Christian evangelism

Christian evangelism is what happens when Christians do evangelism — that is, when Christians attempt to tell others about their religion, with the goal of converting those people to the "good news" of their God and faith.

Individual Christians who view this as an important part of their faith, may often not understand how to respect boundaries, and believe that schools, government, and the workplace are all appropriate settings to teach about their religion. While there is no set method for evangelism, people's attempts to share their "joy" can range from simply inviting people to their church and letting the listener decide on their own, to filling the convert with guilt or fear, to outright threats of loss of life or limb, in a "convert by the sword" method historically used on New World and African peoples.

Evangelical methods
Jesus said to his disciples, just before his death, to go out into the masses, two-by-two, to bring the good word of the Kingdom of Heaven; he also said that if someone doesn't want to listen, do not waste your time in their home. Sadly, not all Christian evangelicals remember that last part.

Techniques for the lay person to evangelize are similar for the Christian religion as for a favorite sports-team or for a favorite TV show. Talk about it, all the time, to anyone willing to listen (or as Kirk Cameron describes it, "learn to circumvent, or go around, a person's intellect" ). Highlight the good stuff: "Jesus loves you", "When you are sad, God's love will help you", and "God grants your wishes prayers", and skip over the less happy stuff: "God killed not only all evil humans, but all living things everywhere, when he was pissy", What will happen to you in the afterlife if you don't accept Jesus' love, or "God told his worshiper to kill his own child, then at the very last second, said 'Oh, just kidding, dude!'" (This is like reminding people how cool it is for vampires to sparkle, but glossing over things like quality of writing.) In the modern world, more often than not, evangelism consists of a post on Facebook saying "God is great." By and large, most Christians who feel a need to evangelize are not overly intrusive or rude.

However, some evangelists have an arrogant approach summed up as: "Christianity, as understood by my personal denomination, is the only right and true path for any human; eternal hell awaits all sinners who do not follow my view." Out of this position of superiority often comes an emphasis on spiritual salvation rather than actually helping others. These people have no problem pushing their views on school children, attaching a "salvation before food" condition at a community food bank, or either spending a significant amount of money to run a radio station almost no one except other converts (and maybe the occasional heathen skeptic looking for lulz) listens to or printing pamphlets and/or Bibles that quite likely will end up as litter or in the recycling bin instead of in, for example, food for people in poverty. They have no problem driving through populous areas with trucks carrying images of dismembered fetuses saying "God hates abortion." Nor, apparently, do they have any problem picketing the funerals of sinners in order to convey their godly message.

Likewise, it's also particularly common to proselytize with threats as these being the End Times using as proof current events as wars or natural disasters, and claiming how all those who do not convert will go to Hell for all eternity unless of course you accept Jesus as Lord and Savior, who was given by God in sacrifice as a show of his love for us so we could be saved, others about them having been former Catholics/Atheists/whatever until they discovered the true Jesus™, and them not being religious. All of this of course mixed in with Biblical verses and songs designed to be repetitive and get stuck in the head.

The latter approach to proselytization is considered, however, to be a tactic designed much more about both reinforcing the proselytizer's beliefs and the membership to his/her group than converting others given that most people who are presented such kind of message will either react poorly geting annoyed, even angry, or will simply ignore it and the people sent in such missions will feel only people who share their beliefs understand them, strengthening their belong-ship and giving reasons not to leave.

Common assumptions
Evangelists may assume that:
 * The potential victim recruit convert has a life - some sort of vague individual personal existence.
 * The potential victim recruit convert has a soul - an even vaguer concept, but one that sounds grandiose. (Generally only one soul per person, though.)
 * The potential victim recruit convert has a potential afterlife. More and more abstruse... (Optional for consumer-goods marketing evangelism.)
 * The potential victim recruit convert has individual responsibility for the whole life/soul/afterlife complex.

Looking for offensive insults and disrespectfulosity? - you found it.

Evangelical Trumpism
Christianity has died in the hands of Evangelicals. Evangelicalism ceased being a religious faith tradition following Jesus’ teachings concerning justice for the betterment of humanity when it made a Faustian bargain for the sake of political influence.

In the United States, Christian evangelicals are closely identified as faithful supporters of the failed presidency of Donald Trump. According to polls, white evangelical voters voted 81% for Trump in the 2020 U.S. presidential election. Evangelicals have fallen for all of the conspiracy theories promoted by right wing politicians and media personalities, and they have spread QAnon bullshit. In the fallout of the 2021 U.S. Capitol riot, some evangelicals are bemoaning this deal with the devil and lamenting that when people are asked what an evangelical is, the answer is likely to be: "Oh, those are those people who are really super supportive of the president no matter what he does." A 2021 survey by the conservative American Enterprise Institute showed that 60 percent of respondents dispute the results of the election and that 27 percent of white evangelicals believe in the widely debunked Qanon conspiracy theory.

Evangelical Trumpism is supported by many so-called Christian televangelist organizations. On January 6, 2021, The Victory Channel, an American television station owned by televangelist Kenneth Copeland, broadcast an episode of a show called "Flashpoint" that featured a wide array of right wing kooks, nut jobs and liars all promoting the conspiracy theory that the 2021 U.S. Capitol riot was infiltrated by paid Antifa supporters dressed in MAGA gear. The program included statements advocating the conspiracy theory from a policeman's lineup of right wing douchebags, including Mike Lindell, Michele Bachmann, and Franklin Graham.