
Transforming Evangelism 6.2 – Wesleyan Way of Evangelism
Rev. Dr. Hal Knight, co-author of “Transforming Evangelism – The Wesleyan Way of Sharing Faith”, discusses concepts from chapters 6 & 7 of the book. In this video, he engages with members of The Foundation for Evangelism board about how our handling of conflict affects our witness. This video can be used along with the book – discussion questions are at the end of Chapter 6.
Transforming Evangelism 6.1 – Wesleyan Way of Evangelism
Rev. Dr. Hal Knight, co-author of “Transforming Evangelism – The Wesleyan Way of Sharing Faith”, discusses concepts from chapters 6 & 7 of the book. In this video, he reviews the foundations of a Wesleyan Way of Evangelism. This video can be used along with the book – discussion questions are at the end of Chapter 6.
North Carolina Conference of the UMC Honors Denman Award Winners
Evangelism is happening in the North Carolina Conference of The United Methodist Church…
This year’s Harry Denman Evangelism Award winners are proving that evangelism is a word and practice being reclaimed and lived out in our churches. Each year, the North Carolina Conference and conferences around the world award a pastor, layperson, and youth for outstanding leadership in evangelism. In 2023, the Evangelism and Discipleship Committee in the North Carolina Conference received and reviewed almost thirty applications for these categories.
Three winners were recognized during their church services on August 27. Our outstanding 2023 evangelists are Ms. Gabriela (Gabi) Loazia Muñoz (youth), Mr. Daewon Goldenbaum-Yang (laity), and Rev. Wesley Neal (pastor).

Ms. Gabriela (Gabi) Loazia Muñoz
Our 2023 youth winner is a Murfreesboro UMC teen who understands the value of hospitality. Gabi invites at least one school friend to every conference event. As her nominator wrote, Gabi is reaching out to her Spanish-speaking friends to let them know they can find a church home in Murfreesboro and meet other UM youth in spaces like Pilgrimage. Gabi encourages others to reconnect with God in new ways by sharing her faith and developing friendships.

Mr. Daewon Goldenbaum-Yang
Daewon Goldenbaum-Yang has expanded St. James UMC’s outreach to neighboring East Carolina University (ECU) students, creating a welcoming space for them to gather. Knowing that college students love free meals, he initiated a “Free Food Monday” so they could meet regularly. The church’s efforts reached ECU’s international students, which has resulted in rich community gatherings, people sharing food from their countries, and new attendees at their Sunday worship services.

Rev. Wesley Neal
Wes Neal, the pastor at Asbury UMC, is part of the Central Durham Mission Cooperative, three congregations in ministry together who worship with one another quarterly. In recent years, Wes has increased Asbury’s community presence by connecting with neighbors. He plans contemplative prayer services open to the community, regular food distributions, and events that introduce neighbors to Asbury, such as a Children’s Day festival. Wes has also connected with nearby Duke University and the NC School of Science and Mathematics students. This year, Wes and Asbury welcomed an NCSSM student into their church family. After attending Asbury for two years, he chose to be baptized and was celebrated with a luncheon, surrounded by his new church family.
The NC Conference continues to show the light and life of Jesus in eastern North Carolina communities. We are grateful for our award winners and the way they continue to live into this vision. Be on the lookout for true evangelists in your church and nominate them in early 2024.
Video of the Denman Award Winners
–Evangelism and Discipleship Committee, North Carolina Conference of the United Methodist Church
This story was originally published at https://nccumc.org/christian-formation/2023/09/harry-denman-evangelism-award-winners-recognized/. It has bee re-posted with permission.
Transforming Evangelism 5 – Telling Our Story and God’s Story
Rev. Dr. Hal Knight, co-author of “Transforming Evangelism – The Wesleyan Way of Sharing Faith”, discusses concepts from the book. In this video, he talks to FFE trustees about the idea of telling our story and God’s story from chapter 5 of the book. This video can be used along with the book – discussion questions are at the end of Chapter 5.
Transforming Evangelism 4 – Knowing God
Rev. Dr. Hal Knight, co-author of “Transforming Evangelism – The Wesleyan Way of Sharing Faith”, discusses concepts from the book. In this video, he talks about the importance of Knowing God from Chapter 4 of the book. This video can be used along with the book – discussion questions are at the end of Chapter 4.
Pray for our 2023 Local Church Grant Recipients

Earlier this year, The Foundation for Evangelism announced that 50 churches and organizations were chosen to receive an Equipping the Local Church grant. These $5,000, $7,500 and $10,000 micro-grants were awarded small and medium sized Wesleyan tradition* churches and church-based organizations from 9 denominations across 24 states. Of course obtaining the grant funding is just one step in launching these experiments and initiatives to share the Gospel, tell their faith stories, and invite others into a relationship with Jesus alongside a local faith community.
We encourage you to pray for one of these grant recipients each day – that their ministries have a positive impact on their communities and that they open doors to invite their neighbors into life-transforming relationship with Jesus Christ!
Abundant Life African Methodist Episcopal Church – Dallas, Texas
This new urban church plant in an area with a high level of poverty will create a new, welcoming, non-threatening place for members to invite family, friends and neighbors to experience the love of Christ in a non-traditional way. To be held monthly on a Sunday afternoon, the gathering will include food, music, open mic time and encourage faith conversations with facilitation from laity and clergy. There will also be a team of laity and clergy that follow up with attendees.
Agape Fellowship Church of the Nazarene – New Igeria, Louisiana
Project RUSH is an initiative to encourage and teach Black fathers to experience both restoration and unification within their own lives and that of their sons. Project RUSH’s strategic initiative is to bridge the relationship gap between approximately 50 fathers and sons. Funds will provide reading materials, support activities (father and son events/fishing/etc.) meals, advertising to be distributed to churches, gyms, veteran centers, and other places where fathers may not be connected to any church community.
Aldersgate United Methodist Church – Olathe, Kansas
The program will offer leadership development and a visual and performing arts program for K-12 students, where older students will be mentored to work alongside adult leaders. The program will begin with a 2-week summer project and may continue with specific classes based on interest. The congregation has laity experienced in teaching and the arts and will also draw on community connection to build relationship with families of participants from less resourced areas.
Aldersgate United Methodist Church – Augusta, Georgia
An initiative to reach out to those parenting on their own through a quarterly blessing day, parenting seminars, a Fresh Expressions group, parent’s night out and invitation to other existing offerings for kids/youth. Laity, pastors and staff already trained in this type of ministry will plan and lead the initiative, while the broader congregation will be invited to support the ministry and its participants.
Bad Axe Church of the Nazarene – Bad Axe, Michigan
This initiative aims to come alongside individuals and families to help share the healing love of Christ through the Celebrate Recovery program. This program will not just be limited to substance abuse, but it will be open to any addiction that someone might be experiencing.
Bethel Korean United Methodist Church – Santa Clara, California
This small, multigenerational church, primarily comprised of Korean immigrants, will develop a counseling ministry to the surrounding Asian-American community to help combat mental health stigma, anxiety and depression. A Christian licensed therapist will help train congregation members as lay counselors, courses will be open to the community to reach those who may not otherwise attend a church service, and the lay-led care sessions will provide for the psychological and spiritual needs of those in their community through informed, compassionate counseling care.
Bremen United Methodist Church – Bremen, Ohio
This initiative is to start a local coffee shop in the village of Bremen. The coffee shop will serve as a gathering place for coffee, conversation, and activities such as: trivia night, karaoke night, youth group night, children’s story hour, bible studies and Sunday night worship. The concept is to provide a community meeting space that is family friendly and youth oriented.
Brighton Rock African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church – Portsmouth, Virginia
The pastor and laity will draw on experience and education in social work to provide children’s Sunday morning and After School programs in a holistic environment that promotes education, spiritual growth, self-esteem, leadership skills, and values to guide students throughout their lives. The program will include tutoring, mentoring and opportunities for learning about and growing in their faith.
Canadian Hills Church of the Nazarene – Yukon, Oklahoma
This initiative is to equip people to live out their faith, collectively, in a daily manner. In September they launched a series of panel conversations with their community called Walk Well With. Through these panels, the congregation is gaining awareness about issues in their community and learning how to walk with people experiencing such things as domestic violence, lack of affordable housing, and poverty as part of their discipleship.
Ceili Community (UMC) – Wheatland, Oklahoma
Cell Community is a new church start seeking to be ability inclusive. ABLE is a program that brings together multiple partners to create space for meaningful employment and life skills for individuals with disabilities. ABLE will serve as an entry point for the families served to connect with the church and their discipleship programs.
Committee on Native American Ministry of the Minnesota Annual Conference of the UMC
This ministry, based at the denomination’s conference level, will empower and equip congregations in evangelistic outreach to their indigenous brothers and sisters, offering the Good News of Jesus Christ in a way that respects their cultural identity and seeks to heal past the harm done by early colonial missionaries. The training/coaching team will be comprised of Native and non-Native pastors and laity who have a heart for Native American people and are very knowledgeable regarding this specialized and contextualized way of sharing salvation through love, healing, hope, and Joy in Jesus Christ.
Community Cup Church of the Nazarene – Kankakee, Illinois
This initiative is for the development of a family resource center, specifically offering parenting classes and support groups to better nurture, love, and educate families. Both pastors and lay leaders will serve in the development of the center. Part of the education in the center will teach biblical principles for parenting.
Converted Heart Christian Methodist Episcopal Church – Silver Spring, Maryland
This initiative is to create a worship service within a homeless shelter. During the services, individuals will have the opportunity to give real-time testimonies in their faith development. Those testimonies will provide further opportunities to develop training surround that subject matter.
Cooks Hill Community Church (Free Methodist) – Centralia, Washington
Laundry Church is a gathering for fellowship, worship, teaching and discipleship designed to reach those who might never enter a church – sharing the love of Jesus and building relationships by doing laundry together, sharing a meal, and having regular times to check-in. Joint Pastor and Lay-led with volunteers including counselors, community service workers healthcare workers, and those with experience serving the un-housed.
Cross Keys United Methodist Sunday School – Williamstown, New Jersey
This initiative expands on Next Generation (Youth) ministries, focusing on children ages four through twelve. The applicants will hold four community events for children. Each two-hour event will introduce kids to Christ in fun ways and provide parents with a safe place and engaging activities for their children.
CrossRoads Cowboy Church Natural Dam (Church of the Nazarene) – Natural Dam, Arkansas
An established “Cowboy Church” will form an outreach ministry that provides training for rodeo contestants of all ages. Participants, many of which are afraid to walk into a traditional style church, will hear the gospel message from coaches, church members, and other participants, and they will be invited to attend the non-traditional worship services and programs of the church.
Daniel Payne Outreach Ministries (AMEC) – Nashville, Tennessee
A nonprofit partnered to a local church will begin a community garden on church land that will provide produce free of charge to the surrounding community, be an educational opportunity to encourage healthy eating, and will provide hot meals to community members. The placement of the garden and involvement of the congregation will allow them to meet community members, help meet their need for food, while also sharing love and hospitality in the name of Jesus.
Deland Church of the Nazarene – Deland, Florida
This initiative is for a middle school after school program that focuses on a critical age group at elevated risk for substance use, crime, negative peer influence, and even human trafficking. The goal is to create a faith-based program that encourages youth to develop a relationship with Jesus Christ as their Savior and Lord. This ministry will incorporate music, drama, fun, and faith into a daily chapel and biblical study connection time as part of the after-school programming.
DRC-Rwandan PAC of the South Austin Church of the Nazarene – Austin, Texas
This initiative is for a new parent-affiliated congregation serving the Swahili-Kinyarwanda immigrant population of Austin: for worship, second language assistance, and job search assistance. The goal is for this group to be fully integrated as part of the South Austin Church which is already bilingual in English and Spanish.
Easter Hill United Methodist Church – Richmond, California
This historically black church will invite families that participate in Freedom School, a summer program they sponsor, to a series of events that complement the summer program and provide an introduction to the church’s ministries. The events will be planned with collaboration between church and summer program staff with input from the Freedom School participants to help build relationships with one another and with Jesus Christ.
Ebenezer Church of the Nazarene – Aiken, South Carolina
This initiative provides hygiene opportunities to those experiencing homelessness, via a mobile “shower trailer.” For the shower ministry, the pastor and laity will arrange a schedule for the Shower Saturdays of who is volunteering. They will monitor the trailer and provide clean socks, underwear and a food bag to those who come.
