
Now a modern classic, Michael Green's Evangelism in the Early Church provides a comprehensive look at the  ways the first Christians -- from the  New Testament period up until the  middle of the third century -- worked  to spread the good news to the rest of  the world.
In describing life in  the early church, Green explores  crucial aspects of the evangelistic  task that have direct relevance for  similar work today, including methods,  motives, and strategies. He assesses  the strengths and weaknesses of the  evangelistic approaches used by the  earliest Christians, and he also  considers the obstacles to evangelism,  using outreach to Gentiles and to Jews  as examples of differing contexts for  proclamation. Carefully researched and  frequently quoting primary sources from  the early church, this book will both  show contemporary readers what can be  learned from the past and help renew  their own evangelistic vision.
Michael Green (1930–2019) was one of the best-known British evangelical theologians and preachers of his generation. A scholar with degrees from the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, and Toronto, Green had a passion for evangelism and a rare talent for communicating complex ideas in easy-to-understand language. In 1996, Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey granted Green a Lambeth degree of Doctor of Divinity. ?He led university missions on six continents, pastored St. Aldate's Church Oxford, and introduced innovative approaches in seminary education. He authored more than seventy books across a range of fields, including evangelism, apologetics, biblical commentary, and academic theology.