Using Tracts for Evangelism

During January, I received a series of questions via Ask Evangelism Coach section.

Because of travel engagements in 3 different countries during January, I’m just now responding (though I’ve been thinking about these for a while)

A series of posts this week will focus on sharing these.  It’s my hope that our readers will join in the conversation.

The question for today comes from a mom:

So at youth group tonight, the teacher gave out tracts for the kids, challenging them to give them out this week.

I have a huge problem with this kind of evangelism, especially among our friends who are so openly hostile to the idea of God, let alone the idea that they need to do something to get right with Him.

I think if my daughter gave these tracts to any of our non-believer friends, their moms would hit the roof.

However, I don’t want to squelch her enthusiasm. I’m really praying about how to respond to this.

Do I let her do whatever, and trust God’s sovereignty?

Do I talk her through my philosophy on lifestyle evangelism and encourage her to hand the tracts to total strangers?

Do I encourage her to learn what’s in the tracts so she can be equipped to start or enter into conversations about salvation?

Using Evangelism tracts

I have used tracts and seen them produce fruit.

I have used tracts and seen them turn into litter.

I have used tracts and seen relationships messed up.

I have used tracts and seen people move towards faith in Christ.

Because of a tract . . .

Passing Tracts A young man in my life came to faith because of a tract.

He had overdosed on illegal drugs and fell into a coma.

When he was found, he was hospitalized.  When he awoke, he was arrested for possession and distribution, and then thrown in jail for the second time.

While in prison, he faced the shortcomings in his character and felt the tug of the Holy Spirit to seek after God.  He took a risk and prayed:

“Lord, if you are real and you love me, on the day I get out, have a person on the street give me one of those tracts that tell me how to follow you and that person only needs to say “Jesus loves you.”  I hate tracts and the people who use them because they always condemn me.  I don’t need a sermon, Lord, but I need to know you are real.”

On the day of his release, he was walking home after the bus ride when a stranger on the street gave him a tract, said “Jesus loves you,” and continued on their way.  No sermon.

This young man surrendered his life to Christ after reading the how to section of the tract.

Fitting into the back story

In that man’s story, the witness passing out the tracts likely still has no idea of the fruit that simple action bore.

A ‘chance’ encounter changed a life.  The stranger did not know the back story of God’s advance work in this man’s life.

There are times in my life when I wish I had one.  For example, I wish I had one in Spanish while talking with my tutor.

In the sovereignty of God, tracts can find their way into hands at the right moment.

The character of the witness

From a human view, the impact of a tract is also connected with the character of the person using it.

When a friendship is involved, your character as a person gives or harms the credibility of the information in the tract.

I have a friend who had been given a tract by a Christian friend.  She put  it on her bookshelf instead of throwing it away.  It sat there for months.

Even when she cleaned the bookshelf, she couldn’t throw it away.  Her ongoing friendship with that Christian began to awaken her desire to seek after God.   That person’s character helped (on a natural level) to keep that tract from the garbage can.

Eventually, late one night, she decided to read it.  It was the right word, in the right moment, all in God’s sovereignty.  She surrendered her life to Christ.  Years later, she’s married to a pastor and serving with him in a small rural church.

The tone of the tract

Tracts have a certain tone to them.  Some are

  • Theological broadsides about minor issues like baptism or King James Only Bible.
  • Frightful to scare the hell out of you.
  • Condemning in tone.
  • Poorly written.
  • Formulaic

If you are wanting to use tracts, find some that are suitable in tone to the message you are wanting to communicate.

Using Tracts

The original question above takes a good approach — pray about how to use them.

Tracts are one of many tools to share the gospel, and I’m not sure they are useful certain situations.

Praying about their use allows you to hear God’s voice and find the leading of the Spirit about when and where to use them in your life.

In the case of the original question, the mother and daughter can talk about

  • how God can use tracts in His sovereignty,
  • how they can pray about using them with their friends, and
  • how they can be a tool to learn the gospel.
  • the theology in the tract.
  • finding the right moment to use them or not.

Tracts are a evangelism tool

Tracts may not be the tool for you.  They may not be the right tool in your relationships.  Or perhaps you haven’t found the right one that would work in your relational context.

They may be the right tool for you.  I can use them to pass them out on a bus (which is done frequently where I live), or at a fair.  I use them when I’m in Latin America since I don’t quite have full fluency in Spanish yet.

Update: Came across some more thoughts by Seth McGee.

Join the Conversation

I know some of my readers use tracts.  Share your thoughts or reactions in the comments.  Help me answer this mom’s question.

