Creating a culture of evangelism doesn’t happen by accident. It requires a churchwide commitment to move from conversation into action. Leading your church to become one where evangelism is a part of its DNA is a process. After examining where your church is and embracing a plan for action, your church members must engage. Here we begin to focus on what it looks like for our church members to live out the gospel in their everyday lives.
This is where evangelism becomes personal. Every believer has a role to play, and that starts with five key words: perspective, prayer, practice, preaching, and persistence. Each one fuels a lifestyle of engagement with the lost. When these five areas take root in a believer’s life, the result is a church that lives on mission, confident in the gospel and courageous in sharing it.
Let’s take a look at all five.
1. Perspective: Understanding the Goal and Our Role
The first step in engagement is helping people have the right perspective, to understand both the goal and our role in evangelism.
The goal is simple but profound: to see as many people as possible come to saving faith in Jesus Christ. But we must remember, God is the one who saves. Salvation is His work alone. Our role is to faithfully proclaim the gospel and make Christ known to everyone, everywhere.
Paul captures this truth clearly in 2 Corinthians 5:18–20, reminding us that God is the Reconciler, and we are the messengers: “Everything is from God, who has reconciled us to himself through Christ and has given us the ministry of reconciliation. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, since God is making his appeal through us.”
We don’t bring about salvation. We simply bear the message of reconciliation. That’s why perspective matters so deeply. When believers understand that the results belong to God, it removes the pressure to “close the deal” and instead renews confidence in the gospel itself.
As leaders, when we help our people see that their responsibility is proclamation and not persuasion, it strengthens their courage to share their faith. The right perspective gives believers freedom to step forward in obedience and trust God with the outcome.
2. Prayer: Fuel for Evangelistic Engagement
Once our perspective is clear, the next step in engagement is prayer. If you’re a pastor or ministry leader, don’t skip over this step. Teaching your church to pray for the lost and for one another is foundational to creating a culture of evangelism. Prayer fuels everything that follows.
There are several reasons this is so important:
- Lostness is everywhere. The need for the gospel surrounds us daily.
- Salvation is God’s work. Only He can change hearts.
- We need God to work in us—to give compassion and courage.
- We need boldness. Even Paul asked others to pray that he would speak the gospel fearlessly.
One practical way to help your people begin is to start a prayer journal. Encourage them to write down names of those who don’t yet know Jesus. They can include family members, coworkers, neighbors, and even strangers they’ve met briefly. When believers pray for lost people by name, something changes in their own hearts. God uses that time in prayer to give courage and to open doors for conversation.
Encourage your church to pray for one another in their evangelism efforts. Have them add the names of fellow believers to their prayer lists. Suggest that they reach out through a quick text, call, or email to say, “I prayed for you today, that you’d have boldness to share the gospel.” Those small connections build an environment of encouragement and accountability.
If your church is looking for a practical tool to start this rhythm, point them to the Who’s Your One 30-Day Prayer Guide. When perspective and prayer come together, hearts are aligned with God’s mission, and churches are ready to engage the world with the hope of the gospel.
3. Practice: Getting Started and Finishing Well
When it comes to evangelism, practice has a dual meaning. We practice evangelism so we’ll be better prepared to put evangelism into practice. One of the most nerve-racking moments for a believer is when they realize, “This is the moment I’ve been praying for—it’s time to tell someone about Jesus.”
Often, the hardest part is simply getting started. That’s why it’s vital to remind people they’re not alone. God is always present, empowering His witnesses and guiding their words. Our confidence doesn’t rest in ourselves but in the presence of God and the power of the gospel, which Paul declared as “the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes” (Rom. 1:16).
One way to help believers practice evangelism is by encouraging them to build genuine relationships with those who don’t know Christ. Gospel conversations flow more naturally when they’re rooted in care and connection. Simple questions can open doors for gospel conversations.
Questions like these can bring dialogue:
- Can I ask you a spiritual question?
- Has anyone ever told you that Jesus loves you?
