đ Reading 12.2: Evangelism, Discipleship, Hospitality, and Public Witness in Church Restart
đ Reading 12.2: Evangelism, Discipleship, Hospitality, and Public Witness in Church Restart
Introduction
A legacy church is not fully restarted because worship services are happening again.
A church may have a sermon, songs, coffee, bulletins, a cleaned-up building, and a relaunch Sunday, yet still lack the very thing Jesus commanded: making disciples.
Restarting a church means more than reopening the doors. It means reopening the mission. The church must recover prayer for lost and hurting people, clear gospel witness, warm hospitality, intentional follow-up, and a pathway that helps people grow from first contact into mature discipleship and ministry service.
Many plateaued churches still believe the gospel, but they have stopped speaking it clearly. They still welcome familiar members, but they no longer know how to welcome strangers. They still hold services, but they may not know what happens next for a seeker, new believer, returning member, grieving visitor, young family, or person sensing a call to ministry.
This reading supports Topic 12: Worship, Preaching, Prayer, Evangelism, and Discipleship Restart, especially the need to rebuild evangelism, discipleship, hospitality, and public witness as part of a real church restart.
The goal is not merely to get people back into the building.
The goal is to help people meet Christ, follow Christ, belong to Christâs body, and be sent into Christâs mission.
Key Scripture References
Matthew 28:18â20 â âAll authority has been given to me in heaven and on earth. Go, and make disciples of all nationsâŠâ
Acts 1:8 â âBut you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you. You will be witnesses to meâŠâ
Acts 2:42â47 â The early believers devoted themselves to teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread, prayer, generosity, worship, and public witness.
Romans 10:14â15 â âHow then will they call on him in whom they have not believed?â
1 Peter 3:15 â âAlways be ready to give an answer to everyone who asks you a reason concerning the hope that is in youâŠâ
Colossians 4:5â6 â âWalk in wisdom toward those who are outside⊠Let your speech always be with graceâŠâ
Luke 19:10 â âFor the Son of Man came to seek and to save that which was lost.â
John 13:35 â âBy this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.â
Romans 12:13 â âContributing to the needs of the saints; given to hospitality.â
Hebrews 13:2 â âDonât forget to show hospitality to strangersâŠâ
2 Timothy 2:2 â âThe things which you have heard from me among many witnesses, commit the same things to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.â
Ephesians 4:11â12 â Christ gives leaders âfor the perfecting of the saints, to the work of serving, to the building up of the body of Christ.â
Biblical Foundation
The mission of the church comes from the risen Christ.
In Matthew 28:18â20, Jesus commands his followers to make disciples of all nations. The command is not simply, âHold services.â It is not, âKeep the building open.â It is not, âPreserve religious memories.â The command is to make disciplesâbaptizing them and teaching them to observe all that Christ commanded.
In Acts 1:8, Jesus promises the Holy Spirit so his people can be witnesses. A restarting church needs the Spiritâs power, not merely better advertising. Evangelism is not religious salesmanship. It is Spirit-empowered witness to the risen Christ.
In Acts 2:42â47, the early church gives us a picture of gospel community. They devoted themselves to the apostlesâ teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayers. They shared life. They cared for needs. They praised God. They had public favor. The Lord added to them. This is a powerful model for a legacy church. The early church did not separate worship, discipleship, hospitality, generosity, prayer, and witness. These practices worked together.
In Romans 10:14â15, Paul reminds us that people need to hear the good news. A church may be kind, historic, and respected, but if the gospel is never clearly spoken, the churchâs witness becomes vague. People need to hear of Christâs death, resurrection, grace, repentance, faith, forgiveness, and new life.
In 1 Peter 3:15, believers are told to be ready to give a reason for their hope âwith humility and fear.â Christian witness should be clear but not harsh, confident but not arrogant, loving but not vague.
In John 13:35, Jesus teaches that love among disciples becomes public witness. A churchâs testimony is not only its message. It is also its shared life.
A legacy church restarts mission when gospel clarity, disciple-making, hospitality, love, and public trust come together.
Evangelism in a Restarting Church
Evangelism is the clear, gracious witness of the church to the good news of Jesus Christ.
Some plateaued churches have stopped evangelizing because they are afraid of offending people. Others replaced gospel witness with general kindness. Others practiced evangelism in ways that felt pressured or manipulative and now need to learn a more gracious, biblical way.
Healthy evangelism includes several practices.
1. Prayer for Real People
A restarting church should pray for names, not just numbers.
Pray for:
Neighbors
Family members
Former attenders
Funeral families
Wedding couples
Local business owners
First responders
School staff
Young adults
Widows and widowers
New residents
People who have been hurt by church
People who are spiritually curious
People facing grief, crisis, or loneliness
Prayer keeps evangelism from becoming a technique. It reminds the church that people are embodied souls loved by God.
