Greek Night at Langston Baptist: Why Greek Life Should Be On Your Ministry Radar

Chad Stillwell
Large group of college co-eds sitting around a table at Langston College BCM

If you lead college ministry and have not yet stepped into Greek Life, you could be missing one of the most connected and influential communities on your campus.

Fraternities and sororities are more than social clubs. They are close-knit, tradition-rich groups that shape campus culture, drive service projects, and influence the rhythms of student life. That makes them both a challenge and an incredible opportunity for the gospel.

Langston Baptist Church’s College Ministry in Conway, South Carolina, recently embraced that opportunity by hosting a Greek Night that drew more than seventy students from Sigma Phi Epsilon and Phi Sigma Sigma at Coastal Carolina University. The plan was simple: create a welcoming space, share a meal, and start honest conversations. The result was powerful. Twenty-four students indicated they wanted to follow Jesus, take a step toward baptism, or explore faith further.

How the Night Unfolded

The evening began with Chick-fil-A and open tables, making it easy for students to relax and connect. Along the way, leaders handed out resources, including study Bibles. For some, it was the first Bible they had ever received.

A short teaching on Biblical community set the tone for the rest of the night. Then came a live question-and-answer session where students anonymously submitted their questions. The questions were personal, honest, and sometimes raw. Leaders responded with Scripture, grace, and real-life application. It shifted the night from something people were attending to something they were part of.

Things wrapped up with “Cookies and Conversations,” a chance for small group discussions where relationships could take root. This unhurried ending allowed ministry leaders to connect on a deeper level with students who may have never walked into a church before.

Why Reaching Greek Life Matters

One Greek student can influence an entire chapter. These organizations are already built around community, shared experiences, and loyalty. When the gospel takes hold in one member’s life, it has the potential to ripple outward quickly.

Yet the reality is that many Greek students will not walk into a ministry event on their own. Their schedules are full. Their social calendars are packed. Some have had negative experiences with Christians or simply assume faith is not for them. This is why going to them or creating something designed with them in mind matters so much. Langston Baptist did not wait for them to come. They extended personal invitations, built a night that felt like theirs, and made sure the welcome was genuine.

Lessons for Ministry

Building a Greek outreach is less about a perfect program and more about intentional presence. Relationships come first. Learn what matters to them, show respect for their commitments, and offer something that adds value to their lives. Create environments where questions are encouraged and honest conversation is normal. Be ready for the follow-up since personal connections after an event often matter more than the event itself.

Thinking Like a Waffle

If you picture your campus as a pancake, you imagine one big flat space where everyone is basically the same. A campus is more like a waffle. It has pockets that represent subcultures with their own identity and rhythms. Athletic teams, student government, music groups, and Greek chapters are all different pockets. Reaching the campus means being intentional about entering those pockets one at a time. Langston’s Greek Night worked because it targeted one specific pocket with purpose and care.

The Bigger Picture

Greek Night was more than a one-off event. It was a model for how a ministry can focus on a specific campus community and build real connections that point to Jesus. Imagine what could happen if more ministries committed to stepping into these pockets, not just for one night but for the long haul!

When that happens, you might find yourself in a room full of fraternity brothers and sorority sisters wrestling with questions of faith, perhaps for the first time, and beginning a journey toward life in Christ.

Chad Stillwell is the Evangelism Team Leader and Collegiate Ministries Director for South Carolina.

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