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Growing Up Challenge? It’s Not too Late. Sign up Now! Our church is experiencing a revival. There is more excitement about discipleship and growing closer to Christ than ever before. I believe that a return to discipleship is the revival of the 21st century.” I am not introducing a new method, actually it’s an old method, 2000 years to be exact. I had the privilege to spend time with Billy Graham a few years ago at his home in North Carolina. You can imagine how special that time was. My friend Rob Wilton and I went with Dr. Don Wilton, whom Dr. Graham calls his pastor. Many of you are familiar with Dr. Graham because of the crusades he led where 100’s of thousands responded to the gospel message. You may have even attended one of those meetings. Although he gave his life to mass crusades, he believed they would not accomplish the great commission. Don’t take my word for it. Listen to his: One of the first verses of scripture that Dawson Trotman, founder of The Navigators, encouraged me to memorize was 2 Timothy 2:2. This is like a mathematical formula for spreading the gospel and enlarging the church. Paul taught Timothy; Timothy shared what he knew with faithful men; these faithful men would then teach others also. And so the process goes on and on. If every believer followed this pattern, the church could reach the entire world in one generation! Mass crusades, in which I believe and to which I have committed my life will never finish the great commission; but a personal discipleship ministry will. Although Paul preached to the masses at times, he too, believed that discipleship was the plan for carrying out the great commission. 2 Timothy 2:1–2, You then, my child, be strengthened by the grace that is in Christ Jesus, 2 and what you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.
1. Dependent upon the grace of Christ Why is the word disciple not used after the book of Acts? The last time the word disciple is used is in Acts 21:16. The word rabbi was a hebraic concept. Since the gospel was moving from Jerusalem to Judea, and Samaria and the ends of the earth, places like Ephesus, Corinth, Colossae, and Rome knew very little about the rabbi/disciple relationship. The relationship of a disciple to rabbi consisted of not just learning what the rabbi knew but doing what the rabbi did. It was learning coupled with imitation and implementation. To eliminate the need for a discourse on discipleship, Paul, and the other epistle writers, utilize a concept that was universal: the familial relationship between a parent and a child. He didn’t envision it in a paternalistic sense, but in a growing or maturing sense. Everything you learned about treating your spouse and raising your kids, you learned from your parents. Has your wife ever said, “you are just like your dad.” Or “you speak to me exactly like your mom talks to your dad.” The patterns that were modeled in the home are foundational for how you live today. So Paul replaces the rabbi/disciple model with the parent/child relationship. This should change the way you read the New Testament now. By understanding this, what Paul says makes sense: “you then, my child (my student, my mentee, my disciple), be strengthened by the grace that is in Christ Jesus, 2 and what you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.” The command “be strengthened by the grace that is in Christ” is in the present passive verb. The present form signifies something we do every day, all day. But passive tense proves that we can’t do it ourselves. The action is done to us from someone else. How is this supposed to happen? By the grace that is in Christ Jesus. This is a foreign concept. We normally build strength by working out, running, lifting weights, or by tearing the muscle. Here is a tip that I learned years ago to build muscle: unless you tear it, it wont grow. The old adage: no pain, no gain is true. Most people who work out never tear the muscle, they only move it. Conversely, the Christian life is very different. We do use weight, but not that kind of weight. God uses wait. Listen to:
Isaiah 40:31, “Those who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; They shall walk and not faint.” We are strengthened to make disciples through his strength, not ours. We don’t tough it out. Paul doesn’t say,
“Drop down and give me 20.” He says, rely on God’s spirit. He is our supply. How many things have you done something without asking for the spirit’s power and direction? How many times have you studied the bible without asking for God’s insight? Or taught a class? Or led a discipleship group? Or corrected your children? Or gave advice to someone? Or made a business decision? I want to be so in tune with the Lord that I hear his voice, sense his presence, and live in his power. So if you are saying, “I can’t disciple someone else?” You are correct. In your own strength you can’t. But empowered by the holy spirit, you can.
- Dependent upon the Grace of Christ
- Investing in the people of Christ
- is dead in sin,
- actively practices disobedience,
- is seduced by the world,
- is enslaved by satan, &
- is the object of god’s wrath.
- Dependent upon the grace of Christ
- Investing in the people of Christ
- Repeating the pattern of Christ
- 1 on 1 can be a ping pong match.
- It can become a Counseling session
- You lose Group accountability
- Its difficult to reproduce
- Jesus Discipled in a Group
- Multiplication is Exponentially faster than Addition
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