentance.” I understand the desire to use words that are understandable, but saying that we “have not lived moral lives” and that we “are not good people compared with Jesus” does not begin to explain the concept of sin. Much better is to use the word like so many generations of Christians before us have, and then explain it. The course seems to deliberately avoid any discussion of Reformed theology, even going so far as to omit reference to uncomfortable verses in John’s gospel. The discussion of atonement is confused, I think, and spends too much time on peripheral questions. For example, it spends a huge chunk of the time explaining why Jesus’s death was loving—because it saves us—but gives almost nothing to explaining exactly how that was.

Christianity Explained is overall the best of the courses I have seen. It is a good length, six sessions, each of which carefully explains one aspect of the gospel. It doesn’t rush a decision, but the student’s understanding of the gospel will become progressively clearer with each session. The core doctrines of the gospel are discussed in detail. This course is by far the best at describing that salvation is by grace, not works. A full session is given to the topic, and it is masterfully done. That is usually the session where the penny drops and students begin to really understand the gospel. My only concern with the course is that sin is not sufficiently dealt with. Of course it is mentioned, but only as a caveat to the cross. In using this course, I have had to explain again later that sin was the reason Christ had to die. I would recommend using this course, but with a session about sin added before the one on the crucifixion. You might profitably insert the session on sin from Christianity Explored.

Christianity Explored is impressive-looking program that is plainly an answer to the Alpha course. It is a seven-week course with an accompanying DVD. The course works through the Gospel of Mark and is designed to take place over a meal. The teaching component can be either a live talk or the DVD presentation, and leads to discussion afterward. Christianity Explored is faithful to Scripture, presents the gospel clearly, and calls non-Christians to a life of repentance and faith. This is an excellent resource.

One further note—Christianity Explained is great in that it can very effectively be used in one-on-one relationships. There is no retreat to be planned, no monologue to be given. The truths of the gospel can be discussed easily sitting over a table at a coffee shop.

By:
Greg Gilbert

Greg Gilbert is the Senior Pastor of Third Avenue Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky. You can find him on Twitter at @greggilbert.

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