PNW STAFF
In an age dominated by streaming services, social media algorithms, and endless digital distractions, many have assumed that the era of stadium evangelism has come and gone. Why gather tens of thousands of people in one place when a sermon can be watched on a smartphone?
Yet this past weekend, approximately 30,000 people packed Angel Stadium in Anaheim, California, for the annual Harvest Crusade led by Pastor Greg Laurie. It was a powerful reminder that despite the constant claims that Christianity is fading, people remain deeply hungry for hope, truth, and the transforming message of Jesus Christ.
They weren't there for a political rally, a championship game, or a superstar concert. They came to hear the Gospel.
That matters.
For more than three decades, the Harvest Crusades have become one of the largest evangelistic outreaches in America. What began in 1990 as a simple desire to reach Southern California with the Gospel has grown into an international ministry that has seen millions attend in person and online, with hundreds of thousands publicly professing faith in Christ.
Greg Laurie's own story explains why the ministry continues to resonate.
Raised in a turbulent home by a mother who struggled through multiple marriages, Laurie was searching for purpose as a teenager during the turbulent days of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Like many young people of that generation, he looked for meaning in the counterculture before encountering the Gospel during the Jesus Movement. That encounter forever changed the direction of his life.
Rather than simply becoming a pastor, Laurie became an evangelist with a passion for reaching people who might never set foot inside a traditional church.
That mission remains remarkably relevant today.
Some critics have suggested that stadium evangelism belongs to another era--that modern outreach should happen exclusively through podcasts, YouTube channels, TikTok clips, or livestreams. Digital ministry certainly has an important place, and countless people have come to Christ through online sermons and Christian media.
But something unique happens when thousands of believers gather together in one place.
Faith becomes visible.
Worship becomes contagious.
The Gospel moves from being another video in someone's feed to becoming a shared experience among real people.
In a culture where loneliness has reached epidemic levels, personal connection matters more than ever. People increasingly report having fewer close friends, less community, and a growing sense of isolation despite being more digitally connected than any generation before them.
A stadium filled with people worshipping together offers something no screen can fully reproduce: the reminder that you are not alone.
The success of the Harvest Crusade is also not an isolated event.
Across America there have been numerous signs that spiritual interest is quietly growing beneath the headlines.
One of the most remarkable examples occurred this spring in Jacksonville, Florida, where more than 7,700 people were baptized during a historic "Baptize America" gathering at Hanna Park. What organizers expected to be a major regional outreach became one of the largest coordinated baptism celebrations in modern American history.
Thousands lined the shoreline as wave after wave of new believers publicly declared their faith in Jesus Christ, while churches from across the country participated in similar baptism events. It was a striking reminder that when people are presented with the Gospel, many are still willing to publicly identify with Christ--despite living in a culture that increasingly pressures believers to keep their faith private.
College campuses have likewise experienced unexpected spiritual awakenings. Universities including Auburn, Ohio State, Florida State, Kentucky, Arkansas, Alabama, and others have hosted large worship nights where hundreds--and in some cases thousands--of students have responded to the Gospel through baptisms and public professions of faith.
These events rarely dominate national headlines.
Conflict sells better than conversion.
Division generates more clicks than discipleship.
Yet beneath the noise of politics and cultural battles, God appears to be quietly moving in places many assumed had become spiritually indifferent.
History reminds us that genuine revivals often begin this way.
The First Great Awakening, the Second Great Awakening, the Welsh Revival, and America's Jesus Movement all began with ordinary people becoming deeply dissatisfied with the emptiness of the world around them and turning toward Christ.
Today's generation faces its own unique crises.
Anxiety, depression, addiction, family breakdown, identity confusion, economic uncertainty, and endless cultural upheaval have left many wondering whether there is something more than the promises offered by modern society.
The Gospel answers that question with a resounding yes.
It offers forgiveness where there is guilt.
Hope where there is despair.
Purpose where there is confusion.
Peace where there is fear.
That message never goes out of style because the deepest needs of the human heart never change.
Technology changes.
Culture changes.
Political movements rise and fall.
But humanity's need for redemption remains exactly the same.
Thirty thousand people gathering in Angel Stadium is encouraging not simply because of the size of the crowd, but because it challenges the growing assumption that America has permanently lost interest in Christianity.
Perhaps the interest never disappeared.
Perhaps millions were simply waiting for someone to invite them.
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