Connect • Build Intentional Relationships with Nonbelievers, Part 2
AI was not used to generate this post.
Do you know the Bible well but have difficulty interacting with the nonbelievers around you? Do you depend on the church staff to not only reach the community but to also teach each person who comes through the door? Now is the time for you to become a Christ-follower not only in your personal walk of faith but also in disciplemaking. Part 1 of this topic covered why we should intentionally connect with nonbelievers. This is part 2 of post #2 in our “Lifestyle Disciplemaking” blog series, adapted from our book, Leap into Lifestyle Disciplemaking. In this article, we will address how to connect with nonbelievers.
Key Takeaways
- This article discusses the importance of loving nonbelievers and the call to intentionally connect with them.
- To begin, focus on ‘Pray and Love’ by praying for nonbelievers and understanding their needs.
- Identify nonbelievers in your life and create intentional relationships to display Jesus’ love.
- Get out of your comfort zone and invite nonbelievers into your life for genuine connections.
- Lifestyle disciplemaking is an ongoing mission that requires dedication and proper mindset from Christians.
Listen to this blog as a similar podcast.
Start with something simple—learning how to love people.
Loving people
God’s love for people given to you
Do you love God? Then, you know that He loves people. That is why He came to earth to live as a human and become the sacrifice that makes it possible for us to have an unbroken relationship with the God who loves us dearly. You can read more about this in my article, “The Gospel: God’s Cure for Our Sin Disease.”
Because our God loves people, He calls us to join Him on mission to reach people who need to know His love. We enter into that mission when we consider what life is really like for those around us who do not know Jesus yet. Throughout this series, we will refer to anyone who has not trusted in Christ yet as a nonbeliever. The Bible describes nonbelievers as living in blindness and darkness. Have you thought about what life is like for the nonbelievers around you? Do you even care?
I read this quote several years ago. It stunned me.
If we are not careful, the busyness of life will lead to intentional blindness. (unknown source)

Have you developed some intentional blindness like the girls in the picture above? I know I have. In fact, I was once ignored while visiting a new group of Christians! Two of the women who were leaders in the group introduced themselves to me then turned away and spent the next five minutes visiting with each other. They left me just sitting alone at the table—a newcomer. Awkward. Intentional blindness. Is that how the nonbelievers in your circle of acquaintances feel?
Who are the nonbelievers in your life?
Who are the nonbelievers in your life? Where do you frequently see them? Start with where you are presently connected: School, gym, sporting events, coffee shop, work, family, neighborhood, retirement center, hair stylist, volunteer activity, book club, community classes, and your children’s friends. Some we think are nonbelievers may be believers who have never been established in their faith so their lives look like those of nonbelievers.
Ask Jesus to give you His love for them and to help you understand what they are feeling and needing from Him. Ask Him to make you want to step into their lives as a means of displaying Jesus’ love and compassion to them. Ask Him to give you a desire to get out of your comfort zone with other Christians and connect with nonbelievers in order to build a relationship. Ask Him to help you go from having good intentions to being intentional—deliberate, strategic—at building relationships with nonbelievers.
Invite your close Christian friends to join Jesus on mission with you. Do this together. Where could you and a Christian friend go together to connect with unreached women? Jesus took His friends with Him when reaching those who were outside His group of disciples. You are more likely to commit to lifestyle disciplemaking when you have a partner or two.
Pray and love
Where do you begin this lifestyle disciplemaking adventure? I suggest you start with “Pray and Love.”
“Pray and Love” simply means you intentionally pray for those with whom you are trying to connect and watch where God might use you in their lives. Ask Him to lead you to begin an intentional relationship with at least one. Ask the Lord to make your love increase for others around you.
May the Lord make your love increase and overflow for each other and for everyone else, (1 Thessalonians 3:12)
Remember this truth as you pray:
Evangelism is not about you involving Him in your outreach efforts. It is He involving you in His. Only the Holy Spirit can open the eyes of unbelievers to the truth of the gospel…It is the job of believers to communicate the gospel. It is the job of the Holy Spirit to convert the heart. (David Souther, EvanTell)
Here is how “Pray and Love” works:
- Ask Jesus to bring to mind 1-2 nonbeliever or unchurched women in your life. Consider those whom you frequently see or where you are presently connected. Some we think are unbelievers may be believers who have never been discipled so their lives look like those of unbelievers. Put these names on your Pray and Love list. Download this Pray and Love bookmark for ease of keeping track of the women on your list.
- Pray for each one whenever you think about her or see her. John 6:44 says this, “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws them.” So you can pray: “Father, please send the Holy Spirit to work in the heart of __ (her name) __ to draw her to Jesus so she will trust in Him.” Continue praying that whenever you think about or see that person, envisioning the Holy Spirit working in her life to draw her to Jesus. Remember what drew you to Jesus and what triggered your need for Him.
- Ask Jesus to give you His love and compassion for her and to help you understand what she is feeling and needing from Him. What fills her time? What are her struggles? What concerns her heart? Think about her felt needs. Step into her life to display Jesus’ love and compassion to her. Example: “Lord, compel me to love her well so that I cannot wait to be able to spend time getting to know her.”
