Those Christians who work in missionary settings among
non-Christian groups learned an important lesson long ago about
communicating the gospel. You can build the church, ring the bell,
and hope that folks will find their way to your doorstep. Or, you
can immerse yourself in the culture, build relationships, and
minister to people where they are. Needless to say, it is the
latter route that bears the greatest fruit--and the greatest
similarity to Jesus' own practice of proclaiming the gospel.
As churches in North America seek to grow and minister more
effectively, they would do well to remember that they, too, live in
an increasingly non-Christian culture. The churches that will
succeed in reaching out to the unchurched in this society are those
who have learned how to encounter such people on their own
territory. Hence, one congregation brings visitors into their
building, not through something foreign-sounding like a "narthex,"
but through a coffee and espresso bar.
In this and dozens of other ways, innovative congregations are
reaching out to the unchurched. Kent Hunter names such forms of
ministry the Jesus Enterprise. In this helpful book he tells the
stories of churches where this kind of outreach has become the
norm. More important, he also provides other churches the tools
they need to identify the particular opportunities their context
presents and ways to take advantage of those opportunities to
present the gospel to those most in need of it.
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