This Is Why You Should Climb Mars Hill
An obvious principle of successful fishing is to go where the fish gather. But the dilemma for every fisherman is to find out where they gather.
As fishers of men, we don’t have that dilemma. One of the biggest places they gather is at your local secular college. Here is an institution filled with lost people.
When the Apostle Paul was in Athens, he went to a gathering place called Mars Hill, where he preached the gospel to contemporary thinkers and philosophers (see Acts 17:16-34). It takes a concerted effort to scale any hill, but Mars Hill takes extra effort because it is particularly steep. However, we must climb it because that’s where many of the unsaved gather.
I have made that special effort almost daily for the last 14 years. I go to a local college in the City of Cerritos, California (about a mile from my home). I go there to share the gospel, and it’s not as intimidating as you think. Granted, many there believe in evolution, and many embrace atheism, but we can deal with both issues in minutes—if we understand one simple principle.
One of my all-time favorite quotes is from D.L. Moody. He said, “I’d rather set 1000 to work than do the work of 1000.” I love it because it holds the key to reaching the world with the gospel. It goes hand-in-hand with these verses:
“The harvest truly is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest.” Matthew 9:37-38
The “Therefore” infers that more sinners would come to the Savior if there were more laborers.
As a pastor, you can set your congregation to work in the form of a team who will regularly go to a local college to share the gospel with the unsaved. Call it a regular “short-term mission trip.” It doesn’t promise the romance and adventure of traveling to a far country to preach the gospel, but it is less expensive, and it can be just as rewarding. All you need is a faithful team willing to join you to climb the hill. Your job as their leader is threefold: You are to encourage, equip, and then lead.
How to encourage your people
The word “encourage” comes from two French words. The first is “en,” meaning to “put in,” and the second is to “make strong.” How do you put courage in your people? You do it the same way the military puts courage into soldiers who are about to go into battle. They issue them weapons in which they can have the utmost confidence. Faith in weaponry breeds courage.
How to equip your people
The Scriptures tell us God has given us weapons of warfare that are not carnal, but mighty through Him to the pulling down strongholds (see 2 Corinthians 10:4). Charles Spurgeon said that the greatest weapon is the moral Law (the Ten Commandments), and hand-in-hand with the moral Law is the human conscience. That’s “the work of the law” written on the heart of every person (see Romans 2:14-15). Using the Law to stir the conscience as Jesus did (see Mark 10:17-20) and as Paul did (see Romans 2:18-20) is the key to reaching the lost—atheists, believers in evolution, transsexuals, the self-righteous, homosexuals, and everyday fornicators.
A video is worth more than a thousand pictures, so here is a clip showing how easy it is to change an atheist’s mind about God’s existence.
And here is one on how to share the gospel with a transsexual or homosexual—without any offense and without compromise.
The key to dealing with atheism is not to make these issues the main issue. Anything that goes off the path to the gospel is a rabbit trail, and the way to avoid going too far down the trail is to ask, gently but firmly, “Do you think you’re a good person?” Most answer without hesitation, redirecting the conversation toward the cross.
How to lead your people
If you’re like me, going to a local college will make you sweat drops of blood. But if we’ve had our Gethsemane experience, we will live for His will, not ours. We look at the agony of the cross and say, “Lord, if you would do that for me, I will do anything for you.” Once you’ve accepted the task of leadership on the Mars Hill Short Term Mission, this is what you then say to your team:
“When we get to the college, we will spread out. Here are some *million-dollar tracts to give to students. As you reach out, say a friendly, ‘Good morning. Did you get one of these?’ As they take it, say, ‘It’s a Gospel Tract. Do you think there’s life after death?’ You are like a bee going from flower to flower, looking for the sweet nectar of an open heart. If there’s no nectar, no problem. Say, ‘Have a great day,’ and move to the next flower.
You will go on each short-term mission dragging your feet and come back, clicking your heels. Let me tell you about one big heel-clicking college moment. I was finishing sharing the gospel with a student when a middle-aged man approached me and said he was a professor of mathematics at the college. He said he’d been watching our videos and added, “I’m going to be real honest. I’m concerned about my mortal soul.” If you’re interested in seeing the amazing thing he said next, you can watch it yourself
I hope it encourages you to climb Mars Hill.
*Available at LivingWaters.com
©2023 Ray Comfort. Used with permission.
About The Author

Ray Comfort
Ray Comfort is the Founder and CEO of Living Waters, a bestselling author, and has written more than 100 books, including, The Evidence Study Bible. He cohosts the award-winning television program Way of the Master, which airs in 190 countries, and has a YouTube channel with more than 200,000,000 views.