University of Florida students who meet Doug Crescimanno
will be entertained—and they might meet Jesus, too.
him for half an hour you feel as if you’ve been on the set of Saturday Night
Live. (He’s at least as funny as Bill Hader or Fred Armisen.) But this
25-year-old University of Florida (UF) graduate, who lives in an apartment near
the huge campus in Gainesville, Fla., is also passionately in love with
Jesus—and he has given his life to sharing the gospel with students.
“People
need God. They are hurt, broken, deceived, depressed and dying. We have the
only solution. We can be used to give people life … and life abundantly!” –Doug
Crescimanno
Doug
earned a degree in advertising from UF, but he’s not pursuing a career in his
field because he’s too busy evangelizing the campus. He sets up a table on the
Reitz Union plaza four days a week and posts a sign that says “BIBLE TRIVIA!” He loads the table with Blow Pops and Jolly Ranchers and
then invites students to play his game. The script goes like this:
“You, my
friend! Would you like to play Bible Trivia? It’s super fast and super easy.”
When a student agrees to play, Doug asks three questions—all in his
over-the-top comedic voice:
“Question #1:
Jesus was commonly referred to as Jesus of _____? Was it a) Galilee; b) Los
Angeles; c) the Bronx; or d) Nazareth?”
“Question #2: Who
wrote the book of David in the Bible? Was it a) David; b) Saul; c) Solomon; or
d) There is no actual book called David in the Bible?”
“Question #3:
Jesus said that unless a man is born-______, he can’t even see the kingdom of
heaven. Is the answer a) born-again; b) born-twice; c) born a lady; or d) born
once, twice, three times a lady?”
By this time the person
being interrogated is laughing and enjoying free candy if
they get the answers right. As they pick out their final prizes, Doug asks them
what it means to be born again. Then he shares about his own conversion
experience (he gave his heart to Jesus while a senior in college) and offers to
pray with them.
Since Doug began running his game table at UF last August, he’s led 15 people
to Christ, and he says countless others have made recommitments to the Lord. He
and his friends, Mike and Lalaine, have prayed for people at the table and seen
miraculous healings. Some have visited their home congregation, Victory Church
of Gainesville.
When I stopped to
see Doug at his apartment last weekend, he told me about a wheelchair-bound guy
who recently visited the ministry table. “He didn’t get completely healed,”
Doug said. “However when we saw him a couple days later, he became a Christian
because he said after he was prayed for, he felt the power of God flowing
through his body for over an hour!”
I’m sharing Doug’s
story because I often hear people lamenting the sad spiritual state of
America’s young people. It’s true that many Millennials have left the faith—or
are just plain uninterested in spiritual things—but I also meet many young men
and women like Doug Crescimanno. They really don’t care about making lots of
money or having important careers; they’d rather stop the world’s injustices,
fight sex trafficking, go on the mission field or help drug addicts kick the
habit.
Today’s young
Christians are also bold and adventurous—and willing to face ridicule for their
beliefs. Yet Doug rarely gets heckled on the campus because, for one, he’s so
funny, and two, he’s sincerely interested in listening to people’s problems.
“The reason why
the persecution hasn’t been that bad,” Doug told me, “is because when you love
and honor people, and when you actually listen to what they have to say instead
of just quickly jumping into a sales pitch, they’re gonna be open to the
gospel. They see you actually care and that this is real.”
When I asked Doug
why he’s made this sacrifice to reach lost people, he said: “People
need God. They are hurt, broken, deceived, depressed and dying. We have the
only solution. We can be used to give people life … and life abundantly!”
We hear a lot these days
about mentoring the next generation—and I’m committed to doing that. But I also
know I can learn from my younger friends. Doug is young enough to be my son,
but he has inspired me to be bolder in evangelism, more aggressive in my faith
and more compassionate in my attitude toward the people around me.
I hope Doug’s zeal will
challenge you, and that his joy in serving God will infect every church in
America.
(And he wanted me to tell you
that if you want to use his Bible Trivia script on your campus, there’s no
charge—but you have to buy your own Blow Pops.)
J. Lee Grady is editor of Charisma. You can find him on Twitter at leegrady. His book 10
Lies Men Believe releases this month from Charisma House.