voguerre sunderland escorts 1v1.lol unblocked yohoho 76 https://www.symbaloo.com/mix/yohoho?lang=EN yohoho https://www.symbaloo.com/mix/agariounblockedpvp https://yohoho-io.app/ https://www.symbaloo.com/mix/agariounblockedschool1?lang=EN
Sunday, December 22, 2024
Home Building Leaders Discipleship: Reversing the Course

Discipleship: Reversing the Course

Jesus did not make disciples. 

Do I have your attention yet?

Okay, good! To clarify ‒ Jesus made disciple-makers. 

Our view of discipleship is skewed. For this reason, the church is not developing leaders because it is not creating disciple-makers. We need to reverse the course.

Jesus cultivated worldly and sinful men into bold, resilient, and daring leaders. Jesus reversed the course of their lives. The apostles were intended to reciprocally train others, to obey the commands of Christ (Matthew 28:19–20). While there is much discussion about the actual “commands” ‒ I think we can all agree that love is a major command (John 13:34). 

When we love others, we become invested in their lives. We earnestly desire to see them grow ‒ spiritually, emotionally and in maturity. The problem, according to the Barna Group, “Only 20 percent of Christian adults are involved in some sort of discipleship activity.” [1] 

We’re clearly not loving others as ourselves ‒ it seems the church is “every man for himself.” With 80 percent unengaged ‒ reversing the course will be a slow, methodical and intentional process ‒ but it can happen. 

How did we get here? 

For the record, I wouldn’t blame the current church ‒ this is the fault of previous generations, and the generations before them, and so on. Without delving in too deeply, the errors of disciple-making transformed over the millennia. The most observed shifts were due to correcting heresies and over infant baptism. [2] We shouldn’t view the shifts as blunders, but more about contextual cultural changes ‒ it is what it is.

Historically, discipleship observed the gathering of believers to study in the teachings of Christ in the midst of intentional daily living. The early church’s approach to communal catechesis might seem to correlate with modern Sunday school, but “we sometimes treat disciple making like a program or a class.” [3] 

As well, curriculums which are designed to systematically guide believers through a discipleship course often convey a false sense of discipleship. When discipleship exists in a ministry “program,” the believer may fail to comprehend the call to follow Jesus in everyday life. 

Basically, the believer begins to view discipleship as a course to complete. However, what happens to believers who do not attend discipleship class? Are they not a disciple-maker? Can you see what has happened? Disciple-making has been reduced to programs and curriculums.

The solution

When Jesus states, “Follow Me, … and I will make you fishers of men” (Matthew 4:19), Jesus required a faithful journey into a deeper discipling relationship. [4] Jesus led the disciples on mission (Mark 1:38), and He also sent them out on mission (Matthew 10:5) ‒ both encapsulated an interactive spiritual praxis. 

Jesus’ disciples did not rely on a programmed curriculum ‒ they engaged in a variety of methods for discipleship. [5] As Bill Hull states, “Discipleship is not a program we launch, it is a lifestyle we embrace.” [6] 

Today, when a believer hears the word, “discipleship,” the thought of Sunday school or a curriculum is envisioned ‒ perhaps even a Bible study. These are all good for the believer’s spiritual growth and maturity. However, discipleship is about intentionally living the Christ-life together. 

Discipleship is triangular ‒ it has vertical, horizontal, and diagonal relationships. We learn from the Godhead ‒ vertically. We grow with the collective church ‒ horizontally. And we teach and reach others by walking with them in daily life ‒ diagonally.

To reverse the course, disciple-making is investing in intentional relationships with others. We achieve this by gathering, meeting, and asking probing questions ‒ centered within the life of Christ. When we share the Christ-life together ‒ scars, sins, and all ‒ we love one another as Christ commanded. 

This article originally appeared here.

Notes: 

[1] David Kinnaman, “New Research On the State of Discipleship,” Barna Group, https://www.barna.org/research/leaders-pastors/research-release/new-research-state-of- discipleship#. VqDcJFJQmDU. 

