Evangelization Strategy in a Diagram

The image below is basically saying: evangelization works best when we treat it like a patient journey, not a one-time pitch.

Read it like a flower you move around: people often begin in the lighter petals—pre-trust and trust—where the main need isn’t more information, but a relationship that feels safe and believable.

From there, trust naturally opens the door to curiosity, then openness, and eventually active seeking (when someone starts asking real questions and looking for God on purpose). That’s the “front end” of evangelization—sometimes called pre-evangelization or first proclamation—and it’s where many efforts succeed or fail: if trust isn’t there, very little else sticks.

When a person reaches a “first conversion,” the diagram shows the work isn’t finished; it shifts into forming disciples: beginning, growing, and finally missionary disciple—someone who can help others make the same journey. The big idea is written in the center ring: “accompaniment and prayer through all stages.”

In other words, the strategy isn’t a script; it’s patient friendship, clear witness, and steady prayer—because different people are in different places, and the goal is to move them forward one step at a time, until discipleship becomes something they live and share.




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