Tuesday, April 21, 2009

What IS Discipleship?

Another great daily email from Ransomed Heart:

What have we come to accept as “discipleship”? A friend of mine recently handed me a program from a large and successful church somewhere in the Midwest. It’s a rather exemplary model of what the idea has fallen to. Their plan for discipleship involves, first, becoming a member of this particular church. Then they encourage you to take a course on doctrine. Be “faithful” in attending the Sunday morning service and a small group fellowship. Complete a special course on Christian growth. Live a life that demonstrates clear evidence of spiritual growth. Complete a class on evangelism. Consistently look for opportunities to evangelize. Complete a course on finances, one on marriage, and another on parenting (provided that you are married or a parent). Complete a leadership training course, a hermeneutics course, a course on spiritual gifts, and another on biblical counseling. Participate in missions. Carry a significant local church ministry “load.”

You’re probably surprised that I would question this sort of program; most churches are trying to get their folks to complete something like this, one way or another. No doubt a great deal of helpful information is passed on. My goodness, you could earn an MBA with less effort. But let me ask you: A program like this—
does it teach a person how to apply principles, or how to walk with God? They are not the same thing.

(Waking the Dead , 95–96)

4 comments:

Kimberly said...

Let me see if I understand correctly what this excerpt is trying to construe...it's a criticism of people trying to apply Christian principles in their lives but leave God out of the equation? Kind of a humanistic Christianity, or deism, where we spout Christian ideals and try to live them but don't actually believe in God's power of intervention (and direct revelation) in our lives?

(Or have I missed the boat entirely?)

Rex Vallis said...

Kimberly, I think you capture the idea quite well.

I've found similar perspectives in all of Eldredge's books. But to be more completely fair, he states clearly that we are in a world at war; if we spend all our time and energy trying to save ourselves (which we can't do) and forget to walk with God ("for my yoke is easy and my burden is light") then we will become casualties in the war.

By the way, he spends a lot of time criticizing his own mistakes too - and what he's learned from them and tried to change.

Kimberly said...

His statement raises some interesting thoughts in my mind about other books and movements that have been popular as of late. Books that teach you to apply the principles of faith in your life to attract good things, but that don't acknowledge that it is actually God instead of the universe or some bogus higher power that grants them to you.

Rex Vallis said...

Amen to that, my astute friend. No "secrets" here, ya know?