- Commit to make the most of any connection you have to build a relationship with her. Think of when and how you might get together with her.Consider what is convenient for her. What could you do together for fun? Plan a time to meet with her. Make good intentions become intentional and relational. Reminder: Do not act shocked by her language or behavior. Love her where she is.
- Trust in Jesus tohelp you see where the Spirit might use you in her life while you live dependently on His power to introduce her to Jesus through your relationship with her. Join Him as you watch what He is doing.
Download the “Prepare to Share” booklet which includes this Pray and Love process.
Let me put in a word of caution here. Love her even if she never trusts in Christ or if someone else leads her to Christ. Do not let her think she is your project or another “to-do” on your list. She will see right through it and distrust your concern for her. The purpose of praying and loving is to draw them to Jesus. You represent Christ to her. Leave it there. Only God can give us His great love for that woman so that we want to love her well, to build a relationship with her, and to consider it a joy in your life to know her.
Out of 100 [people], one will read the Bible, the other 99 will read the Christian. (Dwight L. Moody)
As she “reads you,” she will read God’s love for her. Asking our gracious God to give you His love and compassion for the nonbelievers around you is where disciplemaking starts.
Make room in your life
Like you, I am busy with life that includes my family, my work at home and outside, and my church life. I am learning that if I do not intentionally reach out to one of the women on my “Pray & Love” list and make arrangements to get together with her, weeks go by without any friendship-building really happening. It is not just enough to think about it. I must actively pursue this new lifestyle of intentional friendships with nonbelievers.
I heard pastor Chuck Swindoll say this in a radio broadcast,
You must give up your convenience to reach people for Christ.
That is so true for me. It is likely true for you as well.
To be a disciplemaker, you must leave some room to get together with your 1 or 2 nonbelievers as often as possible. If your lives already intersect (sport teams, work, story time at the library), determine to sit with her at practice and games, ask her when she could meet you outside of work time, or invite her to lunch after story time. Think strategically in the midst of what you are already doing. Show her that she has value to you and to God. As a friend of mine often says, “Love them until they ask why.”
Get out of your comfort zone
In Luke 14, Jesus was invited to lunch with a bunch of Pharisees and lawyers. Deliberately placed in front of Jesus was a sick man, and it was a Sabbath. Of course, Jesus healed the man, then proceeded to challenge the listeners’ concept of compassion followed by a lesson on outreach. That is what caught my notice:
Then Jesus said to his host, “When you give a luncheon or dinner, do not invite your friends, your brothers or sisters, your relatives, or your rich neighbors; if you do, they may invite you back and so you will be repaid. But when you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed. Although they cannot repay you, you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous.” (Luke 14:12-14)
I know Jesus was addressing the religious leaders’ pride and lack of compassion. But He was also addressing their comfort. It is just more comfortable to spend time with likeminded people (in our case other Christians) rather than those who are spiritually poor, crippled, lame, and blind. Jesus needs to kick us out of our comfort zone, too. How many dinners do we host when we invite the spiritually poor rather than the spiritually rich—personally and in our church women’s ministry events?
Jesus continually challenges my thinking about this. We who are spiritually rich in Christ just need to do a better job of connecting with those (the spiritually poor) who need to know Him. In order to be a “Lifestyle Disciplemaker,” you and I need to commit ourselves first to Jesus as the sent ones—sent by Him to “my world.” It means depending upon Him to make that desire in us so strong that we will “see” the ones He wants for us to befriend. It means purposefully giving ourselves (time, love, energy) to them as we live each day and week. That is lifestyle disciplemaking. Who is the one Jesus wants you to befriend this year?
Get our “Lifestyle Disciplemaking” newsletter. Click on this link and choose “Interested in lifestyle disciplemaking” as your experience level. You will receive weekly tips and encouragement for disciplemaking in your life, including stories of what others are doing.
Stay Christ-focused as you take the next steps
Disciplemaking is the Lord Jesus Christ’s idea and commission to all of His followers. What He calls us to do, He enables us to do through His Spirit at work in us and in the world.
Ask Jesus to give you His love for the nonbelievers around you and to help you understand what they are feeling and needing from Him. Ask Him to make you want to step into their lives as a means of displaying Jesus’ love and compassion to them. Ask Him to help you go from having good intentions to being intentional at building a relationship with at least one of them. You can say, “Lord, compel me to love her well so that I can’t wait to be able to spend time getting to know her.” Ask for courage, love, and whatever else you need from the Lord to be a good news bearer to the woman you just identified in your life. Pray for God to draw her to Jesus.
When the Holy Spirit gives you opportunity to talk to her about Jesus, you need to be ready. We will talk about what you can do to “Prepare to Share” in a future blog. For now, I will share an easy way to get started connecting with newcomers to your church activities, many of whom are unchurched women who know they have a spiritual need but not sure what to do about it.
Read all our articles in the lifestyle disciplemaking series. You can the next blog and find out what it means to become a designated engager.
Let Jesus lead you into lifestyle disciplemaking. Jesus followers become disciplemakers.
Lifestyle disciplemaking activities are interwoven throughout our Live Out His Love Bible Study of New Testament women and our Leap into Lifestyle Disciplemaking book.
AI was not used to generate this post.

