Archive for Bible Study – Page 4

Removing the Wall Between Disciplemaking and Evangelism

Making Disciples is our calling; our purpose. Sharing the gospel, leading people to Christ, baptizing people, discipling them in their faith–is what we do to make disciples.
Too often we tend to gravitate towards either evangelism or discipleship. It takes courage to share the gospel. It takes time to disciple someone. God has called us to do both. The command to make disciples includes evangelism and discipleship. It’s not an either/or proposition. It is a both/and.
For me, discipleship was always easier. I love people. I love getting to know people and spending time with them. I enjoy teaching and serving. Sharing the gospel with someone was always difficult. And to be honest, it still is. I have to work hard at putting myself in situations where I can share the gospel with lost people.
The story of Paul and Barnabas tell an interesting story. When Saul encountered Jesus on the road to Damascus, it was Barnabas that welcomed him and discipled him in his new faith. Barnabas “the encourager” spent a lot of time with Saul who became known as Paul. They even went on their first missionary journey together. They invited John Mark to join them. At some point, John Mark left the group. When Paul and Barnabas planned their next trip, Barnabas wanted John Mark to come as well. But Paul refused. They argued and the decision was to travel separately. Barnabas would take John Mark and Paul would take Silas.
Paul and Barnabas, two godly men, that God chose to use to make disciples on their journeys. They differed in their approach. Paul put his focus first on the mission of traveling to new places and sharing the gospel. Barnabas focused on people first as they traveled to new places and shared the gospel. They had two very different perspectives and methodologies but they shared a common objective—making disciples.
Both teams shared the gospel and saw people come to Christ in almost every city. But then, they stayed and taught them in their new born faith. Paul and Barnabas knew that evangelism and discipleship are inseparable. To do one without the other would weaken the church and the movement around the globe in sharing the good news.
Using a sports analogy, teams compete to win the game. Each team has their own unique plan to accomplish their objective. Both teams need an offense and a defense. To neglect either of these is to damage their prospects for victory.
Jesus’ plan to make disciples of all the nations demands that we do both evangelism and discipleship. They are not two separate programs. They are the same program and the same objective.
The questions is not “if” we will share the gospel or “if” we will disciple someone. The real question is who will you disciple and how will you accomplish your mission.
Sean Keith is the Sunday School/Discipleship Strategist for the Louisiana Baptist Convention. Sean has free resources available at www.louisianabaptists.org/churchgrowth and www.revseankeith.com. Follow me on twitter @revseankeith.

Learning About or Knowing God?

“The word became text and dwelt among us.” That is not the way it reads. He became flesh. And yet so much of the time, I catch myself wanting to get to know the “written word” more than the “living word”. I want to study a book instead of getting to know the author. I am not discouraging people from reading the written word; just the opposite in fact. The more I have grown over the years, God has shown me that He wants me to get to know Him, not just know about Him. I start with the written Word to get to know the Word.
In the past I have approached God as the One who had something to teach me. Which is not wrong. But Jesus was more than a teacher. God wants more than for me to ‘learn’ something. He wants me to know Him. He is not just a teacher or principle.

Interesting. When Jesus was asked which was the greatest commandment, He always states the same thing. He knew exactly what the Father wanted. It was always “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, and mind.” In Mark 12 He adds strength. And in Luke 10, the lawyer who asked Him the question positioned strength in the middle. But in all of the passages Jesus starts with heart. Mind is third. So why do we start, and many times get stuck, with mind. Because it is easier to know something and turn it into a principle, than it is to know someone who wants to change us and guide us.

So, given all this, the first thing we should look for as we read the Bible devotionally is; “How does this help me to draw near to God?” The second like it is, “How does He want to draw near to me?” James tells us that God wants us to “draw near to Him”. The first one – How do we draw near to Him? That answer is: do not treat Him is a principal or a text, treat Him as a person. God the Father is the first person of the Trinity. And He wants us to draw near to Him. The second is like it: “He will draw near to you.” How has God drawn near to you? Have you ever sensed Him deeply at work in your heart and your life? And you wondered what that feeling was? And you asked yourself, “I wonder if someone is praying for me now to have peace?” I asked for prayer for peace in this situation, but I sense more than peace. That is Him, not just His attribute. In Philippians 4 we see “the peace of God” as we request it and turn our anxiety over to Him. But then as we dwell on things as He would, the “God of peace” shows up. Not just a principle or the attribute of peace, but God Himself.

