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101 Ideas for Family Evangelism
"The
Christian home is . . . by far the most powerful evangelizing agency
in the world. . . . By their gracious influence, Christian homes
win more converts than all the preachers put together. Give us enough
of them, and the world would soon be a Christian world . . ."
(David and Vera Mace). Here are suggestions for presenting the gospel
to those inside and outside our homes.
Personal
Preparation
Study carefully such Bible verses as Eph. 2:4-8, 13; 2 Cor.
5:21; Rom. 5:12-20; 8:1 which convey the good news of salvation
in Christ.
Reflect on the love of God. What human instruments have profoundly
influenced you in your understanding of God's love? How is your
understanding of God's love growing?
Prayerfully develop your personal testimony of faith and
assurance of salvation in Christ. Writing your testimony may help
you to think it through.
Make a personal list of Bible verses which speak to you of
God's love. Study and memorize these for sharing with your personal
testimony.
Sharing
Faith in Marriage
Share your testimony with your spouse. Listen to your spouse's
testimony. How has the gospel influenced your relationship?
Give evidence of God's grace at work in your life by your
empathy with your spouse, in sharing thoughts and inner feelings
together.
Take time to communicate about the meaning of your faith
with your spouse. How does your faith affect the way you handle
anger, resolve conflict, deal with depression?
Endeavor to uplift and encourage your spouse with affirmation
and appropriate compliments.
Worship and pray together regularly.
Winning
Ways with Unbelieving Spouses
Be a source of emotional and spiritual encouragement for
your non-believing spouse, striving not to be judgmental of his/her
behavior, but offering compliments and affirmation regularly.
Provide an example of your belief in God's grace by living
your Adventist Christianity before your spouse honestly. Be candid
about weaknesses and faults, recognizing these as areas where Christian
growth is needed.
Communicate with your spouse about the forgiveness and continual
renewal you are finding in Christ. Let everything you have learned
about relationships in Christ make your experience in marriage better.
Make extra efforts to identify and emphasize the things you
and your spouse have in common. Seek points of agreement.
Enter willingly and happily into every possible aspect of
your spouse's life which you can without compromising principle.
Discover together new activities and friends to replace those
that may have been left behind because of your beliefs, realizing
that the strength of your love bond together is the greatest asset
you have in winning your loved one for Christ.
As you develop acquaintances at church, invite men to befriend
your husband, or women your wife.
Invite your spouse to participate in activities of church life:
social activities, health seminars, family life events, retreats,
camp-outs, or church building/maintenance programs.
Encourage the participation of your spouse by recruiting
and enlisting his or her expertise in some aspect of church life.
Evangelistic
Parenting
Prepare a list of changes you would like to make to give
a more evangelistic approach to your parenting.
Make the gospel attractive to your children by your positive
relationships with them, by smiling often, by entering into your
child's feelings.
Sing songs to your children which tell of God's love.
Pray with each of your children, rehearsing God's love and
your love for your child in your prayer.
Tell your child in simple terms about God's love as described
in His Word.
Ask forgiveness of your child for something you have done
which brought pain to him or her.
Show unconditional love and acceptance of your child. Avoid
conveying the message, "I will love you if . . . ."
Plan ways for giving each of your children special opportunities
to make their decisions to trust in Christ personally.
Relatives
Pray regularly that relatives will accept the gospel.
Work together as a family to prepare a list of specific efforts
your family can make to lead unsaved relatives to Christ.
Plan ways for making contact with each relative for whom
the family is prayingby phone, by letter, by personal visit
to give, first of all, an expression of your love and to share encouragement.
Friends
and Neighbors
During family worship relate what special opportunities for
gospel sharing have occurred for each one during the dayin
your family, at work, at school, in the neighborhood.
Discuss as a family the prospective spiritual interest of
individuals in work, neighborhood, school, family circles.
Start a prayer list on which are the names of your 10 closest
neighbors.
During family worship talk about special ways of witnessing
to the individuals on the prayer list.
Encourage your children to do little errands of love and
mercy for those less fortunate than themselves.
