Home Small Group Leaders Articles for Small Group Leaders A 3-Step Plan for Mobilizing Your Small Group Outreach

A 3-Step Plan for Mobilizing Your Small Group Outreach

small group outreach

Small group outreach is essential to the health of your church. If you want your small group to be healthy, contribute to God’s mission in the world, and inspire your group members grow closer to Jesus and help others to do the same — then voice the need to reach others with the Gospel! Get your small group thinking about others and sharing their faith. If you don’t take the lead in cultivating an outward-orientation to your group life then it is unlikely somebody else in the group will.

Let people know at the beginning of your small group that evangelism is an important part of group life that will ensure everyone’s experience in the group is healthy and life-changing. Explain how the community of your small group can be instrumental in helping each one fulfill their calling to be an evangelist and bring biblical truths to life (Acts 2:42-47; 1 Pet 2:9-10; 2 Tim 4:5). Don’t just give permission for your group members to invite friends… tell them you want them to invite their friends. This 3-step plan will help you be a catalyst for small group outreach so that your group can fulfill God’s evangelistic purpose for it gathering together.

  1. Don’t wait — Start right when your small group starts. Much of a group’s operative DNA is created toward the front-end of its life together so it’s a mistake to wait. Building a bond happens best by reaching out, not huddling up. A small group that chooses to be intentionally-evangelistic will experience the life-giving community and impact God intends for it. Evangelism is self-perpetuating, even addictive. Once group members get a taste of it, they tend to want more of it.
  2. Pray beyond your small group — Oftentimes, small group prayer consists of praying for the needs of group members and their families. This is important You, as the small group leader, can also leverage your group’s prayer time as an opportunity to direct people’s hearts outward by praying for the unreached, your neighborhood and larger community. Prayer for God’s future family goes a long way in cultivating a compassionate love for the lost. Additionally, when you’ve had opportunities to share the Gospel with others, tell your small group about them. Don’t be shy — be open and honest about your experience. This will encourage others to look for ways to let Jesus’ light shine through them.
  3. Share your heart — Tell your small group how much lost people matter to God and share your heart for reaching them (Luke 15). Don’t just give them permission to invite friends to your group, tell them how much you want them to include others. It’s never too early or too late to share a vision for small group outreach, set goals together, and applaud people exuberantly when they take even the tiniest of steps to share the love of Christ with people who have yet to know Him.

Once you sense your small group is ready to show God’s love practically to others, encourage them to step out in some of these ways so they can become even more effective as Christ’s ambassador in the world:

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ReidSmith@churchleaders.com'
Reid serves as the Director of Communities of Purpose for the Small Group Network and has been a Pastor of Groups at Christ Fellowship Church in Palm Beach County, FL since 2008. He has been equipping leaders in churches of all sizes and stages of growth for effective disciple-making since 1996. Reid has been a contributing author for Christianity Today’s smallgroups.com, LifeWay’s Ministry Grid, and he developed small group training for the North American Mission Board’s Send Network. One of the ways he expresses his love for helping leaders start and multiply healthy groups throughout their churches is through www.reidsmith.org.