Related posts:
About EvangelismCoach

Chris wants to help you increase the number of conversations that lead people towards Christ. He has studied evangelism and church growth ever since working for a Billy Graham crusade over 20 years ago, and has led countless training seminars throughout North and South America in many different denominations.

Comments

  1. Chris, I use tracts in my ministry constantly. I have found to be a very effective evangelism tool. Whenever the Intentional Community Evangelism team works in the inner city, we use tracts. We will make sure that the first thing we do is place a tract in a person’s hand. They may not talk to us, but they will often read the tract. In fact, months after we leave a community, the Evangelism Response Center at NAMB will get calls from people in those areas who read the tract and gave their lives to Christ.

    During my regular outreach excursions here in Raleigh, I have had people come to me and ask for my latest tract! Often these are total strangers. I find that people often tuck them in their pocket and read them later. I have seen how tracts have plowed the hard ground and prepared people to hear the message of Christ. I have also seen plenty of them on the ground too. However, the rate of people who read tracts is far greater than the rate of those who throw them away.

    In fact, I started my evangelism ministry using Chick Tracts. (For those not familiar, these are cartoon tracts) I would leave them in different places around my workplace and people would come by – five minutes later – and pick them up. I had a lady in the plant ask me for tracts one time.

    People don’t think they work because they don’t use them.

    Thanks for the post.

  2. Lindsay says:

    I remember Chick tracts, Darrel. Haven’t used any tracts in eons though I have a good library of “Radio Bible Class” booklets which have proved useful as a follow up for conversations.

    Would love some sources for good tracts. I don’t like the kind that scare people into the kingdom.

  3. Tracts seem to be useful in a distribution context with strangers. I’ve not encountered yet a use between friends.

    @Daryll: Your work in the parks on a regular basis seems to provide a natural context.

    @Lindsay: I’ll find some.

    Daryll: Any recommendations for Lindsay’s question?

  4. I tend to use a lot of tracts published by our mission board (NAMB) one of the best is Your Life: A New Beginning. I like it because it has a follow-up Bible study in the back that you can use to begin the process of follow-up if you lead someone to Christ. Unfortunately, when NAMB redesigned it, they made the text smaller which makes it hard for some people on the street to read. I also like the old standby Eternal Life tract from NAMB. It is very cost effective for mass distribution. These are available through Lifeway or the NAMB website.

    I do like some of the tracts published by Living Waters (Ray Comfort) to use as icebreakers. I especially like the giant $100 bills. They work great with teenagers, gang members and drug dealers.

    I have also produced a few tracts myself that are trivia tracts. They focus on a particular holiday like Christmas or New Year. 10 trivia questions of the front and a gospel presentation within the answer key on the back.

    Chris – tracts work very well in the public arena anywhere. Also, you know that they work even better in an international context. 10 people might read 1 tract overseas.

  5. Lindsay says:

    Thanks for the input, Chris and Darrell.

  6. Excellent article. I have given Spanish tracts to Spanish-speaking people because I am not fluent in Spanish. Two great sites for ordering the best gospel tracts that I know of are http://www.livingwaters.com and http://www.customtractsource.com/ I have given gospel tracts to complete strangers, to people I’ve met and talked with before, and also to people I have known for a while. I have also mailed out gospel tracts to people. I myself was prepared for the gospel by a black Pentecostal guy who spoke to me for a week outside of our Commercial Art class in college during breaks, and later I accepted Christ through a Chick comic tract that I found laying around.

  7. Judah says:

    I have a totally different experience: I became a Christian about 4 years ago (am now a licensed minister) and both my family, friends and I (non Christian) find them terribly offensive. NOT FOR THEIR CONTENT but for the infantile way they present such a rich message. They can insult someone’s intelligence more easily than lead them to the Lord. Sure you might be sowing seed, but more often than not nothing grows. People might blame that on the “soil”….what if your seed is bad?

    I think our culture must move away from reducing the gospel message to an “intelligence” test and a fake wallet.

  8. @Judah,

    I think you have a valid criticism of some tracts.

    Infantile could be a good word, or more like overly simplistic is one that comes to mind. I agree – the description is of the presentation, not content.

    I can see it from two sides: An academic analytical thinker might see it too simplistic to answer all the questions they have.

    On the other hand, the user could simply rely on it as a formula, instead of a conversation tool.

    If the user treats it like a formula, then simplistic is where it stays. If the user treats it like the foundation of a monologue, then it still remains simplistic.

    But if it develops into a useful conversation that both sides find helpful, then I think the tract has moved beyond simple and into something more useful.

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