In
the Great Commission, Jesus said that we were to make disciples, not converts.
He didn't tell us to go out and just save people, but He said to make
disciples, to reproduce ourselves.As a pastor, I was constantly aware of two
commitments: one, to have a congregation that understood discipleship; two, to
equip the saints to do the work of the ministry. These are the two things that
I, as a leader, feel that I am accountable for. And churches that are growing
have been able to successfully do both.
Spiritual
Reproduction Is What Discipleship Is All About!
Discipleship
is not:
1. Just a Christian education. It's not about implanting information for
knowledge's sake. In other words, it's not just going to
Sunday school class. It's not just imparting information. It's not us just
learning
things mentally. That is part of discipleship, but that isn't the
ultimate goal.
2.
Cookies and punch.
Fellowship is to take place in the church;
discipleship takes place in the world.
We're
good at coming together for food and fellowship, and we enjoy that, but
discipleship is more than that. Fellowship takes place in the church, but
discipleship is to take place in our church world to reach out to the
people around us.
3. Scripture memorization. Intellectual exercise is not enough unless there is
life change. It's
not just memorizing scripture so we can go around quoting what God's word says.
Discipleship is more than knowing God's word. Discipleship is living
God's word. It's applying the scriptural truths to our hearts.
Discipleship is not just imparting
knowledge. What are we doing with what we teach on Sunday? What are we doing
with the word of God? Do we take God's word and just read it and say,
"Well, you know, I think that's good, people should follow it," or do
we look at it and apply it to our own hearts and lives?
There's a passage of Scripture that
just grabs me: John 7:17. Listen to these words. "If any man will do my
will, then he will know whether my teaching is of God or not." Did you
catch the sequence here? Did you notice that doing God's will comes before
understanding God's will? The most popular messages I ever preached were
on knowing God's will. People were always saying, "How do I know the will
of God for my life?" Do you know how you know the will of God?
You know the will of God not just by
thinking, not by just studying, not just by taking out your pen and writing
notes, but God's will begins to unfold within us as we utilize it in our lives,
as we walk in the light. We become disciples of Christ as we begin to take
God's word and do something about it.
At the end of every message that I
give, I usually scribble two words with a question mark: So what? I'm asking
myself every time I speak to people, "So what?" "So what, John,
you just gave a message. Was there something that needed to be applied? Was
there something that needed to be shared? Was there something that needed to be
exercised?"
I contend that we are educated as
Christians way beyond our level of obedience. What would happen if, after I
finished a Sunday morning sermon and gave an application, we didn't have church
again until people did something about it? (Some people I wouldn't see until
the next Easter!) Do we take God's word and really apply it?
Discipleship
is: My
desire is to make disciples. That's the command that Jesus has given me, and in
my view, discipleship is:
1.
The Great Commission (Matthew 28:20)
It's
a command, not a suggestion, to imitate what Jesus did with the twelve. He said, "Make
disciples of all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father, the Son and
the Holy Spirit and teaching them to obey all that I have commanded you."
2.
Multiplication through reproduction (II Timothy 2:2)
We
must "multiply" as Christians, because addition won't keep up with the
population growth. Discipleship
is us multiplying ourselves in the lives of others. "And the things
that you have received from me in the presence of many witnesses, those entrust
to the faithful men who will be able to teach others also."
3.
Apprenticeship (I Thessalonians 2:7-8)
Jesus
lived with His men and invested His life in them. Here's what
Paul told the Christians. "We choose to be like children or like a
mother nursing her baby. We cared so much for you that you became so dear to us
that we were willing to give our lives to you when we gave you God's
message."
I can’t help but be inspired by Jesus
in these passages! In His time, there were two models of discipleship:
the Greek model and the Hebrew model. The Greek model was teaching—we think
of Socrates, Aristotle, Plato, Alexander the Great. It was an enlightenment,
information that pleased the mind. But Jesus discipled according to the Hebrew
model: on-the-job training. Jesus took his twelve disciples with him and they
experienced things together.
Disciple-making involves a
developmental relationship where a mature Christian invests and mentors a
willing apprentice so that he or she not only matures as well, but also becomes
a multiplying Christian.
Question:
What do you possess, spiritually, that you can pass on?
Question:
Do you know of any people who could benefit from your spiritual maturity?
Question:
Although you are not perfect, would you commit to multiplying at least one
spiritual discipline or quality in someone else?
Early in my preaching career, in my
second church in Ohio, I decided that I wanted to be a disciple, and began to
call the pastors of some of the great churches all over America. I wanted to
learn something from men who had been very successful. I'd call them and say,
"You don't know who I am, but my name is John Maxwell and I'm a pastor and
you're a great man of God and you have a great church. I want to learn from the
best."
For about the first five years of our
married life, Margaret and I never could afford a vacation, but I’d speak at a
revival somewhere near a city with one of those great churches. And when I
called the pastors of these churches, because they didn't know who I was, I
would say, "I'll give you a hundred dollars if you'll give me 30 minutes
of your time." I was making $12,800 bucks a year, but I wanted so badly to
be a disciple and to learn. I wanted so badly to sit at the feet of somebody
who knew more than I knew.
I would go to these pastors for my
appointment and walk in with my tape recorder so that I could record the
answers. I had a legal pad with pages of questions, and I would ask my
questions as fast as I could with that tape recorder on. When the 30 minutes
were over, I would turn off the tape recorder, put my stuff back in my
briefcase, stand up, reach in my pocket for the hundred dollar check already
made out to that pastor and hand it to him.
Interestingly enough, in every single
case, those pastors would look at that check and smile. They saw a kid who
wanted desperately to build a great church for God. And they'd hand my hundred
dollars back, and sometimes they'd ask me to go to lunch with them. I would
accept, but usually I couldn’t eat. I would just ask more questions.
Often, I’d leave those lunches, get in
my car, and bawl like a baby. For the last hour, I had spent some time with
what I would call a great man of God; and a little bit of that spirit, a little
bit of that man, a little bit of that sense of God that was in his life had
begun to ooze into my life. Peter tells us that the elderly women should pour
their lives into the younger women, that there ought to be a desire to enhance
the body of Christ, where we become our brother's and our sister's keeper. And
those who are more experienced in the word begin to help those who are younger
in the word.
Younger Christians are so much fun!
They don't have a clue, but they're fun! I had one come up to me and show me
John 3:16. He said, "Look what I found." It's just so much fun to be
around a new Christian because they're so happy; they're so joyful. Our
problem, as older Christians, is that we get to a certain level where
we've been there, done that, and we've kind of got our system worked out. All
of a sudden we forget that our obligation doesn't stop with our own spiritual
development, but our obligation is to begin to pour ourselves into someone
else.
The Original
Blueprint. I
desire for us as Christians to begin to pour our lives into one another. Jesus
did such a good job of this. Jesus modeled for us a lifestyle of spiritual
reproduction. It was "on the job training" in real-life contexts.
Note Jesus' IDEA of spiritual reproduction:
I
Instruction in a real-life context.
D Demonstration
in a real-life context. He not only taught them in parables, but He was
also always showing them. He was visualizing. He was incarnating, fleshing out
truth before them. Remember the time the disciples came up to Jesus and they
said, "Lord, teach us to pray." Do you know why they asked that
question? Because they had watched Him pray. They had seen Him go up to the
mountain. And when He came back after prayer, incredible things happened in His
ministry, and it began to make the disciples hungry and thirsty to know what
that man knew. So as they watched him, they begin to want to know more about
God.
E
Exposure in a real-life context. It's where Jesus would take the
disciples into these situations and they would try it.
A
Accountability or assessment in a real-life context. After they tried it,
and after they experimented, they came back and they talked about it.
If you understand church history, you
know discipleship did really well for the first 300 years. The church grew by
Christians reproducing Christians. But in A.D. 313, the Emperor Constantine
made Christianity a state religion. Worst thing that ever happened was that the
head honcho officially ordered everybody to do be Christians. When he said
that, he forced people that weren't even believers to be in the Christian
church. And all of a sudden, it went from a vibrant body of Jesus Christ, a
community thriving with reproduction, to a sterile institution. And we dropped
the ball in 313. Since then, the church has tried to come back to this issue of
reproducing itself.
This strategy worked
right to the 4th century. Then we dropped the ball. Why?
1. Human
nature: We tend to drift into comfort zones -
the path of least resistance.
There's
a tendency for all of us to kind of coast, relax, rest, to lay back. That's the
truth for every one of us.
2. Clergy
vs. laity distinction: A wide gap grew
between clergy and laity
This
distinction basically says that there are professionals that should do all
that, and we pay them – they’re the pastoral staff or leadership team. There's
a tendency to say, "I sit in the pew and I let the leadership team do
that. All we are is laity anyway." The word "laity," by the way,
comes from the Latin root word "idiot." Clergy comes from the root
word "church."
My desire for churches is to cut that
clergy/laity stuff completely out. We don't need clergy and laity. Instead,
aren't we all a part of the body of Christ? Don't we all have spiritual gifts?
Shouldn't we all be using them for the glory of God? Don't you realize you're
going to be accountable to God for your spiritual gifts? Just because I happen
to be a "pastor" doesn't mean that I'm going to be anymore
accountable for my spiritual gifts than you are for yours. You've got to go
find out what it is and utilize it for Christ.
We must return to the
original blueprint...
As we invest in
people, we must be committed to three things:
1.
A Person
2.
A Process
3.
A Purpose
Have you ever sat down with a more
mature believer and been discipled one-on-one so that you can just grow in your
Christian walk with God? If you've been discipled, have you received enough
strength and to turn around and say, “I want to pour my life into someone
else?”
Think
for a moment, what would happen if every one of us reproduced ourselves even
once? Staggering, isn't it? Let's decide to get involved in the kingdom.
Source:
John Maxwell,Sermoncentral.com
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