2. Gospel Clarity
The church should be able to explain the gospel simply:
God created us for relationship with him.
Sin has broken our relationship with God, one another, and creation.
Jesus Christ, the Son of God, died for sinners and rose from the dead.
Salvation is by grace through faith in Christ.
Repentance and faith are the response to Godâs grace.
The Holy Spirit gives new life and forms believers as disciples.
The church becomes a community of worship, love, witness, and mission.
A church restart should not assume everyone already knows this.
3. Personal Testimony
Many legacy churches are full of stories. Older saints may have testimonies of Godâs faithfulness through illness, grief, marriage, parenting, war, farming, business, addiction recovery, church conflict, or calling.
Teach members to share their story simply:
âWhat was my life like?â
âHow did Christ meet me?â
âWhat has changed?â
âWhat hope do I now have?â
A testimony does not need to be dramatic to be powerful. Faithfulness over decades can be a profound witness.
4. Respectful Invitation
A restarting church should invite people to worship, Bible study, prayer, meals, coaching ministry, chaplaincy care, weddings, funerals, micro churches, and service opportunities.
But invitations should not pressure people.
A simple phrase may be:
âWe would be honored to have you join us as we seek Christ together.â
Or:
âIf you ever want to talk about faith, I would be glad to listen and share what Christ has done in my life.â
5. Non-Coercive Witness
A revitalizing church must be especially careful with people who are grieving, sick, lonely, or in crisis. The gospel should be offered with clarity and love, never manipulation.
A funeral family should not feel used. A grieving widow should not feel pressured. A person in crisis should not be treated as a spiritual target.
Christian witness trusts the Holy Spirit.
The church speaks truth, offers hope, serves faithfully, and leaves room for a genuine response.
Discipleship in a Restarting Church
Evangelism without discipleship leaves people unsupported.
Discipleship is the process of helping people follow Jesus in all of life. It includes belief, worship, obedience, prayer, Scripture, character, relationships, service, mission, and leadership formation.
A restarting church should build a simple disciple-making pathway.
Step 1: First Contact
How do people first connect with the church?
This may happen through worship, a funeral, a wedding, chaplaincy care, coaching ministry, a meal, a Bible study, a micro church, a website, or a personal invitation.
Step 2: Welcome
How are people greeted and guided?
A visitor should not have to decode the building, worship practices, childrenâs options, restroom location, or next steps alone.
Step 3: Gospel Conversation
How do seekers hear the gospel clearly?
This may happen through preaching, a newcomer conversation, a short class, a Bible study, or a personal meeting.
Step 4: Prayer and Scripture
How are people helped to begin basic spiritual rhythms?
A new believer or returning believer may need help learning how to pray, read Scripture, and listen to Godâs Word.
Step 5: Worship and Belonging
How are people brought into gathered worship and Christian fellowship?
Belonging should not be reduced to attendance. People need relationships.
Step 6: Baptism and Communion or Ordinance Preparation
How are people guided into visible Christian commitment according to the churchâs tradition?
A person asking about baptism should never be ignored because no process exists.
Step 7: Small Group, Bible Study, or Micro Church
How are people connected relationally?
Disciples grow better when they are known.
Step 8: Service
How do people discover gifts and begin serving?
A disciple is not only a learner. A disciple becomes a servant.
Step 9: Training
How are potential leaders invited into Christian Leaders Institute training?
A legacy church needs trained leaders for worship, care, officiant ministry, chaplaincy, coaching, teaching, and micro church multiplication.
Step 10: Multiplication
How are disciples trained to disciple others?
A restarted church becomes healthy when disciples become disciple-makers and leaders train new leaders.
A pathway does not need to be complicated. It needs to be clear enough that ordinary people can follow it.
Hospitality as Mission
Hospitality is not merely refreshments after worship. Hospitality is the spiritual practice of making room for others in the name of Christ.
Romans 12:13 calls believers to be âgiven to hospitality.â Hebrews 13:2 tells believers not to forget hospitality to strangers. Hospitality is central to church restart because many legacy churches are friendly to insiders but confusing to outsiders.
A church should walk through its building and worship service as though it were visiting for the first time.
Ask:
Can visitors find the entrance?
Are signs clear?
Is the building clean, safe, and welcoming?
Are restrooms easy to find?
Are children and families welcomed safely?
Are older adults and people with disabilities considered?
Is the worship service explained enough for newcomers?
Is insider language reduced or clarified?
Do long-time members make room for new relationships?
Is coffee or table fellowship used for real connection?
Is follow-up respectful and not pushy?
Hospitality is not performance. It is love with practical shape.
A legacy church may already have strong hospitality memories: meals after funerals, potlucks, porch visits, coffee after worship, casseroles, table prayers, and neighborhood care. Those practices can become mission again.
Hospitality says:
âThere is room for you here.â
That message can open hearts.
Public Witness and Trust
Public witness is how the church is known in the community.
A church may be known for faithfulness, kindness, funerals, weddings, worship, service, and prayer. It may also be known for conflict, scandal, gossip, decline, harshness, financial confusion, or irrelevance. A church restart must take public witness seriously.
Public witness includes:
How leaders handle money
How children and vulnerable people are protected
How conflicts are addressed
How visitors are treated
How private information is handled
How weddings and funerals are served
How grief care is offered
How the church speaks online
How the building is maintained
How leaders are trained
How repentance is practiced when wrong has been done
How the church serves people who may never attend
A wounded church must not rush public promotion before rebuilding trust. If there has been scandal, abuse, financial confusion, or leadership harm, the church may need repentance, reporting where required, outside oversight, safety practices, financial transparency, and public humility before asking the community to trust it again.
A rural or pastorless church may rebuild public witness through simple faithfulness: visiting the sick, serving grieving families, training volunteer ministers, opening the building for community care, and speaking the gospel with humility.
Public witness grows when the church becomes known as a people who tell the truth, protect the vulnerable, love neighbors, honor Christ, and serve faithfully.
Organic Humans Integration
Evangelism, discipleship, hospitality, and public witness serve people as whole embodied souls.
People do not come to church as religious consumers only. They come with bodies, memories, wounds, family systems, grief, habits, fears, hopes, and questions. Some carry church hurt. Some carry shame. Some carry loneliness. Some distrust spiritual authority. Some are curious but cautious. Some need friendship before they can ask faith questions.
A restarting church must not treat people as projects, numbers, prospects, or proof of success.
Every person is a living soul before God.
Hospitality honors embodied life through space, food, seating, lighting, sound, accessibility, warmth, safety, and physical presence.
Discipleship honors embodied life through habits, relationships, service, vocation, family life, prayer, Scripture, and character formation.
Evangelism honors embodied life by speaking truth without manipulation.
Public witness honors embodied life by protecting people, telling the truth, and serving with integrity.
A church that sees people as embodied souls will ask:
âHow do we love this person faithfully?â
Not merely:
âHow do we get this person to attend?â
That change matters.
Ministry Sciences Integration
Ministry Sciences helps a church turn mission into practical ministry systems.
A restarting church should examine:
1. Relational Pathways
How does a person move from first contact to belonging?
2. Gospel Communication
Is the gospel spoken clearly in preaching, conversations, classes, and follow-up?
3. Hospitality Systems
Who greets? Who explains? Who follows up? Who notices the person standing alone?
4. Leadership Roles
Who handles visitor follow-up, baptism preparation, new believer care, Bible studies, prayer groups, childrenâs welcome, and ministry training?
5. Safety and Trust
Are children, youth, vulnerable adults, and care ministries protected by appropriate practices?
6. Emotional Climate
Is the church warm, anxious, defensive, hopeful, suspicious, or welcoming?
7. Community Perception
What does the town or neighborhood already believe about the church?
8. Sustainability
Can the church actually maintain the pathway it designs?
9. Training
Are volunteers trained before they are assigned?
10. Mission Alignment
Do worship, preaching, prayer, weddings, funerals, chaplaincy, coaching, micro churches, and discipleship all point toward the same gospel mission?
Ministry Sciences keeps a church from confusing enthusiasm with readiness. It helps the church ask not only, âWhat do we want to do?â but also, âWhat will make this trustworthy and sustainable?â
Legacy Church Application
Rural and Country Churches
A rural church may rebuild evangelism through relationships, meals, visitation, weddings, funerals, local service, and community trust. People may respond less to advertising and more to faithful presence.
Pastorless Churches
A pastorless church still needs a disciple-making pathway. Trained elders, deacons, volunteer ministers, or bivocational leaders can help guide prayer, Bible study, hospitality, and follow-up.
Wounded Churches
A wounded church should not rush evangelistic promotion before rebuilding safety and trust. Public witness must include truth, repentance, and changed practices.
Aging Churches
Older members can become powerful hospitality ministers, prayer partners, grief care visitors, mentors, and disciple-makers. They should not be treated as obstacles to mission.
Plateaued Churches
A plateaued church often needs to recover expectation. Members may need training to invite, welcome, testify, and disciple again.
Underused Buildings
A legacy building can host meals, prayer gatherings, Bible studies, coaching sessions, funeral follow-up, wedding preparation, chaplaincy team training, and micro church gatherings.
The restart is not only Sunday morning. It is the whole church becoming a mission again.
CLI/CLA and Soul Center Application
Christian Leaders Institute can help a restarting church train volunteers, elders, deacons, ministers, chaplains, officiants, coaches, Bible study leaders, and micro church planters. This helps the church move from a few overburdened leaders to a culture of equipped saints.
