![]() Introduction This Fall marks my 30th year in Pastoral ministry. It’s hard to imagine that for thirty years I have dedicated my life to teaching and leading God’s people in His ways and in His Word. In those years I have had some great experiences and I have had some horrible ones. I have witnessed the greatest qualities of Christians and I have seen the worst. I have been hugged by many and yelled at by some and a few were the same people. I have been to countless conferences, read innumerable theological books, leadership books, books on how to have a successful ministry, books about the ins and outs of church growth, and books on the importance of discipleship. I have had success and I have faced failure. All this to say is, in thirty years I have learned a lot. But as I sat down to prepare this message I thought back on all the years of ministry and experiences, and I came to a somewhat cynical conclusion about church and pastoral ministry. As church leaders we are great at building buildings. We love to design programs and come up with clever sermon titles. We have mastered the art of staffing churches. We are great at putting on events and coming up with gimmicks. We are visionaries as we rally people around new initiatives and strategies. And if God blesses our churches with growth, we become increasingly skillful in a multitude of other things from branding to facility management. But my cynicism comes when I get down to brass tacks and contemplate and ask the most important questions, “Are we making disciples of Christ?” And “do we really know and understand what discipleship looks like?” I hope to shed some light on these questions today. Discipleship Matthew 8:18 – 22 Jesus gets away from the crowd to be with his disciples and this directly contrasts Jesus’ normal routine of ministry. Ironically, the crowd that Jesus is getting away from are the reason for Jesus’ ministry of proclaiming the good news, healing, and inviting them into the kingdom of God to become his disciples. Before he was able to cross over, he was approached by a religious teacher of the law and proclaimed, “I will follow you wherever you go.” In this encounter the teacher of the religious law desired a discipleship relationship with Jesus. However, his idea of discipleship and Jesus’ form of discipleship were not the same. The leader was seeking prestige and honor. According to commentator and theologian Michael J. Wilkins, “This man has in mind the kind of master-disciple relationship in which a potential disciple examines various masters and then enlists himself with the most popular or the best-equipped one.” Jesus’ discipleship does not look like this. Jesus’ discipleship does not include schooling or training in the synagogue. His discipleship is relational, humble and comes with a cost. A disciple of Jesus will not result in prestige and comfort, instead it will be one of loss and abandonment. Church leaders today easily fall into the trap of gauging success in the church by the ABCs of growth: Attendance, Buildings, and Cash and not the in discipleship. What pastors shifted the focus from running out and grabbing as many people from outside of the community with gimmicks and programs to attract people to the church and Jesus and instead, spend more time discipling the people whom God has already entrusted to them? What if we decided to invest in those already attending week after week? This is what we call discipleship. The word Disciple simply means “learner or student.” Some would define a disciples much like this religious leader, as someone who follows a leader. But a disciple of Christ is not just a follower. A disciple of Christ not only follows Jesus but…
The distinguishing mark of a Christian disciple is a transformed heart and transformed life. When someone becomes a disciple, Christ radically changes the person’s life. A Disciple is… Led in a Direction – In regard to being led, a disciple is led by someone and follows someone, often in a new direction. It is a choice that is made. It is a response to a call. Disciples are followers; however, they must make the decision to take the hand of the guide and go where they are led. It is not merely following blindly, it involves following one who knows where they are going, how to get there, and one who they will model their lives after. We see this in the calling of the disciples of Jesus. They responded to Jesus’ call and made the choice to follow Him to places they never would have gone and to model their lives after. Every disciple of Jesus is walking somewhere and following someone. So, who are you following? Where are you headed? Trained in Truth – If you are a disciple of Jesus Christ, you must be guided in His ways. Being trained in truth is not about gaining head knowledge and it is not about picking and choosing what to believe. When you agree to be a disciple you are seeking to allow God’s truth to work through your life all your life. Life is not a classroom, so the process of discipleship is intended to train and guide you through everyday circumstances, which ultimately leads to… Formed in Character – Disciples of Jesus are people who no longer want to simply be all they can be on their own. Instead, they want to be like Jesus. It is about transformation. You have joyfully surrendered your life, demolished borders, and are happy to have a life that is shaped to look like Jesus. Discipleship is not about behavior modification. If a church. Pastor, or Christian views discipleship as merely tweaking behavior, then their work is contrary to the content of the gospel and the way of Jesus. Go after hearts. God does not desire to tweak our behavior. He desires to transform our lives. Jesus modeled discipleship and trained his disciples to go out and make disciples. Jesus gradually released his disciples into ministry through a four-step process that looked like this
The Cost of Discipleship Discipleship has an end goal: to be conformed into the image of Christ — to talk the way he talked, walk the way he walked, and respond the way he responded. As a disciple-maker, all you’re doing is pointing at the One you’re following and saying to those around you, “Come with me; I’m following him.” However, discipleship comes with a cost.
Conclusion Discipleship begins with a relationship with Jesus Christ. It is imperative that we have a relationship with the Savior before we can fully follow him in the direction that He calls us. Disciples of Christ allow Jesus to be the center of all they are and do and this affects every aspect of their life. More specifically this centrality affects the way we view ourselves and how we treat others. As a disciple you are part of God’s mission and you are called to participate in God’s mission which is “Disciples making disciples”. HOW?
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Jeff has been in full-time ministry for thirty years. He currently serves as Executive Director at Anchor House Ministry at SeaPort Manatee in Palmetto, FL and he is a part-time Campus Pastor at West Bradenton Southside in Bradenton, Florida.
Jeff Has authored A Lent Devotional (A Spiritual Journey to Lent) an Advent Devotional (The Advent of Jesus) and a devotional on the book of James (James: Where Faith and Life Meet). All three are available on Amazon. He is married to Carrie and they have four children, Micaiah, Gabe, Simon, and Berea. Preview or purchase Jeff's Books
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