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Beautifully Simple, the Discovery Bible Study

December 30, 2019 by Disciple 2 Comments

“But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you.” – John

Read any of the current books at the moment on global Disciple Making, and each will highlight the significance of the Discovery Bible Study (DBS). Across the globe, millions, even tens of millions of people from every people group, are discovering Jesus through the pages of Scripture – and then, in true obedience to what they read, telling others what they are learning about Him.

Don’t be fooled, DBS is no ordinary Bible Study though. There are no leaders, no experts, no teachers (especially) other than Jesus himself, through his Spirit. Time and again, as we run through this in our own groups, we are astonished as the unchurched make fascinating observations and insights around passages – passages we have often been looking at for years or more.

Further, DBS brings strict accountability on each participant to share what they have learned that week, to the extent of being required to report back the following week on whether they have been obedient (or not). It is the crucial difference between that and the traditional Bible Study, seeking to impart obedience more than knowledge. The result is something unique in Western Christendom; predominantly non-believers, learning and discovering Jesus through interaction and the prompting and teaching of the Holy Spirit, and from the outset appreciating that following Jesus means obeying Jesus. A key to that obedience is sharing him with others, whether we fully understand what that means or not.

In DBS, we have the full Ekklesia, with all its components of gathering, praise, teaching, pastoral, sharing and obedience. Adequate time is given to every part, and perhaps most importantly everyone is active and involved.

Around the world there are stories of Muslims, Hindus, aetheists and not-yet-believers, sharing their discoveries of Christ with others in their community. The Gospel spreads between believer and non-believer, community to community. The Church multiplies, the Great Commission is fulfilled with something as simple as a Discovery Bible Study. Above everything, Christ is allowed his role as head of the Church. How wonderful.

My wife has been praying for decades for her family, and recently she has taken each side through a simple DBS. All of them shared in the session, all of them were engaged. Around a table, each answered a simple set of questions and all participated, even answering the question, “who do you know this week who needs to hear this story, and when will you share it?” Like many others, they have begun to discover who Jesus is, in their own homes, with others in their own oikos. The Gospel story, the story of Jesus, will be shared into another oikos. The church multiplied, the Kingdom expanding.

We see the same in our own gathering. Every week the focus is on establishing new Discovery Groups, as we each ask the Holy Spirit to guide us into people of influence in our own oikos, so that we can continue to introduce Jesus to others.

This week, I was reminded of that simple beauty, with no teacher other than the Holy Spirit. A man, an uneducated man who is still working out his Faith, offered profound insights and responses to a well known passage, as those gathered around were amazed. But that was not even all of it, the same man committed to sharing with those in his own oikos. The Good News of Jesus spreads, and nothing will stop it.

Sometimes all we need do, is get out of the way.

The Church Premier League

September 29, 2019 by Disciple 3 Comments

There are four major churches where we live, each a different ‘brand’ from the other. They compete avidly for members, mostly young people. They compete at several different levels, doctrinally, ‘worship’, events, programmes, charismatic leaders and even the type of teaching. This last bit, the message, is often at the heart of success.

One in particular is relatively new and we know the ‘pastor’ and his wife well. They have a good heart, do a lot in the community and have been set on establishing a church for some time. Their model is Bethel, one of the leading US mega churches run by Bill Johnson.

We have been enticed to go there a few times; ‘we’re growing so fast, but it’s mostly young people and we don’t have enough mature Christians around to cope, why don’t you join us?’ While we appreciate the sentiment, it’s not quite where we sense our calling from the Lord.

Perhaps more importantly though, is it right?

Is it right, for example, to claim rapid growth when all of the growth – 100%, is transfer growth, especially when the main group is young people who at best are transient and go where the crowd is? Can we claim the Lord’s anointing when this is the case? The next phase of growth is already on the table – a building, because the one we’re renting has already been outgrown. Then we need a youth pastor…..and on it goes down a familiar road.

Meanwhile, the other churches presumably are upset, because they are losing members. We know for a fact this is the case, everyone is going to this ‘new’ church. If numbers are down, then offerings are down and so an examination will soon need to take place to decide what we can do to stem the outflow. An overseas visiting speaker perhaps? A review of ‘worship’ or some of our programmes, and perhaps even a sermon urging members to invite their friends along.

It is immensely sad. Yesterday, I was with my son and together we spoke to 2 young mums who go to the ‘newbrand church’ and they explained why they liked it. Yet church is not a brand, you’re not supposed to tire of it or the pastor. Church should not be the next Gucci handbag or nightclub that will pass out of favour shortly. In a year or so, there will be another newbrand, and the cycle will repeat. As growth and numbers become the absolute priority to keep the machine going, the Gospel becomes secondary to the individual. Programmes tailored down to the singular are created and worst of all, sin is not discussed or ignored lest people are offended and leave.

Critically though, the very structure of the modern Western church is built such that local mission is virtually non-existent. So little time is spent mixing with non-believers, as instead every waking moment is taken up with ‘church’ programmes and activities. We have prioritised growth, even if it’s a lie, ahead of all else including Jesus’ great command.

In our discussions with many of the churches about training to make disciples, few are genuinely interested. They cannot see the relevance of Jesus’ call to grow His Kingdom, past the notion of whether or not such activity is going to grow theirs. Meanwhile the world looks at us and asks questions we ignore.

It’s time we sat back, took the blinkers off and looked hard at whether what we call church is actually what Jesus envisaged. That would be the hardest thing the church has ever done.

We must be wary for if what we have is not what God wants, then he will change it. His change is often painful.

Jesus Loves ISIS

September 14, 2019 by Disciple 2 Comments

For if, while we were God’s enemies, we were reconciled to him through the death of his Son, how much more, having been reconciled, shall we be saved through his life! – Romans 5.

