Having recently written Making
Kingdom Disciples, A New Framework, where I deal with the missing,
transforming elements of disciple making, I've been especially
interested in books on discipleship. I've read some good ones and
not so good ones. I like this book. I think it deserves reading by
anyone interested in making disciples. George Barna has written,
"The Christian Church in America is comprised of many
converts, but shockingly few disciples. Less than 1% of all
believers perceived a connection between their efforts to worship
God and their development as a disciple of Jesus."
Glenn McDonald pastors a church in
Indiana, which was named one of the 300 excellent Protestant
congregations in America. His focus, like ours, is transformation.
He deals with this in two ways: first, through discipling
relationships and second, by the six marks of a disciple. They are
"a heart for Christ alone, a mind transformed by the Word,
Arms of love, knees for prayer, a voice to speak the good news,
and a spirit of servanthood and stewardship." McDonald
definitely moves us in the right direction because he is not
concerned with constructing a list of things to do during the week
but that we become transformed people.
The author confesses, "It took
crises in my personal and public worlds to convince me that the
call to make disciples is not a clergy-dependent exercise. First,
I had to reject the assumption-all too common in the mind of the
program-oriented church leader-that if I should step back from my
manic pace of life, the kingdom of God would be just one day away
from collapse." From there, McDonald developed the idea of
moving away from the ABC churches that focus on attendance,
building, and cash. He's speaking of churches that emphasize
programs rather than relationships. Churches tend to measure the
wrong things in discipleship because they look at structure rather
than relationships that transform.
The book actually deals with how to
move from a program driven church to a disciple-making one where
true biblical discipleship can be done. He also demonstrates how
churches in the ABC mode are often the churches that are in a
survival mode rather than growing vibrant churches. A church
involved in transforming discipleship will focus on the
sovereignty of God and the lordship of Christ. That's the key to
effective disciple making.
Each chapter concludes with
questions for discussion as well as ideas on how to get started
with the process. He gives the church a fivefold challenge: Stay
centered through prayer and discernment, embrace discipleship as a
singular focus, shift from a strategy of programs to a strategy of
relationships, emphasize the marks of a disciple instead of
behaviors, and cultivate a culture of personal discipline. Read
this along with Making Kingdom Disciples with the prayer that God
will enable you to be kingdom builders.
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