Evangelism. The very word makes palms sweat and images spin: buttonholing in a city park, knocking on neighborhood doors, being conscripted into evangelistic campaigns, to say nothing of that annoying religious neighbor or coworker. We have met the evangelists—and they are not us. If evangelism is the welcome door to faith, why does it grate open on rusting hinges?Mark Teasdale has met these challenges and more. They come in the shape of students in his evangelism class. In Evangelism for Non-Evangelists he sympathizes with the perceptions and discomfort we bring to evangelism. But he also opens up a nonthreatening space for us to weigh what we believe the evangel of evangelism—the good news!—to be. And he helps us navigate our way toward expressing the gospel in a manner true to what we believe, authentic to who we are, and attractive and even compelling to others. For pastors, seminarians, church leaders, and lay people, here is a refreshing, practical, and companionable look at evangelism. It might even chart a course toward your own authentic evangelism.
Inhoudsopgave
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Evangelists Are Taught, Not Born
2. Finding a Better Starting Point
3. Looking Inward to Look Outward
4. Putting the Good News in Context
5. Fashioning New Wineskins for the Old, Old Story
6. Evangelizing Yourself, Evangelizing the World
Appendix: What I Wish I Knew When I Started Seminary
Postscript: How to Use this Book
Subject Index
Over de auteur
Mark R. Teasdale (Ph D, Southern Methodist University) is E. Stanley Jones Associate Professor of Evangelism at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston, IL. He is ordained in the United Methodist Church and is passionate about helping students reclaim the practice of evangelism on a personal, practical level. He is the author of Methodist Evangelism, American Salvation: The Home Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church.