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Hardcover Envangelism That Works Book

ISBN: 0830717390

ISBN13: 9780830717392

Envangelism That Works

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3 ratings

Good Intro on the Lack of Evangelism in Today's Churches

Barna here provides a good intro on the lack of evangelism in today's churches. For anyone who has read much on the subject, Barna really doesn't share anything new. What he does do however, is to put many of the trends and concepts together in one volume. There are certainly better books on the market describing specific methods of "evangelism that works." This title just identifies the problem in American churches today -- we are falling far short of communicating the gospel of Christ with a lost and dying culture. For an introduction to the challenges of evangelism in the 21st century, this book is fine. For a description of specific evangelistic techniques God is using today, many other works would be better.

Evangelism -- The Door to Disciple-Making

This book is written by a popular, prolific, contemporary, for-profit pollster whose clients are primarily Christian agencies. The main thrust of this book is to distribute theolographic data pertinent to evangelism, which the author has obtained through his company, Barna Research Groups, Ltd., and then to synthesize these data to reveal potentially better ways for churches and individuals to evangelize non-believers in the United States of America. Published in 1995, this book contains much information that remains of interest to evangelizers today. For the most part, his methodology is based on telephone polling of people assigned to various faith categories according to their answers to a few basic theological questions and analyzing their stated beliefs on moral issues and their attitudes toward evangelists in general. Barna also interviewed various officials from successful evangelistic churches, and some from churches that were not. He discusses small churches vs. large churches, evangelically minded churches, and those less so, as well as a cross-section of the American population from various generations to obtain data and infer conclusions. All of this was done with the intent of assisting churches to develop or improve existing evangelistic programs. The stated moral beliefs and theological awareness of people in various "Christian" categories, the opinions of average Americans, and the relative lack of evangelistic interest among churches and senior pastors were all disturbing. By revealing common traits of churches with successful evangelistic programs, he provides the reader with many ideas to increase and improve the evangelistic work in his/her home church. The book has several strengths. First among them is a call for more and better evangelistic activity from all churches, as well as a call to all Christians to perform their God-given duty to share the Gospel as deftly as they can as an act of obedience. Mr. Barna presents his data effectively to show the need for long-term interaction with each individual as well as the need for follow-up assessments with the non-believer or the new convert. He discusses the anesthetic effect of well-worn phrases that have lost their power with many non-believers, such as "God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life" (p. 119). Attention is repeatedly drawn to the fact that effective evangelism is not a "decide now," "take it or leave it" proposition, but an ongoing interaction, with follow-up, until the prospects look dim or the new convert is a well-established participating member of an appropriate church. He also comments on various evangelistic efforts, including the use of various broadcast media, direct mail, cold-calls, pastoral visits, church-sponsored events, etc. and discusses the various costs, benefits, and drawbacks of each one. There are two constitutional weaknesses in Barna's work. First, the author does not adequately discuss his methodology. He info

Very good for getting in the mind of your friends

This book provides many good ideas but falls somewhat short on presenting how-to items succinctly.What I was looking for was a book I could use to teach a class on relationship evangelism. Furthermore, my ideal is a book that addresses post-modern people (especially Gen-Xers and Gen-Yers) with their common aversion to embracing any exclusive or absolute truth. This book worked very well, but I had to work harder than I would have liked in creating my own group study guide.This book, like most on the subject, takes a narrative approach to each chapter. What I would have liked but did not find were:1. Discussion or review questions at the end of each chapter2. Application exercise(s) at the end of each chapter, focused on building lifelong habits.The content is there, but not split out in a clear, action-oriented recap. Inside the Mind of Unchurched Harry & Mary has similar strenghts and weaknesses.A promising new book that I may use is Evangelism Outside The Box (Rick Richardson, 2000).Older books that have worked very well for me in teaching others are: (roughly in order of preference): Power Evangelism (John Wimber, 1992), Witnessing Without Fear (Bill Bright, 1987), Out of the Salt Shaker (Rebecca Pippert).
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