Evangelism is not a program in Bishop Dag Heward-Mills’ ministry—it is the very heartbeat. It is the cry that echoes through every sermon, the purpose behind every book, and the driving force behind every crusade. His entire life has been shaped by one question: how can more souls be saved? Every major decision, every sacrifice, every step of obedience has been taken with eternity in view.
He preaches with fire not because he wants to be known, but because he wants Christ to be known. He travels to unreached regions not for adventure, but for the one lost soul who might be standing in the crowd. He trains pastors and raises missionaries because he knows the harvest is still plentiful and the laborers are still few.
This burden for souls has taken him across dangerous terrain, into remote villages, and before crowds numbering in the tens of thousands. But he would go even if there was only one. That is the kind of evangelist he is. Not moved by applause. Moved by compassion. Not driven by numbers. Driven by love. The kind of love that caused Jesus to weep over cities—and the same love that has fueled the ministry of Dag Heward-Mills for decades.
Evangelism That Bears Lasting Fruit
One of the most remarkable things about Bishop Dag’s evangelistic work is how lasting the fruit has been. The souls saved in his crusades are not forgotten. They are followed up. They are discipled. They are connected to churches that have been planted intentionally for that purpose. The fruit is not emotional—it is spiritual. It is measured in changed lives, transformed communities, and growing churches.
His Healing Jesus Campaigns are not simply events. They are spiritual invasions. When he arrives in a town, the gospel is not just preached—it is demonstrated. Demons flee. Sick bodies are healed. Backsliders return. The atmosphere is changed. But more importantly, foundations are laid. Churches are planted. Leaders are trained. And the gospel continues to spread long after the tents come down.
He teaches that evangelism must be followed by shepherding. It is not enough to win souls—we must care for them. This is why his crusades always involve a strong partnership with local pastors. He equips them, encourages them, and works with them to ensure the new believers have a place to grow. That is how you bear fruit that remains.
The global impact of Dag Heward-Mills cannot be measured in headlines or statistics alone. It must be measured in the eternal. In the lives that were pulled from darkness. In the young men who were discipled into pastors. In the churches that now stand where there was once spiritual emptiness. That is the true fruit of evangelism.
Dag Heward-Mills has not just preached about soul-winning. He has modeled it. And because of his example, thousands of others have caught the same fire, carried the same cross, and committed themselves to the same mission.
The world is different because he has obeyed. Hell is smaller because he has preached. Heaven is rejoicing because souls have been saved. And the gospel continues to spread—one soul, one city, one nation at a time.