Evangelism requires commitmentâeven if it means holding church under a tree
Posted: 1/30/08
| Youth who have never fit in at church are drawn to Ron Evans' Church Under a Tree in a Plano park. |
Evangelism requires commitment–
even if it means holding church under a tree
By Loni Fancher
Texas Baptist Communications
ROCKWALL—Commitment is the key to a fruitful ministry, said Ron Evans. He should know. He’s persistently followed God’s calling to break through barriers and reach a group of disenfranchised young people as pastor of Plano’s Church Under the Tree.
During Super Summer in 2006, the youth pastor of Brown Street Baptist Fellowship in Wylie felt God calling him to reach out to unchurched and disenfranchised youth.
Shortly after, he was drawn to Haggard Park in Plano, where teenagers and young adults from all over the Dallas area gather to hang out. Many of them come from broken homes, battle substance-abuse issues or are sexually promiscuous.
![]() |
| The gathering meets on Friday nights and Sunday afternoons. |
Later that summer, Evans and his three teenage daughters took a guitar, Bible and their Labrador puppy with them to the park. They worked their way through the crowd, claimed a picnic table and began singing praise songs, hoping to draw people into conversation. In the end, the puppy was the draw.
Evans and his family put down the guitar and spent the next six weeks building relationships with the young people.
“You’ve got to get in their heart,” Evans said during Engage, a Baptist General Convention of Texas-sponsored conference on evangelism. “You’ve got to become their friend. It’s relationship ministry, and that’s all it is.”
They still hang out every Friday night, but they also started meeting more formally on Sunday afternoons. They gather for lunch and transition into a time of prayer and preaching. In the beginning, attendance was lackluster at best. One or two scouts were sent to see if Evans and his group were authentic, but the more they proved themselves, the greater the response.
On a typical Sunday in recent months, dozens of young people will gather in the park for worship.
The group has become a church of its own, but a church of members who never would darken the doorstep of a traditional house of worship.
On any given Sunday afternoon, people ages 15 to 50, ranging from wealthy families to homeless youths and drug addicts gather to hear about God.
![]() |
“They come here because they’ve been to a church or they’ve met church people. And when they came in all dressed in black with tattoos and piercing, no one would talk to them, and no one acted like they cared about them. But they come here because we did,” Evans said.
Evans and his group have challenged the Church Under the Tree family to seek depth in their faith. The group shares a prayer journal they call “The Book of Life,” which is passed around each Sunday for people to share or update prayer requests or what God is teaching them. Evans scans it into his computer and e-mails a file of the updated pages to supporters each week.
Accountability groups have started on Thursday nights and Saturday mornings. Evans hopes similar groups will multiply throughout the Dallas area.
“What we’re praying for are small groups that meet all over the Metroplex, and then we get together on Sunday afternoons,” Evans said.
Evans is quick to attribute the success of Church Under the Tree to God. He is just trying to do ministry the way Jesus did, by going to the places where people already are gathering.
“One hundred percent commitment to the students and to God’s word—that’s the only combination that accomplishes anything,” he said.