- Do you know how to get to heaven?
- Would it be okay if I shared my story with you?
- Can I tell you what I’ve learned about Jesus?
Ultimately, we must provide people with safe spaces to practice sharing the gospel and learning how to finish conversations well. Role-playing in small groups or evangelism training helps believers grow in gospel fluency, so when real opportunities come, they’re ready. Pastors can model this in their own preaching by consistently offering a gospel invitation. Each time a pastor invites people to repent and believe, it not only reaches the lost but also trains believers to do the same in their daily lives.
4. Preaching: Keeping Evangelism in Front of Your People
Preaching and teaching play a critical role in creating a culture of evangelism. Every pastor and ministry leader has the opportunity and responsibility to weave evangelism into the regular rhythm of the church’s life. That doesn’t mean every sermon must focus solely on evangelism, but every sermon can include instruction, inspiration, or illustration that points people toward sharing their faith. Include evangelism stories in your messages. Lead your congregation in praying for the lost by name. Ask your small group and Sunday school leaders to do the same in their weekly gatherings. And, just as Paul asked the Ephesian church to pray for his boldness, publicly pray that your church family will be bold in proclaiming the gospel.
Another way to keep evangelism front and center is to preach directly on evangelistic themes. Teach on the role of the Holy Spirit in witnessing, the power of the gospel, and the call for every believer to be a witness. Some pastors even preach a sermon series designed to help their people overcome fear in evangelism. One pastor titled his series “Hard Knocks,” addressing how to start conversations about Jesus when it feels difficult. You can also use corporate worship gatherings to demonstrate evangelism in action. For example, one Sunday we distributed New Testaments to everyone, marked verses together that tell the story of salvation, and challenged everyone to give their copy away and share the gospel with someone that week. These experiences remind believers that evangelism isn’t just a message; it’s a mission.
Don’t overlook the power of small groups as evangelism training environments. Teaching a focused series on evangelism within adult and student groups creates space for discussion, practice, and encouragement. In these smaller settings, believers can ask questions, share stories, and build confidence in their ability to share the gospel. When pastors and leaders consistently preach, teach, and model evangelism across every ministry setting, it reinforces the truth that every believer is called and equipped to be a witness for Christ.
5. Persistence: Staying Faithful in the Work
The final piece of engagement is persistence. Evangelism isn’t a one-time emphasis. It’s a lifelong commitment. As pastors and leaders, we can’t give up on leading, teaching, praying, and proclaiming the importance of evangelism, even when progress feels slow. We must remain faithful to encourage and equip our people to share the gospel, knowing that God is always at work, even when we can’t see it.
There will be moments when conversations fall flat, when someone rejects the message, or when believers grow discouraged. But that’s when persistence matters most. Keep urging your people to pray, witness, and trust God with the results. Remind them that they may not know how God is stirring someone’s heart or preparing them to respond later. Faithful sowing today may produce fruit tomorrow or even years down the road.
Creating a culture of evangelism takes time, repetition, and patience. It’s a continual process, one that leaders must revisit and reinforce again and again. As you remain steadfast, God will use your persistence to build confidence in your people and to expand His kingdom. My prayer is that God would give you boldness and endurance as you lead your church to proclaim the gospel to a world in need.
Creating a culture of evangelism doesn’t happen overnight. It’s built through steady faithfulness in perspective, prayer, practice, preaching, and persistence. When believers understand their role as gospel messengers, depend on God through prayer, and practice sharing their faith with confidence, the church becomes a movement of everyday missionaries. As pastors and leaders preach and model evangelism consistently, that passion begins to take root in the hearts of their people. And when we stay persistent—refusing to give up even when results seem slow—we join God in His ongoing work of reconciliation. Together, we can lead our churches to live on mission until everyone, everywhere, has heard the good news of Jesus.
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This article was adapted from a session of the “Creating a Culture of Evangelism” online training course. To learn more or take the course, click here. Also available in Spanish.
Published November 20, 2025