A young missionary couple, recently arrived in a country where speaking of Christianity is illegal, wrote a letter to their would-be executioners, saying they forgave them because of what Christ has already done. They assumed that at some point, they will be killed for their faith, and wanted to express beforehand their complete forgiveness and love.

Another young American couple, so convinced that Jesus loves ISIS as much as anybody else, gave up successful careers and moved to what is possibly the least favourite holiday hotspot in the world. It is right in the midst of where ISIS runs most rampant, and the mere mention of Jesus in any conversation is likely to be met with death. A middle-aged woman, with few qualifications and seemingly little to offer, is working alongside others in reaching the hardest to reach with the news that God loves them and has provided a way of transforming their hatred into love.

As I recently watched their stories unfold, I was dismayed to realise before the Lord that in my pre-Christ state I was absolutely no different to anyone signed up to ISIS. Even those who slit the throats of a group of orange suited believers down by the sea. In fact, I genuinely wonder if I wasn’t even more culpable given my privilege and background. The confronting reality of discovering and thinking about this, has shaken me. I have been closer in personality to a member of ISIS, than to Jesus Christ. I was God’s enemy, when horrifyingly, I always thought I was pretty good.

In a world that has adopted the mantra, ‘love humankind, but hate your neighbour’ this is an expression of the deepest love anyone can show another human being. The result, painfully slow and only at a cost few could ever contemplate, is that darkness is being pushed back in these places, replaced with the love of God found only in Jesus.

Why is this so important for you and me?

We have the lost the very sharp edge of Faith that says we are all equally, enemies of God. That outside of Christ, God sees all of us in much the same vein as he sees the average ISIS member; murderers, liars, thieves, adulterers and covetous. That outside of Christ, God is going to deal with us in a manner so terrifying, that none of us can imagine how that can be. We are so dulled by our culture, that we laugh such a notion off.

Worse, is that the average Christian suffers from a cultural malaise that denies there is really a problem, that God loves everyone and so what is the worry? Our ‘cultural Christianity’ has now become so bad, that even when the Bible clearly calls something sin, we tend to be uncertain as to whether God is really serious. Such is the condition, that the lines are blurred, and many who regularly ‘go to church’ and think they are saved, might be as prepped for hell as their unsaved neighbour.

God is looking for believers here and now, who will stand up and make the clarion call as to the real state of affairs. That, like missionaries serving in ISIS territory, are prepared to tell their neighbour that God has offered them a way out through Christ, but that unless they repent they are under severe judgement – God will treat them in much the same way as he is going to treat ISIS soldiers.

Few would deny that such people deserve everything God gives them, but what about us? Can we really call ourselves ‘followers of Jesus’ when we blithely let everyday people pass us by without reacting in any way? We must explain that God is love and has provided us with a way out from the coming terror of judgement. We, and they, must respond with urgency.  

Worship for Nobodies

September 8, 2019 by Disciple Leave a Comment

I appeal to you therefore, brothers by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. – Romans 12

We have a growing group of believers in a Sunday night Discovery Group, who are enthusiastic about being missional for Jesus. The hardest part is to convince them that they have the freedom and authority to do the work of the Lord. Can we heal people? Am I able to teach, to witness, proclaim, lead others to Christ and, heaven forbid, even baptise?

They come with a lifetime of learnings that, well, need to be unlearned. For so long, the teachings of Jesus appear to have been filtered through a chosen few, such that “greatness” in God escapes the ordinary believer. How tragic. We forget that Jesus took a bunch of nobodies, and painfully transformed them into world-beaters such that they accomplished more in a few years than the Jewish-hierarchy achieved in a few millenia. He’s still doing it, though I wonder if at times it’s still just as hard work.

While freeing up the shackles, such ‘nobodies’ also begin to realise something else – Scripture is full of ordinary people that called on the armies of heaven to hear their prayers and act accordingly. They realised they weren’t alone, that through prayer their will might align with God’s and that as a Gracious and Loving Father he would act on their behalf – especially, when that entailed a breakthrough in a non-believers life, exposed to Jesus for the first time. You bet our Father will move.

So it is we come to the story of a young girl, a beautiful young believer who comes from a shattered background. She lives with a mother who is a chain-smoking alcoholic, bitter, angry and so against God. We prayed, fervently that this woman might have a breakthrough on account of her daughter, that her demeanour might change from aggression to peace. Over the years, in spite of the girl’s efforts, the mother was unrepentant and unrelenting, God had no place in her life, and no she wouldn’t ‘come to church’. The hardest part was convincing the daughter that she could speak into her mother’s life, that she could sit down and share a simple Scripture and allow the Holy Spirit to do the work. As a group we prayed expectantly that God would move.

How startled was she, when there was an abrupt change in her mother, that anger was replaced with tears, hostility with repentance. How delighted was she in sharing the story, that God had opened the eyes of the mother and the daughter; that as a child of God, she has the authority to ask Jesus to do the impossible, that she needs nobody else – not tradition, or learning, or background. Just Jesus. That it is in her simple obedience, not her knowledge, in child-like trust that God will answer and move. When he does, why are we then so surprised?

Friends, believe it, receive it. We worship God when we put our trust in Him alone, recognising what he has given us. He so wants all of us to have such faith in His Son, that we come believing, expectant, receiving. He alone affirms us and gives us the authority and it is all we need. The Woman at the Well went and told an entire village about the Messiah, and the village was completely transformed on her account.

God wants you, just you. In the right circumstance, at the right time, ready and expectant to respond. Us, a living sacrifice prepared to move on his word. True worship, full of expectation that our Father will move. How wonderful.

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