Cooperate with your child in some task of Christian service
to which their abilities, strengths and interests are suited and
from which they will gain success and joy.
Assist your older children and young people to form missionary
bands with their playmates and schoolmates for some task of Christian
help work.
Spiritual
Gifts
Spend some family worship periods reading and studying the
Bible texts on spiritual giftsRom. 12; 1 Cor. 12, 13; Eph.
4. Discuss: How do these texts help us to identify our spiritual
gifts?
Read biographies of Seventh-day Adventist pioneers or other
notable Christian leaders whose spirit of service and spiritual
gifts will inspire and encourage your family.
Think together, pray about and discover what each family
member's talents and abilities are. Thank God together for these
gifts and abilities of each one.
The gifts that God has given your children may differ from
yours as parents. Invite other Adventist Christian relatives or
church members who may have spiritual gifts and abilities more nearly
like those of your children to share their experiences to help provide
models and examples for your children.
Express appreciation in a special way for the unique talents,
gifts and abilities of each one in your family, affirming the contribution
each one makes to the smooth running of the family.
Think and pray together about how the special abilities of
father, mother, sister, brother or other household member could
be used by God in the home, in the church, in missionary work in
the community.
Recognizing personal talents and abilities, let each family
member prepare a simple plan of one or two specific things he or
she could do to witness for God. Small children may draw pictures
depicting their contributions.
Ask family members to share on a regular basis how God has
prompted them to use their talents and abilities in their everyday
activities.
A Family
Missionary Project
Plan to involve the family's various talents in a special
family missionary project. Get suggestions from church leadership
on projects that might be helped by your family's involvement.
Tailor the family's involvement to accommodate various ages
of family members, keeping an appropriate balance between the family's
personal needs and the need to share with others. Strive toward
an experience that has some measurable results and whereby all can
feel a sense of success and fulfillment.
Read the Bible or gospel literature to an elderly or visually
impaired person.
Pay a friendship visit to a shut-in.
Do grocery shopping for a shut-in.
Write a letter of encouragement to a bereaved, grieving or
discouraged family.
Visit someone who is sick.
Provide a no-interest loan to a financially struggling family.
Bake a loaf of bread for a homeless person.
Prepare sandwiches for distribution to homeless individuals.
Offer a food basket regularly to one or more families in
need.
Do grass-mowing, leaf-raking or other yard work for an elderly
person.
Provide once-a-week child care for a single parent.
Distribute gospel literature home to home regularly in a
specific part of town.
Sing or play musical instruments at a nursing home or retirement
center.
Give a few hours of service on occasion to families needing
assistance in child care, home remodeling, financial management.
Provide foster child care for a young person in need.
Give new or used clothing to persons in need or donate such
items to an appropriate distribution center.
Go Ingathering as a family.
Address invitations to evangelistic meetings.
Enroll neighbors in a Bible correspondence course.
Distribute invitations to evangelistic meetings.
Invite younger family members to share toys with children
of needy families.
Use the family car to transport individuals to evangelistic
meetings.
Invite friends to a health fair or cooking school.
Invite one or two of your children's friends to church and
a meal on Sabbath. Provide transportation if needed.
Have a "help and bless" brainstorming session with
your family. What act of Christian helpfulness might your family
perform right now for some acquaintance in your extended family,
your church, your neighborhood, your community?
If there are aspects to the missionary project which can
be done during family worship, such as preparing mailings, developing
Bible studies, then plan for some special worship time which will
incorporate these, giving family members time to discuss their feelings
about the missionary activity.
Family Stewardship
Plan a special gift for the current thirteenth Sabbath mission
offering.
Plan a family investment project. Ask your Sabbath School
investment leader or Sabbath School superintendent for more information
and suggestions on how your family can become involved in this plan
of raising money for missions.
Establish a "Lord's Fund" as part of the family
budget in addition to regular tithes and offerings. This money may
be kept in the family treasury and distributed when family members
feel especially impressed by God to assist in some unusual missionary
project or some other special need that comes to their attention.
In addition to regular family tithes, offerings and church
commitments, pray about missionary work with which your family might
become sacrificially involved.
