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    Should we focus on evangelism or discipleship in youth ministry?

    Posted on Thursday 7 January 2010 by Greg @ 9:07 am
    Filed under: Rants

    Evangelism is often looked at as the red headed step child (apologies to any reading this right now) of the youth ministry world. We deal with it because we are legally required to in the by-laws of the Bible but, down deep in our hearts, we are more passionate about discipleship than evangelism.

    But this is where our thinking is wrong. Evangelism and discipleship are like Nitrogen and Gylcerin, they must be blended for maximum effect. Teens who are growing in Christ will share their faith and teens who are sharing their faith in the power of the Spirit will grow in Christ.

    I am convinced that if teenagers fall in love with sharing their faith they will fizzle out, but if they fall in love with Jesus they’ll always evangelize. Because of this, our first and foremost goal is to get teenagers fully surrendered to Christ. If they offer their lives as living sacrifices (Romans 12:1), I believe they will passionately share their faith out of the overflow of their love for God!

    At Dare 2 Share we refuse to divorce evangelism from discipleship. In fact, I believe they are intrinsically united. My firm belief is that evangelism accelerates the discipleship process like no Bible study class ever could. When teenagers begin to share their faith, they have a new thirst to study God’s Word, pray, and depend on the Holy Spirit.

    For instance, at our training conferences this year we deal with conquering sin through applying the power of the cross (aka “sanctification”) because, and here’s the direct connect with evangelism, if teenagers are living a godless life none of their friends will take them seriously when they are sharing the gospel. So we teach key truths that deal directly with essential “deep” theology (“the inerrancy of God’s Word, the Trinity, prayer, worship, the exchanged life, etc) but they ALL make a direct connect to sharing your faith.

    Emphasizing evangelism opens up the opportunity for risk and persecution (1 Tim 3:12) and helps teenagers download theology quicker and more effectively. It provides a context that is more like the 1st century Church rather than the 21st century Church. It gives them a bold cause (THE Cause) that is urgent, exciting and life-changing. Teenagers pay attention and are hungry to learn theology because they are being sent into battle for the souls of their friends.

    Calibrating theology in light of evangelism “missionizes” theology and takes it out of the clincial into the practical. Jesus equipped his disciples in the context of mission. First, He called them in Matthew 4:19, “Follow me and I’ll make you fishers of men.” Then, He officially appointed them as His apostles in Matthew 10 and immediately unleashed them for an evangelistic campaign. Up until His final words to them in Acts 1:8, Jesus equipped His disciples with the core truths of the faith in the context of mission. By focusing on evangelism we are able to more effectively disciple teenagers because we add danger and risk to the scenario.

    Youth leaders play a key role in maintaining a youth ministry environment that emphasizes this philosophy and keeps THE Cause as the center of their strategy for spiritual growth in their teenagers. The “Deep and Wide Youth Ministry” strategy, along with the sharing of best practices from other youth leaders, is essential to helping them sustain this paradigm shifting model.

    Shoud we focus on evangelism or discipleship in youth ministry? The answer is both/and not either/or.

    Signed, Greg Stier
    8 Comments

    8 Comments for 'Should we focus on evangelism or discipleship in youth ministry?'

    1. On January 7, 2010 @ 9:19 am Eddie said:
      • It’s like an architect who spends all his years studying engineering and design and at the end of his life he realizes he’s never actually designed anything. Or a painter who spends all his time checking out the paint, mixing paint, learning about the multiple kinds of paint, history of paint and mastering the painting techniques. But until the painter puts paint to object, nothing gets painted.

        Same with evangelism and discipleship. Evangelism is the point. Discipleship helps us be better evangelists.

        Reply to this comment

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    2. On January 7, 2010 @ 12:43 pm Michelle said:
      • “Evangelism and discipleship are like Nitrogen and Gylcerin.” Sweetness. That is a comparison I can definitely understand and one I’ll not soon forget. Thanks for the good reading.

        Reply to this comment

      • Permalink to Michelle's comment

    3. On January 7, 2010 @ 2:42 pm brian aaby said:
      • Greg, my hope and prayer is that each Youth Leader (and student) will truly get this! For years many have separated something that has never been separated in Scripture! As we fall in love with the lost (evangelism) we need and fall deeper in love with the church (and discipleship). Youth Leaders (and unfortunately those who influence them) emphasize more Bible Study, better fellowship, longer worship and further-out missions and then wonder why these very students walk away from the church after high school.

        Students who fall in love with the lost during middle-school and high school will carry that love onto their college campus or into their careers. If our emphasis continues to be to get Christian students to programs instead of to people, the trend will continue! The natural outflow of discipleship is living/sharing/breathing THE Cause.

