In Spite of Our Shame
To follow Jesus is to leave the solitary confinement of shame in order to live in connection with God and others.
Family and Making Disciples, Part 5: Belonging
People need to belong. This desire in man to belong comes from the nature of God. For all eternity the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit have had each other and belonged to one another. Since man is created in the image of God, we too were made to belong to others.
Family and Making Disciples, Part 4: Leadership
The church (ekklesia) is made up of the children of God, and so it only seems consistent that we would function as a family on earth. Families cannot be run as an organization, and yet Christianity approaches the church as an organization as seen in the way it recruits and trains its leaders.
Family and Making Disciples, Part 3: Multiplication
The marked difference between how parents approach their children and an organization their members is sacrificial love. Just as a child learns love through the daily sacrifices his parents make for him, so the love of God is taught by the believers laying down their lives for other believers. We demonstrate to the world the love of God when we, as the family of God, lay down our lives for one another.
Family and Making Disciples, Part 2: The Church
Making followers of Jesus cannot be separated from the family nature of God. As God the Father loved Jesus, and Jesus loved us, so in the same familiar manner we are to love one another. A parental sacrificial love for others is the catalytic force that will produce disciples of Jesus and advance the kingdom of God.
Family and Making Disciples, Part 1: The Home
One reason why Christianity has struggled to make disciples is because we have approached disciple making with programs rather than as a family. Can an organization empower and develop its people? Certainly. But, there is a marked difference between how an organization develops its people and how a parent loves his child.
Teach Them Well
Many mornings, I have great intentions of starting our day well and then transition to watching it slowly spin out of control.
Making Disciples Starts in the Home, Part 4
Making disciples in your home doesn’t have to be big, dramatic moments. It doesn’t have to be perfect. But if you will commit to learning these practices in your family, God will work and you will all grow.
Making Disciples Starts in the Home, Part 3
Our homes become places of discipleship when we lead them to be places where grace is experienced on a regular basis. So how can we mirror the grace that has been given to us by Jesus in our families?
Making Disciples Starts in the Home, Part 2
We set the stage for discipleship at home by pursuing a life that we want our children to imitate.
Hospitality Begins in The Heart
Jesus shows us that the invitation of hospitality is an invitation into a heart that puts people at ease, makes them the most important person, and therefore creating a space where they can grow as a disciple.
Making Disciples Starts in the Home, Part 1
With 22 years of marriage and 3 kids, I can never lose sight that fulfilling the commission in Matthew 28:19-20 to “go and make disciples” starts in my home. It not only starts in my home but is the most important aspect of making disciples in my life.
Discipleship as ‘Followship’
God made us for life with Him; He redeemed us for life in Him. We were made for unbroken communion with our Lord. Discipleship is ‘followship’ – following God in fellowship with Him. And this is living in our salvation.