One of the ways you know you’re making progress is that you stop having the same discussion over and over again.
What if the popular understanding of discipleship is producing some of the ill-health and even stagnation and decline we see all around us in the church?
1. Jesus commanded us to make disciples, not be disciples.
The way many Christians talk, you’d think Jesus told us to be disciples. He commanded us to make disciples. The great commission is, at its heart, an outward movement.
Could it be that in the act of making disciples, we actually become more of who Christ designed us to be? It was in the act of sharing faith that thousands of early Christians were transformed into new creations.
I know personally I grow most and learn most when I am helping others. It gives me a place to apply what I’m learning and to take the focus off myself and place it on Christ and others, where it belongs.
2. Discipleship is simply linked to evangelism.
The thrust of all first-century discipleship was to share Christ with the world he loves and died for (yes, Jesus really does love the world).
And for sure, the opposite is true. You can’t be an evangelist without being a disciple. But somehow many many people would rather be disciples without being evangelists.
3. A mark of an authentic disciple includes getting it wrong.
A common criticism of churches that draw in large numbers of outsiders and newer believers is that these new followers of Christ get it wrong as often as they get it right. They might not realize that reincarnation isn’t biblical or struggle to understand the faith they’re stepping into.
After all, Peter didn’t get it right most of the time when he was around Jesus. Many leaders in the early church needed correction. And even Paul would later confront Peter about his unwillingness to eat with Gentiles. And yet Christ chose to build the early church on Peter and Paul. Imagine that.
4. A morally messy church is…inevitable
One stinging criticism of churches that are reaching people is that many of their attendees https://besthookupwebsites.org/dating4disabled-review/ don’t bear much resemblance to Jesus.
These new, immature Christians can be swayed by powerful personalities, still be sexually active outside of marriage, have questionable business practices, end up in broken families, be too swayed by the culture, not know how to conduct themselves in worship, doubt core doctrines like the resurrection.
If these issues remind you of why you so dislike growing churches or megachurches, just realize that I pulled every one of those problems out of 1 Corinthians. The church in Corinth struggled with every problem listed above and (I think) every problem growing churches today struggle with.
The fact that you have these problems may actually be a sign you’re making progress with the unchurched. You don’t want to leave them there, but when people really start engaging with Christ, tidy categories are hard to come by.
In fact the most morally ‘pure’ people of the first century (the Pharisees) were the very ones Jesus most often condemned. Go figure.
5. Maturity takes time and is not linear
It would be great if there was instant maturity in faith and in life. But it never works that way.
You can’t expect a 3 year old to have the maturity of a 13 year old, or expect a 23 year old to have the maturity of a 43 year old. When you place expectations on people that they are just not able to bear, you crush or confuse them.
And yet we do that in the church all the time. People grow and mature over time. And our progress isn’t always as linear as a 101, 201, 301 progression would make it. In fact, I know some 23 year olds who are more mature than some 43 year olds.
Expose new Christians to the love of God and community, to great teaching, great relationships, and solid accountability and over time, many will grow into very different people than they were when they first came to Christ. They may grow at different rates and in different measures, but I believe Jesus talked about that. Just don’t judge them after a few months or even a few years.
6. Christian maturity was never about you anyway.
Christian maturity has never been about you anyway. It is certainly not about how awesome you are compared to others, how smart you are, how righteous you are, or how holy you are.
7. Love compels us
If you love the world, how can you ignore it? Jesus said the authentic mark of his followers is love. He defined the primary relationship between God and humanity as one of love. The truth he ushered in is inseparable from love.
The primary motivation for evangelism and discipleship is the same; it is love. That should characterize both the discussion about evangelism and discipleship and also the way we go about both.
This isn’t an exhaustive treatment of discipleship and evangelism, but in the time it takes to sip a coffee I hope it helps in some way advance the conversation about evangelism and discipleship in your church.
And if we advanced our understanding of discipleship in the church, maybe the church and our culture would be transformed.
Break Through The Barriers That Prevent Your Church From Growing.
It can be discouraging to put your heart into your ministry and still see it plateau or, worse, decline. But that’s the reality facing many churches today.
According to one study, 94% of churches aren’t growing. That means more than 9 out of 10 churches are stuck or losing ground.
Sadly, people in your community are experiencing widespread loneliness, polarization, and hopelessness, and they need the local church more than ever before. So, why does keeping people in church (much less attracting new members) feel like such an uphill battle?
While growth is ultimately up to God – not to you or me – The Art of Church Growth will prepare you for growth by removing obstacles that are in your control.
Learn how to navigate seven critical conversations that will inject clarity and direction into your mission and help remove the barriers that stand between you and reaching more people: