Teens today face a host of
challenges that were unimaginable to past generations, especially as the
culture now even calls into question what it means to be male or female. But
one Colorado evangelist is not deterred and is empowering tens of thousands of them
with the Gospel.
"Henry David Thoreau said that
'for every thousand hacking at the leaves of evil, one strikes at the
root,'" Greg Stier, founder of Dare 2 Share, told The Christian Post.
"What I tell people is that it really is a sin issue, and we need to
attack that and the only thing that can attack that, just as in our lives, is
the Gospel of Christ."
"And so if I meet somebody who
is transgender, I share the Gospel. I don't deal with the transgender
issue" right then, he said.
Stier believes Christians oftentimes
"do it backwards" by dealing with and trying to fix the issues in
trying to "win our culture back." But it can't be done through
"polemic debate or through politics," he stressed.
"The way we are going to win
our culture back is we're going reach the next generation, and we're going to
disciple the next generation, give them a renewed heart and renewed mind,"
he said. "And then, guess what? That will filter down into the moral fiber
of our nation and it will filter into our politics."
And that's what Stier has been doing
for the last 25 years through Dare 2 Share. Thus far, through training events
and resources for youth ministers, Dare 2 Share has empowered over a million
teens to be bold in their faith.
Stier, who resides in Denver, started
the youth organization with the belief that teenagers are powerful and can
change the world. They just need to be unleashed.
Stier was raised in a troubled home
in a rough urban environment, never knew his biological father, and had an
extremely dysfunctional family. But a preacher from the Denver suburbs reached
out to one of his toughest uncles and after that his family "fell like
dominoes" in coming to Christ. Stier got involved with the youth ministry
led by this pastor who saw it as essential to raise up teenagers to share the
Gospel.
"They believed that teens came
to Christ quicker and shared the Gospel faster," he recalled, noting that
even as a young teenager he felt equipped enough to navigate any Gospel
question.
"And it wasn't because I was exceptional,
it was because we were all equipped and trained and inspired by this pastor and
our youth leaders to share the Gospel now."
That same vision and passion to
evangelize would give birth to Dare 2 Share.
Because he saw his local community transformed by the Gospel he dared to dream
bigger, believing that this could happen all over the nation and the world.
Through an event called Dare 2 Share
LIVE and dozens of churches across the U.S. have already signed up to host
local gatherings.
The day-long event will include
local worship bands alongside recording artists Tenth Avenue North and rapper
Propaganda.
In each city, teens will have
outreach to do that day — including collecting food and sharing their
faith with social media utilities — and will learn how to open discussion
about their faith. Dare 2 Share LIVE will allow the organization to reach more
teens in one day than they typically can in a whole year. They are aiming for
50,000 teens to begin at least 300,000 faith conversations, all while serving
their communities in a practical way.
Already, Dare 2 Share LIVE is being
saturated in prayer and Stier is asking as many people as possible to join in
intercession "that God would strike the nation with revival on September
23." He has his clock set for 9:23 a.m. and 9:23 p.m. every day to pray.
"What I tell people is that we
can't manufacture revival but we can put in the plumbing and ask God to turn on
the faucet," he said.
Stier's efforts to raise up youth to
minister has several precedents in American religious history.
He explained to CP that the First
Great Awakening with George Whitefield and John Wesley, the Second Great
Awakening with D.L. Moody, the YMCA, and The Salvation Army were all heavily
comprised of young people.
In fact, young people being on the
edge of great moves of God goes back even farther.
Top of Form
"If you look at Jesus, I'm
convinced that most of his disciples were teenagers," Stier said.
In Matthew 17:24-27, Peter, Jesus,
and his disciples all go on to Capernaum but only Peter and Jesus pay the
temple tax.
"If you cross-reference that
with Exodus 30:14, the temple tax was for those 20 years old and older. So if
I'm reading that right, Jesus was a youth leader with one adult sponsor."
And once empowered by the Holy
Spirit, that group of young people were unstoppable, he said, a theme he
unpacks in his book Gospelize Your Youth Ministry.
When Stier speaks with postmodern
teenagers who do not know Christ they find the Gospel intriguing, especially
when it is framed as a relationship with God and not a dry religion; it is a
love story of God taking our sin upon Himself in Jesus that we might know Him,
he says.
And when people come to the Lord and
the Holy Spirit begins to dwell in them, they are regenerated and He begins a
process of transformation, Stier explained. Followers of Jesus have to allow
time for that process to unfold.
Stier added that it is vitally
important for evangelistic efforts to be coupled with discipleship and the best
person to disciple a new Christian is the one who led him or her to Christ.
"The one that leads them to
Christ is the one who grows them in Christ," he explained.
Yet he believes an even larger shift
needs to take place.
"We've taken the onus of
evangelism and discipleship from the people and we've put it on the
professionals," he said.
"And the work of youth ministry
is evangelism and disciple-making."
The Reformation transformed the
world when the Word of God became more widely accessible and got into the hands
of common people through the Gutenberg printing press, he said,
and another reformation will occur when the work of God gets into the
hands of His people.
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