Backyard BBQ Evangelism: True Story Of Outside-The-Church-Walls Ministry

We have to start letting go of some of our long-held ideas about church and ministry. Especially when it comes to evangelism and outreach.But it’s not always easy.[ictt-tweet-blockquote]Don't force people to do ministry your way. Help them with the ministry they're already passionate about.[/ictt-tweet-blockquote]Here’s a true story that illustrates that reality. (I’ve kept some details vague, and adjusted others slightly to protect the identity of the pastor and church in question.)

The Backyard BBQ

Recently, I was talking with a small church pastor who was upset at his deacons."I have five deacons," he told me. "And they help out everywhere but at the church. One of them builds houses for Habitat for Humanity, the others volunteer at the senior center, the homeless shelter, the food bank, and as an assistant coach for the high school football team. That last one makes me especially angry.""Why is that?” I asked.“Well, we have no youth group. On youth nights my wife and I set everything up, then we hope someone shows up. Usually it’s only two or three kids. Sometimes none. But this deacon spends a lot of time with teenagers outside the church. In fact, he has a huge backyard, so two or three times a year he has all the football players over for a BBQ. Since all the players go, all the cheerleaders go, and soon half the high school is at his house, but our church doesn’t have a youth group.”“It sounds to me like your church does have a youth group,” I told him. “It’s in his backyard.""You don't get what I'm saying," the pastor responded. "Those kids don't come to our church, just to his backyard BBQs."“No, I heard you," I responded, as gently as I could. "But you're not getting what I'm saying. You need to call him and volunteer to help out at the next BBQ. Then, when you show up, don’t bring a big ol’ Bible or wear your clerical collar. It’s a small town. They all know who you are. Help flip burgers and toss a ball around with the kids.“After a couple parties, you can earn their trust. If you do, some day one of the kids will pull you aside to tell you his parents are about to get a divorce, or that she's been cutting her arms with a razor blade, and you’re the only pastor they know that they can tell these things to.“Your deacon’s BBQs are giving you a chance to meet and minister to kids who would never come to a church. Don’t get upset about it, be there for it!“And while you’re at it, call the other deacons and ask them how your church can help them build houses, feed the poor and minister to seniors. Don't force people to do ministry your way. Help them with the ministry they're already passionate about.”backyard bbq

Go Where They Are

Unfortunately, this pastor never got what I was trying to say. For him, the only ministry that counted was what happened inside the walls of the church.I wish this was an isolated incident. But we all know it’s not. There are far too many pastors and churches that don’t consider ministry valid unless it happens within the walls of their church building.But Jesus never called us to bring people into a church building. He told us to go to them. On the streets, in the marketplaces and at backyard BBQs.If we’re going to reach the next generation, we’ll need to get much better at doing ministry from the church, not just in the church.Keep your eyes and ears open to what’s already happening in your community through the members of your church. Then step up to help.

Regaining Trust

For generations, local churches were the center of many communities. They were places of hope and welcome. They aren’t seen that way anymore.We’ve lost people’s trust. Through scandal after scandal and one political fight after another, we’ve so diluted the pure, simple gospel message that more and more people no longer have the church on their list of possible places to find help, healing, or answers to their questions.In addition to keeping our doors open, we need to look for places where their doors are open so we can meet them on their turf. Start new relationships and nurture friendships where they are, instead of insisting they do it our way.We need to earn their trust again. But it’s not about getting them to trust an institution. Quite frankly, I don’t care if people who have been burned by the institutional church ever trust it again. They need to know they can trust Jesus. And his followers.For a lot of people, that will only happen outside the church’s physical and institutional walls, not inside them.That’s okay. In fact, it’s more than okay. It may force us to rediscover our true mission and purpose again.After all, outside the walls is where Jesus did his best work. Why should his followers be any different?This article first appeared on ChristianityToday.com. Used in its entirety by permission of author to republish.

8 Questions For Churches at a Crossroads

Did Billy Joel Have It Right? Has It Always Been a Matter of Trust?

It would be easy for me to say that I’m constantly searching for the will of God.But I would only be fooling myself. And if I told another person that, it would be a lie.The truth is that God has a very long leash. He lets me gravitate towards my will all the time. Unfortunately, I can hang out in that my-will-world way too long. Fortunately, God loves me enough to bring me back to his reality, and sometimes even ask me, “So, you had fun and then you hurt bad. Wha-dyah learn?”Left to my own devices, I could easily veer off the path and into tangent city, where God’s will seems to be in some far off land, a land that I vaguely remember how to get back to.Now it came to pass after these things that God tested Abraham, and said to him, "Abraham!" And he said, "Here I am." Then He said, "Take now your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell you. (Genesis 22:1-2)“Our difficulty is not that we don’t know God’s will,” I read in the Experiencing God Day by Day devotional for May 20. “Our discomfort comes from the fact that we do know His will, but we do not want to do it!"

When God first spoke to Abraham, His commands were straightforward. “Go to a land I will show you” (Gen. 12:1). Then God led Abraham through a number of tests over the years. Abraham learned patience as he waited on God’s promise of a son, which took twenty-five years to be fulfilled. Abraham learned to trust God through battles with kings and through the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. The pinnacle of Abraham’s walk of faith was when God asked him to sacrifice the one thing that meant more to him than anything else. Abraham’s previous obedience indicated that he would have quickly and decisively sacrificed anything else God asked of him, but was he prepared for this? God did not ask Abraham to make such a significant sacrifice at the beginning of their relationship. This came more than thirty years after Abraham began walking with God.

Abraham’s previous obedience. Wow! So, even though it appears that Abraham led a life that was pretty much in God’s will for a lot of the time, he still needed to be tested. So, God, waiting for Abraham to walk out his faith slowly, didn’t simply zap him with another item on the big to-do list until he was ready.

As the Father progressively reveals His ways to you in your Christian pilgrimage, you, like Abraham, will develop a deeper level of trust in Him. When you first became a Christian, your Master’s instructions were probably fundamental, such as being baptized or changing your lifestyle. But as you learn to trust Him more deeply, He will develop your character to match bigger tests, and with the greater test will come a greater love for God and knowledge of His ways. Are you ready for God’s next revelation?

The 3-day Together LA conference with 50 speakers present to share their experiences as Christian leaders serving the city was more than two years ago. This website was launched just three months ago. As editor of TogetherLA.net I often want to go beyond my Master’s fundamental instructions. But in the end, when I wander my way it most often feels like I’m forcing something to happen. When I don’t simply lean into Jesus… you know, turn the keys over to Him, things have a tendency to go sour.How did Abraham do it? Sounds like it’s a matter of trust.And that, my friends, is not just a Billy Joel song. However, Joel had it right in that song as far as the topic of relationships and trust. As nearly as I can tell, he was referring only to earthly relationships. But there is a greater relationship we must put our all into. That one is our relationship with God.Yes, it’s a matter of trust.For we walk by faith, not by sight. (II Corinthians 5:7)