Who should do the discipling, only God, or should we as Christians have a hand in it?
Who should do the discipling, only God, or should we as Christians have a hand in it?
It seems to me that we are the ones who are tasked with the various evangelistic efforts
The teaching part is life long so we impart into others as God imparts into us and it does not need to be a classroom setting to be disciplining. In my opinion it should include lots of teaching and listening just like Jesus did it but that does not mean you have to be in a classroom or in a church building to do it, neither did Jesus.
How far should our evangelistic efforts go? Do they stop at leading someone through the "sinner's prayer," or do we have a duty to follow up and guide the new believer?
I don't make broad brush statements about churches. It comes natural to criticize and to find fault. We have to train our tongues to not do that. We cannot tell what the percentage of other churches are doing without a scientific survey. People can speak from their own limited world view, in their part of a geographical area where they have attended churches and been involved long enough to know about what is going on beyond the Sunday morning service. But people are free to wag their tongues and pass judgment on what a church or pastor is not doing right and what they should do better. I will guess that 50% of the time or more they are wrong about their criticisms. But that is not a scientific survey and the percentage might be much higher.This is an awesome sentiment, but now I want to flip my question on its head. What percentage of pastors in developed countries are engaging in the type of activities you have so eloquently described?
It seems like more than just the sinners’ prayer, yes
I don't make broad brush statements about churches. It comes natural to criticize and to find fault. We have to train our tongues to not do that. We cannot tell what the percentage of other churches are doing without a scientific survey.
I can only speak for my church. We have a school of ministry that trains those who feel called to preach
I also think that so many wrong things have been taught in the name of disciplining (even cultish and strange doctrines of demons) that today we have to clearly define what we mean and what it looks like to disciple all nations
We are not supposed to be modeling it after the Jewish Rabbi/disciple model and some would try and teach that.
I agree. I often wonder if they really know which generation they are speaking about. It makes no sense to define an entire generations culture, America is full of different cultures depending on environments and many other factors. I am studying an evangelism book for a class this month and it is trying to persuade me that people do not want to hear preaching today they want to hear talk shows and creative arts instead. I could not disagree more. There are many people who want Holy Spirit anointed preaching and are looking for it and turning away from creative art methods and not authentic or from God. The author is trying to paint with a broad brush and I think his experiences are his own and he does not comprehend the current generation like he thinks he does.Fair enough, but it goes both ways. I've heard many pastors over the years-- whether in person, on radio or YouTube-- complain about generation X, Y or Z not being disciplined enough to go to church or to take seriously God's edicts. I would argue they are also painting with a fairly broad brush.
The ministry training students train the people in the church who want to get involved in outreaches like Nursing Home, and Jail Ministry, Street Ministry, short term missions etc. We have a full time student who is called to Jail and Police Chaplain and is taking both criminal justice courses as well as chaplaincy and bible college courses. Full time ministry might be a better word but I think that the vision of the school of ministry here is that it will produce pastors as the most common graduate.What if I am not called to preach but have a heart for the elderly in nursing homes? Would I be able to receive training to endure the obvious hardships I may encounter ministering to those people? After all, the spiritual warfare that goes on in those places must be somewhat perilous.
We are commanded to make disciples from all nations and bring Jesus's message to the world. Humans can make disciples by spiritual support and teaching.Who should do the discipling, only God, or should we as Christians have a hand in it?