Embrace – A Center for Community (UMC) – Waynesboro, Virginia
The Table Salt initiative nurtures innovative, collaborative community-based worship communities by bringing together diverse and often un-served/under-served groups to encounter the living God, be nourished for service alongside Christ, and be empowered by the Holy Spirit to nourish others. As a church plant, Embrace converted a former congregational facility into a mission outpost where congregations and community agencies extend their reach to at-risk/marginalized neighbors. They are now expanding to include the “dinner church” model for worship
First United Methodist Church – Johnson City, Tennessee
This church is committed to be in ministry with their community’s children and families, where most live in poverty or are people of color. Pre-COVID, the youth ministry sought to meet basic needs and build relationships and participation grew from 4 to 200. This grant will expand their midweek program to Sunday mornings through transportation, breakfast, and integration into the congregation’s worship life.
Fleming Island United Methodist Church – Fleming Island, Florida
A Special Needs children’s ministry will help this church connect with a specific group from their community that is often overlooked. Using the experience and passion of church members who have family members or work with people with special needs, they will develop a unique space for these children and their families to be part of worship, the existing children’s program, and spiritual growth ministries.
Forest Chapel United Methodist Church – Cincinnati, Ohio
This is an evangelistic ministry with children from the neighboring elementary school, ages 5 through 12. These children face the challenges of drugs, gangs, violence, high school pregnancy, and failure to complete high school and continue to post-secondary education. Prayer will be the foundation on which this ministry is built and relationships with children develop. Scripture will be heard read and sung. Kids will have fun as they discover that the story in the Bible is their story.
Four Winds NYC (Wesleyan Church) – New York, New York
Four Winds NYC is a Cafe church that will serve the neighbors in East Village NYC. The applicants plan to utilize their space to provide jobs, legal immigration services and education, mentoring and tutoring, and also be a regular workshop for arts and music professionals.
Goodsell United Methodist Church – West Point, Georgia
Suppin’ in the Word is a new ministry designed to intentionally share GOD through the WORD using scripture, stories, study, a meal fellowship and mentorship. The goal is to seed a positive change in the lives of participants and reach unchurched persons in a non-traditional way and at a non-traditional time by increasing spiritual awareness.
Grace United Methodist Church – Jackson, Tennessee
This initiative is to create the Community Table, a place for learning, creativity, and fellowship. The applicants plan to focus their congregational gifts on hospitality and service to open the church as a community center. They will host a community garden (strengthening an existing relationship with the local soup kitchen and the school next door), offer art and wellness classes, host parents’ nights out, and organize alcohol-free music events.
Hartsville District Cooperative Parish – Hartsville, South Carolina
This cooperative parish includes churches which are historically black and Anglo. They are starting a dinner church to welcome people in the community to a meal and informal conversation around a scriptural topic with the goal of building relationships.
Hemenway United Methodist Church – Evanston, Illinois
This initiative offers young leaders a Jesus-centered approach to Christian teaching grounded in the tenets of Wesleyan heritage. This is a mentorship program where youth can continue to explore their spirituality, discover their gifts, and be given leadership opportunities within the life of the church. The hope is that they will experience the goodness of God in their lives and continue leading in the future.
Heritage United Methodist Church – Madison, Alabama
“Every Child is Worth Celebrating” is the motto of this initiative that provides birthday gifts and parties to children whose caregivers may not be able to afford to do so. The church has cultivated partnerships at local schools and with foster care system non-profits in their community. Through Christian relationship, they hope to bring the Gospel to the children and caregivers, and to the larger community through invitation to become involved.
Midtown Church (Assembly of God) – Kansas City, Missouri
This initiative will launch a coffee shop in a post-Christian community, geared toward sharing the love of our hospitable God. Employees will be hired with intention toward discipleship and mission, including managers who build relationships that reveal the nature of God, and baristas aging out of the foster care system. After 6 months of getting to know the community and building partnerships, they will launch a worship gathering
Mosaic Church of Detroit (Wesleyan Church) – Detroit, Michigan
This initiative is for a food truck ministry. The food truck ministry will train vulnerable youth, return citizens, and persons in recovery in Culinary Arts and entrepreneurship. This ministry will encourage relationship building that leads to discipleship and spiritual formation.
