Monday, March 30, 2015

Christ in Discipleship




LIBERTY UNIVERSITY BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY


Written Assignment 1: Christ in Discipleship


Submitted to Dr. Rodney Dempsey, in partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the completion of the course


DSMN 500 – D01
Discipleship Ministries


by

Robert Ortiz Jr.
Submitted: August 6, 2014



It seems the focus of the church today is to gather as many people as it can into it and have them take part in “speed saving,” (a play on speed dating). The idea is to introduce these folks to Christ, then give them the basic “Christianity” run down, i.e., attend church services, teach them to tithe, and then shuffle them into ministries they can get involved with if they want to, ministries the leaders wants to grow on purpose for its own benefit not necessarily for the glory of Christ the Lord. Is this an ugly picture of the church? Yes it is (although, not all churches operate this way thank God); nevertheless, the focus of the church in the twenty-first century is certainly not on discipleship as much as it is on seeker friendliness and political correctness – there is no longer a radical Christianity with radical obedience and “heartbroken boldness” as Dave Earley writes (which is a command of Christ).[1] 
Of course, this stems from a lack of continuity with the Word of God. Beginning with leaders and working its way down to the lay person, the single-mindedness of following Christ in total and utter obedience and focusing on the call to discipleship and disciple making is simply not a priority, not even a desire most times. Earley writes that for Christ there were a set of assumptions in play when he commanded his disciples to go and make disciples, “He was assuming they were already living as disciples,” and when he commanded they obey all he demanded of them “He was assuming they were already obeying everything he had commanded.”[2] The idea then is that Christ was seeking from his disciples complete obedience and steadfast assertiveness to get the job of making disciples done, clearly the undertone here is that one cannot make a disciple if one is not a disciple.
And herein is the problem – a great majority of Christians are not making disciples because a great majority of Christians are not disciples. The church has become sedentary. It has lost its first love. And it shows. The church has become satisfied with going through the motions of rote Sunday service and a lack of expectation of obedience to every Word of Christ on the part of its congregants. Earley ponders a very poignant question, “if I really believed, read, studied, memorized, and obeyed everything Jesus commanded everyday, would my life look any different?”[3] Now there is a question to chew on. Of course the life of a believer would be different, markedly different because he is obedient.
 Obedience is the engine that drives the disciple toward accomplishing the goal of making other disciples. Obedience to Christ and his commands are paramount if the disciple is to truly live out his life according to the blueprint laid out by Jesus; he modeled obedience and fully expected his disciples to follow suit. Why else would he dictate some five hundred commands in the whole of the NT? Obedience is far more than simply following orders for the sake of a task, for the disciple, obedience means self denial, a release of oneself and a total and utter attachment to Jesus Christ. Oswald Chambers writes, “Discipleship means personal, passionate devotion to a Person— our Lord Jesus Christ.”[4] Jesus said, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.”[5]
Dietrich Bonhoeffer writes, “Discipleship is commitment to Christ.”[6] This commitment to Christ requires submission of self. The first step states Bonhoeffer, is to separate oneself from their previous life; the call of Christ “immediately creates a new situation.”[7] A disciple of Christ called by him cannot stay the same person; every person who responds to Christ truly is a new creation (2 Cor. 5:17). Bonhoeffer points out that there is really only one option to following Christ as his true disciple and that is to leave everything and everyone and attach himself completely to Jesus.[8] Another aspect of the disciple’s life that must come into submission to Christ is pride. Too often Christians want, and with good intentions most times, to serve God so badly they lose focus of Christ; it is then the service to God that he begins to worship and not God himself. It is easy to get caught up in ministry opportunities or your own desires for life. Christ is seeking total submission and commitment to him if his child is to be a true disciple.
According to Earley there are three distinct stages in the life of a true disciple:
·         Stage one: declaration
·         Stage two: development
·         Stage three: deployment[9]

These stages combine to create the ideal situation for a Christ centered disciple to live her life according to his commands in utter obedience, and therefore have the ability to go and make disciples which is ultimately the goal of discipleship.Stage one is about making a declaration of faith in Jesus as Lord after having taken some time to look into who Christ is as a person. Repentance follows. Stage two is about developing as a disciple by fully connecting with Christ in a devoted, submissive, and passionate relationship. In this stage there is a period of apprenticeship with Christ where a disciple learns to model Christ in his dealing with humanity.

