Gospel conversations can come from almost any circumstance or activity. Even pickleball.
Andrew Dyer, pastor of Corinth Baptist Church in London, Kentucky, not only has found a new sport to play in pickleball but a new way to develop friendships and relationships that can lead to the most important decision anyone can make — accepting Jesus Christ as their savior.
“There have been some amazing conversations we’ve been able to have,” Dyer said. “Back in the spring of this year, my wife and I were figuring we’ve had those conversations from introduction to friendship with about 60 to 80 who had no association in the church.
“The lesson in that is God uses whatever you have, whatever you’re interested in,” he said. “It makes a difference in the world in church context. Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might and to the glory of God.”
In the fall of 2021, a church member asked Dyer if it would be possible to put some pickleball lines down in the church’s activity building.
“I said, yeah, I guess. What’s pickleball?”
Learning something new
The woman was one of the senior adult members and she explained pickleball — often described as a cross between tennis and ping pong — that is sweeping the nation, especially in Southern states. It has been extremely popular with senior adults because the court’s smaller size lessens the impact on the knees.
“She said we could get portable nets and see if people want to play,” Dyer said. “We had a small group of about eight that played through the fall and winter. In February one night, there were a lot of cars in the parking lot. I went to the activity building and people were playing pickleball. They said, ‘You need to come play with us.’”
Dyer, who is 45 and grew up around athletics, said a few weeks later he stopped in again and began playing pickleball. He had a great time and told his wife about it. Corri Dyer is a former college tennis player, so she took an immediate liking to the sport as well and plays competitively with her husband.
“We started playing and fell in love with it,” he said. His wife, however, tore her Achilles and was out 6–8 months but has since begun playing again.
Meanwhile, pickleball began to grow in the community with some outdoor courts.
“We started playing with people in the community who were not part of the church,” he said. “I wasn’t Pastor Andrew, I was just Andrew to them. And when we get to know them better, those gospel conversations can come naturally. The artificial barriers are eliminated.”
Effective outreach
Dyer said several from the community have visited the church and started attending with the first and only connection coming through pickleball. He said a 75-year-old senior adult came to play pickleball with a church group and said to one of the members they had never been around a group of people accepting of everybody and wanting everybody to succeed.
“It’s such a tremendous testimony,” Dyer said. “She has attended regularly for several months.”
EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Mark Maynard and originally published by Kentucky Today.