Why Make Disciples One-on-One?

Changes in society, religious education, family, and the Church require that what happened organically within thick social/cultural settings of an earlier age (perhaps) now must be done deliberately.
Launching a Small Group Discussion

Before you start asking your small group any of the three types of questions, help the group warm up by planning a launching discussion.
One-Time Conversion or Ongoing Transformation?

As Catholics we sometimes recoil at this kind of talk. Our experience grounds us in a more communal, sacramental, and gradual process of initiation rites and sanctification, beginning at baptism and maturing throughout life.
An Exercise in Noticing

If you don’t really know someone, how can you truly love him/her? Do you know his/her answers to the following questions? Perhaps take them to prayer.
Preparing Good Questions

Good questions are a critical ingredient in all great discussions. Jesus himself was the master questioner, often responding to questions with deeper questions.
EC Impact: Warren

“EC training has helped me to be more comfortable and confident in sharing my faith in an organic way.”
EC Impact: Kristen

“These one-on-ones helped me to recognize Jesus’ love for me for the first time and taught me that someone cared enough to share this with me and teach me.”
EC Impact: Colleen

“God is truly reaching more in this work.”
How Small Groups Build a Movement
Small groups work because they are rooted in relationships, not in organizational structures or edifices. Within the relationships people want and need, they find what they didn’t know they lacked: Jesus and the Church.
Evangelizing through Prayer, Fasting, and Almsgiving

Here are our top 5 evangelical Lenten resolutions for 2017, directly from EC Staff: