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evangelism
The Freshman Difference
God has called Campus Crusade for Christ
to be involved in reaching every student on every campus.
The most strategic way we can accomplish that on a regular
basis is by concentrating on reaching the Freshman class.
They should be the focus of our efforts every year.
Reasons for Reaching Freshmen
- Historically Freshmen are the
most open to the gospel. Statistically, 85% of those
who receive Christ do so before the age of 19.
- By reaching every Freshman every
year we will automatically be reaching every other
influence group, since all of them must pass through
the Freshman class. It is the only "target audience"
that every other target audience has been a part of.
All Greeks, athletes, and students leaders, etc. pass
through the Freshman class. It is much easier to reach
them while they are Freshmen and send them into an
affinity group than to try to break into an affinity
group.
- Reaching the Freshman class means
we will also be reaching the entire University after
3-4 years. In other words, if you reached every student
this year with the gospel, who would you have to target
next year to continue reaching the campus? Logically,
just the Freshman and transfer students. Another example:
If you reached everyone on your city block with the
gospel, then two new families move in. Who would you
have to reach in order to continue "reaching your
block?" Just the new families.
- There is a normal growth curve
of one to three years before new Christians begin
to have their own groups, assume leadership and have
an impact. Although there are some exceptions, we
cannot build movements around the exceptions. This
means that if we are targeting Juniors or Seniors,
just about the time they begin to make an impact,
they graduate. A movement happens when what an individual
is doing is multiplied several times in the lives
of those she is working with. This creates momentum.
- Students will hopefully graduate
with a greater depth of maturity and greater breadth
of ministry skill and experience after 4-5 years of
involvement. They will be prepared laborers for the
harvest.
- The Freshman class is a measurable,
definable, reachable, target audience. In many cases,
the Freshmen are required to live on campus and hence
are more accessible through dorm strategies, etc.
On filely every campus, you can obtain a phone or
address list of all the Freshmen. We can continually
be giving other segments of the campus opportunities
to hear and respond to the gospel through various
strategies. But let's aim to personally contact every
Freshman.
- As we concentrate on reaching
Freshmen as our "market niche," we will reach far
more students overall. Freshmen who are won to Christ
will have more years to be involved in evangelism
than a senior. There is a greater possibility of impact.
- Other classes will automatically
be influenced as the Freshman progresses through college.
If we are going to be involved in reaching the campus
for the long-haul we can afford to be methodical and
purposeful in our strategy.
- Freshmen are probably the most
accessible and easy to share with. It is probably
less of a "faith barrier" for a sophomore to share
her faith with a Freshman than a Senior.
- As we reach every Freshman every
year and are faithful in giving everyone the opportunity
for building, training, and sending as they pass through
the ranks, we are, from the human side of things,
insuring all that could be involved are in fact involved.
- We tend to be more motivated
when we can say with integrity that we are giving
every student the opportunity to respond to the gospel.
It gives focus and clarity to what we are trying to
accomplish. We need to be crystal clear with our objectives
and promote creativity in the strategy of fulfilling
the objective.
Implications for Planning
We need to build our campus plans around reaching the
Freshman class. Reaching Freshmen needs to move from
one of many optional strategies to a distinctive on
our campuses. It's not whether we reach them, but how
we will reach them.
Of course we will be reaching others in the process,
but let's make sure that we contact every Freshman.
We will measure our evangelism by this question: "Did
we reach the Freshman class?"
How Do We Do It?
You, the local leader, decide what strategies are the
most effective to reach your campus. Here are a few
ideas that will help:
- Be present during Freshman Orientation
Week. Take your "6 Easy Questions" survey in front
of Freshman Dorms or in the dinner lines.
- Offer programs about relevant topics
in predominately Freshman classes or dorms, or Greek
pledge classes and athletic teams.
- Target your strategy toward Freshman.
- Send a letter to Freshman every week
telling them that someone from Campus Crusade will
be calling them the next week to take the "6 Easy
Questions" survey. Use other creative surveys that
you change every month or so in order to really know
your target audience.
- Mail a copy of Josh's More Than a Carpenter
to every Freshman. This puts something in their hands
that the Holy Spirit can continue to use.
- Distribute Freshman Survival Kits if
you have them. Ask your consultant about availability.
Choose as your "target audiences" the different segments
of the Freshman class. Each leader can be in charge
of reaching one of these "target audiences."
Adapted from a leadership letter by Eric Swanson
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