A powerful, citywide Gospel outreach organized by Evangelist Jacob Ebersole and his World Harvest ministry is set to descend on Columbia, South Carolina, October 24–26, with nightly services at 7 p.m. The grassroots campaign — billed as the Greater Columbia Crusade and operating out of a big-tent format and local venue partnerships — is free to the public and driven by volunteers from across the region. This is not a polished, celebrity‑led spectacle; it is hometown evangelism with serious momentum behind it.
If you missed the warning signs from our culture, look instead to what happened this summer in Spartanburg, where churches teamed up across racial and denominational lines and scores of people came forward to be saved during a three‑day crusade in June. Local pastors and volunteers report the kind of spiritual fruit that no government program or classroom lecture can manufacture — real conversions, food distribution, and discipleship plans for new believers. That unity of purpose among everyday Christians is exactly the kind of civic renewal conservatives have been calling for.
World Harvest is no fly‑by‑night operation; Ebersole’s teams have organized large evangelistic campaigns overseas that drew thousands, and the ministry has documented significant decisions for Christ in places from West Africa to South America. That global experience is now being brought back home to the Palmetto State, and the Columbia dates are being staffed with prayer hubs, volunteer training, and mass‑choir preparations to make sure souls are not only saved but shepherded. This is the kind of organized, results‑oriented faith work that conservatives know builds stronger families and safer communities.
The logistics are old‑fashioned and practical: food distribution before services, hospitality teams, altar workers, and a simple call to repentance and faith in Christ. Local churches and ministries are hosting prayer hubs and outreach teams, proving once again that civil society — not a sprawling bureaucratic program — is the engine of real help and hope. No amount of virtue signaling from the same coastal elites who mock Christianity will replace the boots‑on‑the‑ground care these teams provide.
Make no mistake, this is also a cultural pushback. When our institutions celebrate nihilism and erase religious liberty, the people who actually build communities — pastors, small business owners, military families, and parents — are answering a higher call. Conservative Americans should celebrate and support movements that restore faith, civic responsibility, and the refusal to surrender our towns to the secular agenda. The revival in South Carolina is proof that when ordinary believers organize, real revival and real social repair follow.
If you live near Columbia or care about the spiritual health of our nation, show up, volunteer, and bring others to hear the Gospel this weekend; the organizers have made clear that the doors are open and they need hands and hearts to follow through on the work afterward. Pray for revival, back local churches that are doing the hard work of disciple‑making, and call out the media and institutions that will ignore these victories while praising every cultural fad. This is one movement that deserves our loudest support and our fullest participation.