Mosaic United Methodist Church – Wilmington, North Carolina
This initiative aims to commission artists to learn about and paint a Saint. The artists will be sourced from three main groups: Young artists (k-12th grade), College students, and the local artist co-op. As the paintings are completed, invitations will be given to the artist and any surviving family members to a worship service.
Mount Hermon United Methodist Church – Mount Jackson, Virginia
This initiative is to build an outdoor, natural playground based on Biblical themes. Each activity would tie to a story from the Bible, e.g., a tunnel called “Jonah’s Whale.” This area would also include seating and tables for scheduled gatherings. This initiative will be a missional field as the church schedules regular playdates and Bible studies in this outdoor environment.
Mount Hope United Methodist Church – Lansing, Michigan
This multicultural city church will engage middle and high school teens in a music program that helps them learn about Jesus and tell their faith stories in a youth-led worship service and discipleship ministry. With shared leadership from pastors and laity, the program will help youth of the church understand what faith in Christ means. They will be encouraged and mentored in their spiritual development by volunteers in the ministry, and will also have the opportunity to connect with their peers.
Mt. Harmony United Methodist Church – Wellersburg, Pennsylvania
“Taste The Joy: Community Luncheon and Happenings,” is an initiative that offers a shared place to have a free meal, have conversations, make friends, listen to faith stories, and offer support, topics of interest, and show movies that ignite heartfelt discussion, thoughts, doubt, fears and faith. As jobs and people have left this community, there are high levels of isolation and hunger among those who remain, and this initiative will feed hearts and souls.
Mt. Pleasant United Methodist Church – Pittsboro, North Carolina
The Teacher Workday Childcare program is a new offering to the community which will build on the current Parents’ Morning Out program by offering a safe and nurturing Christian environment for children during the Chatham County public school Teacher Workdays. This program will address a need for community families, allowing members to use their gifts and experience, further build relationships, and provide fun and educational activities that will nurture mind, body, and spirit.
Rebirth Christian Methodist Episcopal Church – Florissant, Missouri
Pastors and laity (of 2 churches) have been planning for this initiative for several years to prepare lay volunteers to share their faith, provide a “Grill ‘n Greet” cookout event to get to know neighbors and share Jesus with them, provide a summer camp for children to promote their spiritual and academic growth, as well as a 6-month intensive effort to serve the homeless with physical resources and a witness to God’s love and saving message.
Russell Memorial Christian Methodist Episcopal Church – Durham, North Carolina
The initiative will provide a weekly Sunday morning breakfast and teaching time for low-income, unhoused or formerly incarcerated individuals from nearby public housing. A planned block party in the public housing areas will provide physical necessities while inviting the community to a fun, approachable worship time. The project will also start an after-school care program for children in partnership with community organizations, pastors, teachers, counselors and other community leaders.
Smith Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church – Anniston, Alabama
This initiative uses qualified and newly trained congregants to provide two weekend meals to the community as well as other outreach programs. The applicants will continue developing partnerships, and jointly explore grant opportunities throughout the city and neighboring communities, to decrease the number of un-sheltered, and unemployed residents throughout the community.
St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church – Nashville, Tennessee
This STEM program will expose youth (boys and girls) with hands on, experimental learning in science, technology, engineering and math in weekly labs after school. The program will reinforce the message of Jesus Christ by witnessing through facilitator actions to the students that Jesus Christ is the way, the truth and the light.
Tehachapi Valley United Methodist Church – Tehachapi, California
This initiative serves adults with special needs by providing a weekly spiritually-led socialization program. Church members, retired special education teachers, aids, youth, and young adults volunteer their skills and talents to belonging ministries.
Tempe First United Methodist Church – Tempe, Arizona
This church is personally vested in sharing the Gospel in a new way with persons with developmental disabilities. The grant will enable the church environment to be inclusive enough for the Developmental Disability community to become a regular part of being grounded in God’s story, to share with others in this story, to be invited in and discipled and to invite others along with them. Leadership and follow-through will include a mix of pastors, staff, and laity, and planning will include persons with and parents of children with developmental disabilities.