Christian Leaders Alliance can provide appropriate credentialing, commissioning, ordination, and public recognition pathways for those called into visible ministry roles. This can strengthen trust when leaders serve as officiants, chaplains, coaching ministers, ministers, or church planters.
A Soul Center may also become a local ministry context for discipleship, prayer, coaching, chaplaincy, Bible study, or micro church ministry. This can extend ministry into homes and communities while remaining connected to training, recognition, and accountability.
The course template places Topic 12 within the wider restart process of rebuilding worship, preaching, prayer, evangelism, and discipleship, leading toward a practical worship and discipleship restart planner.
Revival, Evangelism, and Disciple-Making Connection
Revival and mission belong together.
When a church truly returns to Christ, it begins to care again about people who do not know him. When the Holy Spirit renews love for God, he renews love for neighbors. When the gospel becomes precious again, witness becomes more natural.
But revival is not emotional excitement alone.
Biblical renewal bears fruit:
Repentance
Prayer
Holiness
Love
Courage
Compassion
Gospel clarity
Disciple-making
Leadership multiplication
Public integrity
Mission
A restarting church should pray:
âLord, renew us so we may witness faithfully.â
âLord, teach us to welcome the stranger.â
âLord, help us make disciples, not merely gather attenders.â
âLord, raise up trained leaders for this community.â
âLord, let our public witness honor Christ.â
Evangelism invites people to hear the gospel. Hospitality makes room for them. Discipleship forms them. Public witness shows the community that the churchâs message is embodied in love and integrity.
What Helps
Pray for people by name.
Mission becomes personal when the church intercedes for real people.
Teach the gospel clearly.
Do not assume people understand sin, grace, repentance, faith, Christ, and new life.
Train members to share testimony.
Simple stories of Godâs grace can open gospel conversations.
Create a newcomer pathway.
Help visitors know what to do next.
Practice intentional hospitality.
Make the building, language, meals, greetings, and follow-up welcoming.
Develop a discipleship pathway.
Move people from first contact to belonging, growth, service, training, and multiplication.
Use CLI training.
Equip ordinary believers for ministry roles.
Protect public trust.
Be transparent, safe, accountable, and humble.
Serve before asking.
Community trust often grows when the church loves without demanding attention.
Connect care ministries to mission.
Weddings, funerals, coaching, chaplaincy, and micro churches can all serve gospel witness.
What Harms
Counting attendance but not making disciples.
Numbers alone do not prove renewal.
Assuming people know the gospel.
Many people know church words without gospel understanding.
Pressuring vulnerable people.
Evangelism should not manipulate grief, crisis, sickness, or loneliness.
Hospitality only for insiders.
A church can be friendly to itself but cold to newcomers.
No follow-up.
Visitors and new believers need clear next steps.
Public promotion before trust is rebuilt.
A wounded church may need repentance and safety before relaunch.
Training no one.
A disciple-making church must equip people for ministry.
Confusing busyness with mission.
A full calendar is not the same as faithful witness.
Ignoring community perception.
The town may remember wounds the church prefers to forget.
Treating people as projects.
People are embodied souls, not revitalization statistics.
Reflection + Application Questions
How clearly does your church currently communicate the gospel?
Who are ten people or groups your church should begin praying for by name?
What is the next step for a first-time visitor in your church?
What is the next step for a person who wants to know more about Jesus?
What is the next step for a new believer?
What is the next step for someone asking about baptism?
How does your church currently practice hospitality?
What parts of your building, worship, language, or church culture may feel confusing to newcomers?
How can your church train members to share testimony naturally?
What public trust issues may need to be addressed before a restart?
How could CLI help your church train disciple-makers and ministry leaders?
What one practice could your church begin in the next 30 days to strengthen evangelism, discipleship, hospitality, or public witness?
References
The Holy Bible, World English Bible.
Chan, Francis, and Mark Beuving. Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples. David C Cook, 2012.
Coleman, Robert E. The Master Plan of Evangelism. Revell, 1963.
Keller, Timothy. Center Church: Doing Balanced, Gospel-Centered Ministry in Your City. Zondervan, 2012.
Ogden, Greg. Transforming Discipleship: Making Disciples a Few at a Time. InterVarsity Press, 2003.
Pohl, Christine D. Making Room: Recovering Hospitality as a Christian Tradition. Eerdmans, 1999.
Reyenga, Henry. Organic Humans. Christian Leaders Press.
Stetzer, Ed, and Mike Dodson. Comeback Churches. B&H Publishing, 2007.
Thompson, James W. The Church according to Paul: Rediscovering the Community Conformed to Christ. Baker Academic, 2014.
Willard, Dallas. The Great Omission: Reclaiming Jesusâs Essential Teachings on Discipleship. HarperOne, 2006.
Wright, Christopher J. H. The Mission of Godâs People: A Biblical Theology of the Churchâs Mission. Zondervan, 2010.