Doug Dees
Executive Pastor
First Baptist Church of Moore, Oklahoma

Disciples Make Disciples

Why Make Disciples?

The Great Commission in Matthew 28:19 was the final request by Jesus to His disciples. It indicated the completion of everything that Jesus had taught them and trained them to do. Now it was their turn to make disciples in the same fashion that Jesus did.
So as a disciple or follower of Christ, why should we make disciples? These three passages from the New Testament best describe why I should take the time to pour into other people’s lives the way that God has used others to pour into my life.
The first reason we should make disciples is because that is what Jesus did. In Matthew 4:19 – Jesus called the disciples to come and follow Him and He would make them into fishers of men. There is a long tradition in the Jewish faith of the Rabbi and his followers. The Rabbi would only select those who showed the greatest potential for being a Rabbi themselves one day. Jesus chose fishermen, a tax collector, a zealot and others. These were average, everyday people. These were people like me. Jesus didn’t choose me because of what I had to offer Him. He chose me because of what He had to offer me.
We need to make disciples because that’s what Jesus did. Someone saw the potential in me and discipled me. Therefore, I should allow God to use me to disciple others too. That goes for you to.
Secondly, we should make disciples because that is what Jesus has “commanded” us to do. In Matthew 28:19 – Jesus called His disciples to make disciples of all the nations. And they did. The call to make disciples is every believer’s responsibility. That is the only way to “make disciples of all the nations”. In every tribe, every people group, every country, every ethnicity, every Language; we are to make disciples. This is God’s plan. You are part of God’s plan—so make disciples
Lastly, we are to make disciples because that was the pattern of every disciple before us. 2 Timothy 2:2 – Paul wrote to Timothy to teach others the things that Paul had taught him, but to do so in a way that those you teach will teach others also. We are to make disciples who will make disciples, and so forth and so forth. Multiplication of the gospel into every heart and in every land.
These three verses illustrate not only the responsibility of the believer to make disciples but also the urgency of making disciples. If not me and you; then who. If not now; then when.
Making disciples is more than a responsibility of the believer—it is a privilege.
Sean Keith is the Sunday School/Discipleship Strategist for the Louisiana Baptist Convention. Sean has free resources available at www.louisianabaptists.org/churchgrowth and www.revseankeith.com. Follow me on twitter @revseankeith.

Who is a Disciple?

As there is a lot of discussion about disciplemaking in today’s church culture, there is probably no bigger discussion that happens than “Who is a Disciple?”. In simple terms, it is someone who is like Jesus. He walks with God, talks to God and has God’s purpose in his heart and mind. Many discipleship programs start with the fact that a person must first accept Jesus as Lord and Savior. The focus then is on baptism and the basic Christian disciplines: reading the Bible, prayer, personal worship, corporate worship, scripture memory and meditating on the Word of God. Few of them focus on finding the person’s spiritual giftedness or finding a place of ministry that correlates to that giftedness.

There was a consensus for many that if someone was a baptized Christian, walked with God in the basic spiritual disciplines and found a spiritual ministry that the person was a full disciple. I contend that many discipleship programs have been short sighted in not going back to the simple terms we discussed earlier, “Be like Jesus”. Jesus did one more thing, He shared the gospel with non-believers and He made disciples. I think that Jesus wants a disciple of His to be like Him. In fact, in one of His last instructions about making disciples, He stated, “Teaching them to observe” found in:

Matthew 28:18-20 (NASB)
And Jesus came up and spoke to them, saying, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”

So a “Disciple of Jesus” is someone who observes all the teachings of Jesus including the instruction in Matthew 28. A true disciple makes disciples.

The ultimate goal of a peach tree is not to just produce peaches. It is to produce peaches that fall and begin other peach trees that produce peaches that produce other peach trees. The same is true for disciples. A true disciple produces disciples that produce disciples that produce disciples.

“Who is a Disciple?” Look to see the disciples you have produced. If you have not produced any then you are not a disciple.

Dr. Mark Yoakum is the Director of Church Ministries for the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention and believes the Great Commission is serious about going and making disciples.