The Gathering at Washington Street (UMC) – Petersburg, Virginia
This initiative aims to use a regular monthly meal as a means to grow relationships that lead to faith, transformed lives, and a transformed community. Numerous opportunities are available for laity to join the work in a way that equips them to grow in discipleship. They can pray, sit at a table and converse with people who are eating, cook a meal and/or serve the meal.
The Mosaic Center – Evans, Georgia
This community mission/outreach branch of Mosaic Church Evans has built relationships among residents of a low/no-income apartment building which houses adults with disabilities and complicating factors, such as mental illness or drug addiction, in an economically depressed area. The program will focus on building leadership among the residents, involving laity in the church to help with literacy classes and Bible reading, and will recruit two summer ministry interns (2023) to help identify any unaddressed spiritual issues.
The Way (UMC) – Pace, Florida
An initiative to reach folks in the community through a community soccer league. The aim is to introduce people to Jesus via weekend soccer games led by the church youth director with experience as a pro soccer player.
West Ohio Conference of the UMC
Four Friends’ purpose is to inspire a desire in those listening to join God’s work with those whose lives have been impacted by crime and incarceration. This grant connects formerly incarcerated individuals with local churches where they share their personal testimony of how they came to faith in Christ, have experienced God’s redemptive work, and continue to be transformed by the Gospel. These congregations are encouraged and given resources to begin ministry with justice-involved persons.
Word on the Street (UMC) – Huntersville, North Carolina
This initiative is for a group of dinner churches. These dinner churches provide a weekly meal for over 100 people. The group also shares things like clothing, supplies, and haircuts. Most importantly, after those meals, they gather together for worship. Through this worship, they all share the love of Jesus with each other.
Zion Grove African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church – Eagle Springs, North Carolina
This initiative will train leaders from 6 congregations to build relationships among women through the means of learning to pray, reflection, meditation, and forgiveness. With many churches in a radius of ten miles, churches cannot operate independently without the help of local churches supporting and uplifting one another. The format will be modeled after John Wesley’s class meetings.
Other Ways to Support Local Church Grants
Funding for Equipping the Local Church Grants come from our donors. If you’d like to support a grant, make a donation below:
*We define Wesleyan-tradition as based on the ministry movement begun in the 18th century by John and Charles Wesley
EDIT: A previous version of this story listed 51 grant recipients. That number has been reduced to 50 due to one recipient withdrawing their application.
Innovation Grant to ALA Equips and Supports Pastor-Lay Couple
For Pastor-Lay Couple, Rev. Jeff and Jessica Taylor, The Adventurer’s Leadership Academy (ALA) has been a lifeline for their ministry leading Fresh Expressions of Church. Feeling a call to a different kind of ministry, the couple envisioned a kind of church that could take place in campgrounds or online among people who RV. Their vision gave way to RV Church.
The Adventurer’s Leadership Academy, or ALA, is a multi-conference collaboration in partnership with United Theological Seminary that equips lay, licensed and ordained adventurers to cultivate fresh expressions and other forms of innovative ministry. The Foundation for Evangelism provided an Innovation Grant to launch the laity certification track in 2021. Participants in ALA join a cohort, giving them a community of peers from whom they can learn, be supported and support, along with guided in-context experimentation.
For Jeff and Jessica, their ALA cohort has been a welcome community of encouragement during difficult times in their ministry. Jessica is currently working with the Fresh Expressions Florida team, and Jeff is an ordained elder in the Florida Conference of The United Methodist Church.
Transformed from Despair to Hope – Chris Parsons 2023 HDEA Recipient

In a world often shadowed by despair and darkness, stories of redemption and transformation serve as beacons of hope, reminding us of the remarkable power of faith and the unwavering love of God. One such story is that of Chris Parsons, a 2023 Harry Denman Evangelism Award recipient, whose life has evolved into an extraordinary narrative of innovative evangelism ministry. From a life plagued by addiction, homelessness, and despair, Chris’s remarkable journey exemplifies the profound impact of God’s grace and the limitless potential for change that exists within every heart.
A Life Shaded by Darkness
Chris’s early years were marked by challenges that would have broken many. Growing up in a Christian family, he was introduced to the church but struggled to comprehend the teachings of the Bible. Amidst a battle with bipolar disorder, ADD, and drug addiction, he found himself trapped in a cycle of self-destruction. His relationship with his alcoholic stepfather was abusive, and the wounds from his past drove him deeper into darkness.