Paul Tanner writes,
Jesus masterfully worked with the original twelve disciples, calling them from their rather mundane way of life to transform them into fearless leaders who would lay the foundation of the church in the first century. He knew when to encourage them, when to instruct them, and even when to rebuke and correct them. He was the master teacher, while they were the ever wayward students in his classroom of faith.[10]

What Christ did with the twelve he will do with believers today, their experience can be had except that it is done by obedience, studying God’s word, prayer, fasting, and ministry, which is the next stage. Stage three is all about deployment, the “go” part of discipleship. Christ’s mission was to announce the kingdom of heaven is near and to partake in a divine plan to save mankind from his sins and offer the opportunity to be reconciled with the creator of all things. It then becomes the mission of Christ’s disciple to go and proclaim the good news, lead others to him in faith and repentance, teach them to model Christ, and finally have them go and do the same; disciples making disciples who make disciples.
            The three stages create a wonderful result when Christ calls and disciples follow. All three work together quite cohesively to make up the whole of a soul winning, disciple making powerhouse of a believer who is submitted and committed to Christ. An important outflow of that progression leads to building community. God does not desire a disciple go it alone, this is evident in Christ calling the twelve. God operates within a community – God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit. Earley writes that the “‘Great Three-in-one’ is an eternal manifestation of intimate community and glorious interdependence.”[11] For believers then, we need each other if we are to successfully achieve the goal of discipleship – making more disciples.
            Earley cites Charles Spurgeon as stating, “Every Christian is either a missionary or an imposter.”[12] Earley goes on to write, “Disciples do not live as mere church members.”[13] A disciple would be hard pressed to not go and obey the call of Christ to reach out and make disciples of the entire world. A true disciple, after going through stage one: declaration, and stage two: development, will almost instinctually want to share his knowledge of Christ with others. The best way to guide another person to that end is to first help them see Christ for who he really is. This is can be accomplished most effectively by modeling the life of a true disciple; be that person you hope another to be – serve others, care for them, pray for them, and be available whenever someone needs you. Like Jesus modeled it for the twelve and they modeled it for their disciples and so forth, disciples today should and can, do the same.
            There is a great sense of joy, peace, and love for a true disciple. Knowing that Christ the Lord will be there for them as he was for the twelve in preparing them to live a submitted and committed life of love and service to God Almighty is wonderful and intimidating. There is a heavy price to pay for being a disciple of Christ; he expects everything from a disciple – complete and utter devotion above all and everyone else. There is no room for half heartedness with Jesus; it really is all or nothing. But, there are many marvelous benefits to living life surrendered to Christ; the most important one is freedom. Bonhoeffer writes,
When holy scripture speaks of following Jesus, it proclaims that people are free from all human rules, from everything which pressures, burdens, or causes worry and torment of conscience. In following Jesus, people are released from the hard yoke of their own laws to be under the gentle yoke of Jesus Christ.[14]

What a fantastic fact to know, that Jesus will take care of every aspect of a true disciples life if only she would declare Christ as Lord, develop under his tutelage, and be ready for deployment into a lost and desperate world which frankly is eager and ready to hear the good news of Jesus Christ.

  



[1] Dave Earley and Rod Dempsey, Disciple Making Is…: How to Live the Great Commission with Passion and Confidence, (Nashville: B&H Publishing Group, 2013), 54.
[2] Ibid., 49.
[3] Ibid., 47.
[4] Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest: Daily Devotions by Oswald Chambers, http://utmost.org/the-conditions-of-discipleship, (accessed July 11, 2014).
[5] Luke 9:23 (NIV).
[6] Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Discipleship, Geffrey B. Kelly and John D. Godsey, eds. And Barbara Green and Reinhard Krauss, trans., (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001), 59.
[7] Ibid., 61 – 62.
[8] Ibid., 62.
[9] Earley, 58.
[10] Paul Tanner, “The Cost of Discipleship: Losing One’s Life for Jesus’ Sake.” Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society56, no. 1 (03, 2013): 43-61, http://search.proquest.com/docview/1353301300?accountid=12085.
[11] Earley, 71.
[12] Ibid., 77.
[13] Ibid.
[14] Bonhoeffer, 39.

Bibliography

Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Discipleship. Geffrey B. Kelly and John D. Godsey, eds. and Barbara
Green and Reinhard Krauss, trans. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001.

Chambers, Oswald. My Utmost for His Highest: Daily Devotions by Oswald Chambers.

Earley, Dave, Rod Dempsey. Disciple Making Is…: How to Live the Great Commission with
Passion and Confidence. Nashville: B&H Publishing Group, 2013.

Tanner, Paul. “The Cost of Discipleship: Losing One’s Life for Jesus’ Sake.” Journal of the
Evangelical Theological Society56, no. 1 (03, 2013): 43-61.
http://search.proquest.com/docview/1353301300?accountid=12085.

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