This article examines the diminishing effectiveness of pulpit-centered evangelism within contemporary Christian contexts marked by changing communication patterns, technological expansion, and growing religious plurality. While proclamation from the pulpit has historically functioned as the primary mode of evangelistic engagement, recent scholarship suggests that this model alone is increasingly insufficient for sustaining meaningful faith transmission (Clark Koukl, 2009). Drawing on theological literature, survey-informed reflections, and contextual analysis, this study argues for participatory training as a critical framework for renewing evangelistic practice beyond traditional sermon-based approaches. The article develops a conceptual model of participatory evangelism that emphasizes shared responsibility among clergy and laity, relational communication, and formation rooted in Scripture, prayer, ethical conduct, and discipleship (Paul VI, 1975; Newman, 2004). Rather than relying on physical experimental methods, the study synthesizes existing evangelism literature, pastoral documents, virtual engagement practices, and structured survey insights to assess prevailing assumptions about evangelistic responsibility within a local Christian community context. These insights reveal persistent tensions between clerical centralization and lay participation, alongside a strong expressed desire for training that equips believers for everyday witness. Building on this analysis, the article proposes a participatory training framework that integrates preparatory formation, interactive learning strategies, and reflective evaluation. This framework is presented as adaptable across similar ecclesial and cultural settings, particularly where socio-economic pressures, limited time resources, and evolving authority structures shape religious participation. The study concludes that participatory evangelism training offers a resilient and context-sensitive approach to evangelization, fostering theological clarity, communicative confidence, and communal ownership of mission. By moving beyond the pulpit without abandoning proclamation, the article contributes to ongoing international conversations on evangelism, formation, and the future of Christian witness in rapidly changing social environments. Keywords: Participatory evangelism, lay formation, pulpit-centered preaching, relational witness, ecclesial leadership, evangelism training, contemporary Christian ministry
Onyebuchi Igwe Thomas (Tue,) studied this question.