Eventually, Chris’s path led him to prison, where a glimmer of light began to shine through the cracks. He started engaging in Bible studies and, in an unexpected turn, discovered a profound connection with God. But life’s trials were far from over, as he coped with the loss of his stepfather just months before his release.
From Humiliation to Healing: A Turning Point
Embracing his newfound faith, Chris embarked on a journey of healing and redemption. He emerged from the shadows of addiction, homelessness, and self-inflicted humiliation, ready to claim his place as a vessel of God’s grace. It was during this time that he encountered a woman who offered him a lifeline, extending a hand of compassion and understanding that touched his heart.
Initially skeptical of her intentions, Chris’s encounter with this woman (Carlie Evano, a member of Mosaic Church in Beavercreek, Ohio) became a pivotal moment of divine intervention. Diagnosed with congestive heart failure and faced with a stark prognosis, he was given an opportunity to reevaluate his life’s trajectory. Through patient guidance, Chris began to recognize the value of breaking down his colossal challenges into manageable pieces, leading him to embrace his calling.
A Journey of Compassion and Redemption
As Chris’s personal transformation deepened, he resolved to extend his hand to others grappling with similar struggles. Volunteering for Whole Truth Ministries Sober Living House marked the inception of his innovative evangelism ministry. Promising God to uplift and support others on their journeys to recovery, Chris’s ministry became a testament to the power of compassion and the potential for redemption in the most unlikely circumstances.
Chris’s ministry extended beyond the confines of a building; it transcended societal boundaries and reached into the lives of those who needed it most. His interactions with the homeless and those ensnared by addiction became testaments to the profound impact of his faith and the resilience of the human spirit.
From Darkness to Light: The Miracles of Transformation
Chris’s remarkable journey was punctuated by divine miracles that defied explanation. His congestive heart failure, once a grim specter of mortality, miraculously vanished, leaving behind a fully functioning heart. Medical professionals were astounded, and Chris’s very existence became a living testament to the boundless possibilities of God’s grace.
One particular encounter further assured Chris’s devotion to evangelistic ministry. Through unwavering dedication and compassion, Chris guided a man caught in the throes of addiction and despair from the precipice of self-destruction to a life of sobriety, employment, and newfound hope. It was through moments like these that Chris’s ministry resonated with the very essence of Christ’s teachings—a love that transcends judgment, a compassion that knows no bounds.
Planting Seeds of Recovery
Chris’s journey continues to evolve, and his vision for the future is one of boundless hope. With a desire to establish his own sober living housing in Ohio, Chris aims to provide a haven for those seeking recovery, free from the stigmatization that often plagues individuals on their path to healing. His vision embodies the principles of compassion, understanding, and genuine connection, a stark departure from the “relapse as recovery” mindset that prevails in Ohio and across America.
The Power of Testimony – Becoming a Beacon of Hope
Chris’s innovative evangelism ministry is a testament to the transformative power of God’s grace and the unwavering dedication of one individual to bring hope despite darkness. His journey from despair to redemption, from humiliation to healing, serves as a powerful reminder that no life is beyond redemption and that every heart holds the potential for change.
Through Whole Truth Ministries Sober Living House, Chris has not only become a beacon of hope but a living testament to the words of Jesus: “No greater love has a man than one who will lay his life down for his friends.” His story stands as an inspiration to us all, a reminder that no matter how dire the circumstances, the light of faith can pierce through the darkness and lead to a life transformed by the power of God’s boundless love. For more information on The Foundation for Evangelism’s Harry Denman Evangelism Award, including a list of award recipients, please visit: https://foundationforevangelism.org/harry-denman-evangelism-award/.
Transforming Evangelism 3 – An Inviting Community
Rev. Dr. Hal Knight, co-author of “Transforming Evangelism – The Wesleyan Way of Sharing Faith”, discusses concepts from chapter 3 of the book. In this video, he talks about how the early Methodist Church was set up to be an inviting community that nurtured and supported new believers. This video can be used along with the book – discussion questions are at the end of Chapter 3.