That's interesting. Could you explain the practical how-to aspects of this prophetic evangelism. I think I know what you mean, but I'm not sure. Thanks.
As immature believers, we all receive low-clarity revelation, marked by:
(1) A lack of specificity.
(2) A degree of uncertainty, i.e. less than 100% certainty.
With 100 billion souls at stake, it would be callously unprofessional of God to run evangelism on such low-quality revelation.
You ask, what is the practical how-to? That's the thing - high-quality revelation conveys those specifics.
Or maybe I can answer this way. What the church should be doing is waiting upon God - in prayer and praise - for revival and for
clear revelations of His will in all church matters including evangelism.
A prophet knew (with 100% certainty)
what to say,
where to say it, and
when to say it. That's the perfect formula for evangelism.
But more than that. The nature of the prophetic gift is to ALSO convince ("convict")
the audience at 100% certainty. This means the prophet is the most effective evangelist possible.
Finally, this paradigm follows the OT military paradigm. When Israel marched into battle at less than 100% certainty - i.e. without a clear sign from heaven - she stood to lose. Waiting upon the Lord for a preconfirmation of success was known as "Inquiring of the Lord". This is PRECISELY the strategy dictating the evangelistic campaigns in Acts. Examples:
(1) The disciples waited in prayer until Pentecost, whence they saw tongues of Fire.
(2) Acts 4:30-31 we see them waiting in prayer - until an earthquake erupted!
(3) Acts 16:25-31 records a similar earthquake.
(4) Peter saw a vision in Acts 10, directing him to preach to the Gentiles.
(5) Acts 16:6-10 shows how Paul's evangelism was directed by visions and revelations from heaven.