The following comes from a June 8 Catholic Voice article by Michele Jurich:
It’s just before noon on a sunny Saturday on Berkeley’s Fourth Street, a busy boulevard of upscale cafes, shops and businesses.
The gleaming Apple store is doing a bang-up business in the next newest thing; a steady stream of customers await tables at Bette’s Oceanview Diner, where weekend breakfast is a daylong opportunity; across the street, an animal rescue group will soon set up an array of crates of cats that through no fault of their own need rehoming.
The rhythm is so Berkeley. Today, there’s a new table in town.
Near that line of waiting pancake aficionados is a table lined with pamphlets with titles like, “Praying to the Saints,” “The Bible Alone?” and “Reasons to Return to the Catholic Church.” Arranged to the right are dozens of rosary beads.
The sandwich sign on the sidewalk reads:
CATHOLIC
TRUTH
Got Questions?
Free Pamphlets
Need Prayer?
Find True Joy!
And two members of the Berkeley chapter of the St. Paul Street Evangelists make the personal pitch. “Would you like some rosary beads?” they ask a woman who slows down to eye the table.
Yes, please, she replies, sharing that perhaps she shouldn’t, she’s Episcopalian.
“Well, that’s low Catholic,” she says, accepting a string of plastic black rosary beads.
And the conversation begins.
David Brandt, a parishioner at St. Joseph Church in Pinole, is the leader of the Berkeley area evangelists, who are part of a network of 190 teams nationwide. He and his handful of fellow evangelists — he’s recruiting more — have brought their pamphlets and rosary beads to some places that have a lot of questions.
But St. Paul Street Evangelists know a thing or two about bringing the message to a tough crowd. Founder and national director Steve Dawson did his first evangelizing in Portland, Oregon, before moving the ministry to the Detroit area.
After a 14-month journey with the Franciscans, Dawson did not feel the call to the priesthood and religious life. “I still felt called to be active in the church, specifically in the new evangelization,” he said.
The new evangelization, he said, has been endorsed by the last three popes, and its roots run “all the way back to Jesus.”
But Dawson said he didn’t see much evangelization. “I had heard a lot of talk,” he said. “I looked around and I didn’t see a lot of feet on the ground.”
So he started with his own. He decided to go out and talk to people in Portland, where he was finishing his degree.
Among the city’s street vendors culture, the evangelist “fit right in, in a sense,” he said.
“We were amazed at the experiences we were having,” he said. He said 99 percent of the interactions were positive.
“We weren’t in your face,” he said. “If people didn’t want to talk to us, they kept walking.”
But for those who stopped to talk, there were changes. Dawson said one man told him he’d like to come back to the Church. Dawson suggested he start with confession, and met him at his church.
When the man came out of the confessional, he said to Dawson, “I’m a new man.”
Dawson wanted to “show other Catholics what we were doing,” and did so through social media.
From its beginnings in 2012, the ministry has grown to 190 teams, including in two foreign countries, and more than 6,000 street evangelists who receive training and encouragement through the website.
The ministry is based in Michigan, where among his supporters is Archbishop Allen H. Vigneron, who served as the third bishop of Oakland.
Although both Dawson and Brandt have some seminary training, it is not a prerequisite to joining the street evangelists. “A love for Jesus and his Church,” is the main attribute, Dawson said. The evangelist should be a Catholic in good standing.
“We don’t make people into theologians,” he said. The street evangelization “is not a lot of apologetics,” he said.
Learn more: https://streetevangelization.com
Read about the local chapter: https://streetevangelization.com/
berkeleyca/
Well done Faithful Servant! I bet Our Good Lord and Our Lady are smiling down from Heaven at this gentleman’s wonderful endeavor!!!
God bless Steve Dawson, David Brandt and the other street evangelists. What a great idea.
Amen to that Sarah, I agree! God bless them! Praise Be Jesus Christ! They are brave and good souls!
God bless these wonderful street evangelists! I remember when the Legion of Mary used to do a lot of this kind of work, going door to door in Catholic parishes, and seeking to bring people to the Catholic Faith, helping those also, who were lapsed Catholics! Sadly, they nearly disappeared, after Vatican II!! They were so holy!