The Art
of Evangelistic Visiting
Ask an individual successful in visitation to take your family,
or members of your family, on a visitation excursion into your neighborhood.
Allow this individual to coach you in appropriate manners, conversation
and conduct of the visit.
To provide an opportunity to become acquainted and begin
to cultivate friendship, take a "Welcome to the Neighborhood"
gift to a family just moving in.
Take a "Congratulations on your new baby" gift
to a family with a newborn.
Take a "Congratulations on your wedding" gift to
a newly wedded couple.
Take an appropriate expression of sympathy to a family who
has experienced some loss.
Invite your neighbors to church programs, i.e. Vacation Bible
School, holiday celebrations, socials, etc., so you will be prepared
to invite them to evangelistic meetings and worship services.
Take a gift of food to a neighbor. Allow your children to
have a part in its preparation and its presentation.
Give gifts that are tailored to perceived interests and tastes
of your neighbors, perhaps a potted plant to a neighbor who likes
plants, a stamp for a stamp collector, a recipe for one who enjoys
cooking.
Give gifts that will interest and delight your neighbor's
children. Christian periodicals with stories, storybooks, or tapes,
for example, are gifts that will be appreciated by both adults and
children.
Ask your neighbors for a favor. Show them that you need their
friendship and help as a family. This will place you on common ground
with them and open the doors for fellowship.
When visiting homes of friends or acquaintances offer a humble
prayer as you part company. Your prayer will be a powerful witness
to your belief in God, His care, and the truth in which you believe.
Invite other families, acquaintances of the family or those
with whom you would like to become better acquainted, to your home
for family worship. Make the service brief, interesting and full
of life. Sing songs that can be easily sung and pray short, simple
prayers. Choose cassettes for listening or readings tailored to
the age and interest level of those present.
Invite others to your home for a meal. Offer friendship and
modeling about temperance and healthful living through the meal
which is served.
Invite others to join you in a family outing or recreational
activity that is typical of the wholesome times your family spends
together.
Reaching
Out to the World
Learn the names and locations of missionaries from your locale
or region that are serving in missions. Pray daily as a family for
these missionaries.
Obtain addresses and write regular letters of encouragement
to foreign missionaries.
Take special interest in the projects of the 13th Sabbath
Mission offering. Learn more from libraries, magazines, etc. about
the country, the people and needs of the area where one of these
specific projects is located. Pray for this project and plan as
a family to support your prayers with a sacrificial offering on
13th Sabbath.
Discover from your pastor or church leadership where there
are areas unentered by Seventh-day Adventist missions in your country
or some other country. Learn all you can about this area and its
people. Pray that doors for entrance to this people will be opened.
Contact your pastor or church leadership about how to make
contact with a pen pal from a foreign country. Have family members
write to pen pals appropriate to their ages and share with the family
what they learn about life in another country.
Short terms of service are available for adults and young
people in a growing number of areas in the world. The doors to service
in these areas are open through the General Conference, through
educational institutions and private organizations. Inquire of your
pastor or church leadership about the possibilities for family members
to experience some mission service. If possible, plan to participate
in such a missionary experience.
As the Adventist message circles the globe, more and more
workers are needed in foreign fields in a wide variety of professions
and occupations. Consult with your pastor or church leadership,
pray about and consider as a family whether some of your family
members might serve the Lord in full-time mission service.
Pick a block in your town where there are no Adventists living
and consider this your "unentered" area in which to make
missionary visits, distribute literature, etc., to win individuals
for Christ.
Make a study as a family of one of the main world religions
outside Christianity. Discuss creative ways Adventists might reach
these groups with the good news about Jesus. What about their religious
beliefs might make them open or closed to such good news?
Should it be necessary to relocate as a family, pray about
and consider moving to a section of the city, country or region
where Seventh-day Adventists are few or non-existent so as to provide
a witness there.
As children are growing in the family discuss the blessings
and importance of missionary service either at home or abroad and
the possibility of settling themselves as adults in parts of the
country that need the witnessing presence of Seventh-day Adventists.
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