        Youth Leaders: start modeling it! Not by just preaching about it, but by doing it yourself. If you don’t have non-Christian friends (your own age) that you are loving and sharing with, why do you expect your Christian students to fall in love with something you don’t even love? Talk about your failures (missed opportunities), praise God in your successes (the times you were faithful in sharing, leaving the results to the Spirit). Deeper love for the lost leads to deeper love and reliance upon Christ (and vice-versa!).

        Whoa, I guess this isn’t my blog; I’ll leave the next rant for Greg, but man, he was scratching where I hope we all have the itch! Now, off to my blog to post something similar!

        Reply to this comment

        greg stier Reply:
        January 7th, 2010 at 4:11 pm

        Yes! Yes! and YES! You go booooy!

        Reply to this comment

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    4. On January 10, 2010 @ 10:40 pm Katelyn said:
      • Greg! the fb fanpage for d2s, doesnt like me…. well, on my phone that is. And my laptop decided to block facebook all together…. and the d2s website and my blog and everything is permantly (im guessing) zoomed in to 400% and I cant undo it!! So, I guess I’ll tell you what it was ;)

        —–
        I could use some prayer… like an hour ago, I went into the living room, and asked my mom if she thinks that the t-shirt making people will make us teens in the campus ministry some t’s… she said yea, so, I left their buisness card in there with the “I Gotta Be Honest…” blog post underneath it. (I only wrote it because I was/am frustrated with the un-support I’ve gotten from mom and other people, who I won’t mention, who should be offering support, but aren’t..) I really do need her support in this… I went back in there earlier and she told me, through the tears, the she does love and care for me… that’s great that she’s able to say it.. Now, is she able to show it too? please pray that she does. Pray that the needed ends meet. I really do not want the rest of my high school years to be “hell” because of the amount of damage that my mom has done to me… I want these years to be amazing and to see God work in and through all of us. If you haven’t heard these songs, The Words I Would Say by Sidewalk Prophets and I Am by Ginny Owens and Big Enough by Ayiesha Woods and Small by JJ Heller, than you should. Those songs have gotten me this far.. oh and reading my bible and praying and writing.
        ———

        Did I ever tell you that I appreciate EVERYTHING you do?! (:
        all of the encouragement that I have recieved from you and other people is amazing and it doesn’t seem to get old. I’m glad my gramma tells me she’s proud of me. my grampa does too. Giving up is never on the list of options for anyone… and people like you, won’t let me add it!! :D

        Thankyou, Greg!!!! (:

        Reply to this comment

        greg stier Reply:
        January 11th, 2010 at 9:10 am

        I am proud of you too Katelyn. There’s a cool verse in Samuel when David was being chased down by King Saul and hiding in caves. It says, “But David encouraged himself in the Lord.” I love that. Sometimes it feels like its just you and God in a cave…but that is enough. Better that than a million supporters but without God. I will pray for you and your relatioship with your mom.

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    5. On January 14, 2010 @ 7:21 pm Seven said:
      • Greg -
        Okay so this is probably the wrong place to point this out, but I’ve noticed that a lot of times (maybe all the time but I’m not positive) you teach us how to share the Gospel and then eventually follow it up with “Does that make sense?” and then (if yes) “Are you ready to put your faith in Jesus Christ alone right now?” Which is way cool, don’t get me wrong, but you always stop there. What comes next? What do you say if they say yes again? “Cool, you’re now a Christian”? Do you ‘lead them in prayer’? How, exactly, do you do that? Do you use a specific sinners prayer? (I know you have to explain that it’s the faith, not the prayer, that saves, and I liked the sinners prayer at the end of “Venti Jesus Please”)
        I know this probably sounds stupid, but it’s one of the main things that keeps me from sharing as openly as I should. If someone were actually ready, I don’t know what I’d do or say. It’s really daunting, actually, to the point that I hope people aren’t ready to recieve Christ. Which is very selfish of me, but hopefully you can shine some light on this subject? I also know some other Christians who have this problem, and we’ve discussed it but I’m still not sure. If you want to email me, my email is dangersvoice@gmail.com
        Thanks and God bless you and your ministry!!

        Reply to this comment

        greg stier Reply:
        January 16th, 2010 at 8:13 am

        Leading someone in a prayer after they trust in Jesus is fine (and the one at the end of Venti Jesus is as good as any) but just remind them that it is not the prayer that saves…it’s their faith in Jesus that saves them. Also, that is just the beginning for them. After someone trusts in Jesus we want them plugging into a healthy church, getting the spiritual grounding they need and sharing that message with others! Keep asking your questions. They are great!

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