[2] Matthew Fretwell, “Developing A Reproducible Disciple-Making Training Strategy for the Church Planters of New Breed Network” (Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2017). 

[3] Craig Ott and Gene Wilson, Global Church Planting: Biblical Principles and Best Practices for Multiplication (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2011), 229. 

[4] Bill Hull, The Complete Book of Discipleship: On Being and Making Followers of Christ (Colorado Springs, CO: NavPress, 2006), 36.

[5] Jim Putman and Bobby Harrington, Discipleshift: Five Steps to Make Disciples Who Make Disciples (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2013), 117.

[6] Bill Hull, Conversion & Discipleship (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2016), 55.

Matthew Fretwell
Matthew Fretwellhttps://urbanchurchplanting.co/
Matt Fretwell is married, has three daughters, is an author, revitalization pastor, national director of operations for New Breed Network, and leadership coach. Matt holds a doctorate from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Great Commission reproducible disciple-making strategies. Matt also writes for Church Planter Magazine and interviews well-known evangelical leaders on his discipleship podcast, The Wretched & The Wrecked.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Eminem – Stronger Than I Was

We woke reasonably late following the feast and free flowing wine the night before. After gathering ourselves and our packs, we...

Dj Dark – Chill Vibes

We woke reasonably late following the feast and free flowing wine the night before. After gathering ourselves and our packs, we...

Leona Lewis – Bleeding Love (Dj Dark & Adrian Funk Remix)

We woke reasonably late following the feast and free flowing wine the night before. After gathering ourselves and our packs, we...

Silicon Valley Guru Affected by the Fulminant Slashed Investments

We woke reasonably late following the feast and free flowing wine the night before. After gathering ourselves and our packs, we...

Recent Comments

Ngallendou Dièye on Navigating the Wave of Need
subash on 3 Kinds of Leaders
Ngallendou Dièye on 3 Kinds of Leaders
Eric Richardson on 3 Kinds of Leaders
Malcolm Webber on 3 Kinds of Leaders
Ngallendou Dièye on Our Evangelical Cover-Up?
Mark Larson on Is Competition Wrong?
betty-wiseheartedwomen.blogspo on Is Evangelical Worship Headed for a Huge Crash?
Ngallendou Dièye on 3 Fears that Paralyze Potential
Mwesigye Batatwenda Peterson on Pain
Mwesigye Batatwenda Peterson on 5 Reasons We Struggle to Rest
Michelle Chiappelli Zvyagin on Is Evangelical Worship Headed for a Huge Crash?
Ngallendou Dièye on Why Jesus Let People Walk Away
Jim Sutherland on How to Help Someone Not Change
Ngallendou Dièye on How to Help Someone Not Change
Ngallendou Dièye on Alone in a Crowd
Nancy Watta on Leaders Act!
Dr George Varghese on The Weapon of a Clear Conscience
Ngallendou Dièye on 10 Ways To Lose Great Staff
Ngallendou Dièye on Christian Celebrity Culture
Ngallendou Dièye on What NOT to Say to Someone in Pain
Joel Loewen on How to be Patient
Ngallendou Dièye on A Bit of Advice on Giving Advice
Malcolm Webber on 7 Key Paradigm Shifts
Malcolm Webber on 7 Key Paradigm Shifts
Ngallendou Dièye on 7 Key Paradigm Shifts
Ngallendou Dièye on Leaders Act!
Elisha kakwerere on 10 Reasons Leaders Stop Growing
Ngallendou on The Idolatry of Missions
Kyla Alexander on The Idolatry of Missions
Edgard Abraham Alvarez Muñoz on Little Church, Big Mission
James Ruark on A Church Led By Scholars
Ngallendou on A Church Led By Scholars
Bill Blatz on A Church Led By Scholars
Bill Frisbie on Who Stole My Towel?
niklaseklov on Who Stole My Towel?
Malcolm Webber on We Need to Learn Empathy!
Hansraj Jain on Honoring Your Predecessor