Skip to main content

Making Disciples: Week by Week

A vital part of growing as a disciple is putting yourself in a position to be held accountable. This is best done with a small group of fellow disciples. It is before these people that we share our weekly, monthly, or life-long goals. It is this group of people who will ask us for a progress report week after week. It is to this group that we share our victories and our failures. This is the group that will help us to grow in holiness.

It doesn't matter if it is called a Huddle, or an Incubator, or an Accountability Group, or an Emmaus Reunion Group, or a Disciple Bible Study, or any other small group gathering of Christian disciples. If the group members aren't being equipped, empowered, supported, and held accountable for continuing the process of making disciples, then it is not an effective or fruitful disciple-making ministry. Consider this simple tool for evaluating your disciple-making ministry group.

1. Are people being taught to see how God is at work in their lives? We live in a society that has separated God from the ordinary events of life. People of faith need to be taught, once again, how to see the hand of the Creator in creation and the expression of God's grace in our lives. An important part of disciple making work is helping people recognize God in their lives.

2. Are people able to (and encouraged to) articulate (witness to) how God is at work in their lives? Once we learn to see God at work in our lives and in the lives of those around us, we need to be able to give witness to it. One of the membership vows we take is to serve as God's witness. We pledge to support the work of the church (the Body of Christ) with our witness. We learn to do this in our lives and in our speech.

3. Are people learning and living holy habits (e.g., praying for others and serving others; attending weekly worship)? So often we approach church like consumers. We are looking for a place that provides services to meet our needs. An essential part of discipleship is learning to take care of each other. We look after each other's physical needs, and we learn how to support each other in our prayers -- out loud and immediate. We live out our faith in acts of piety (our expressions of our love of God) and in acts of mercy (our expressions of our love of neighbor).

4. Finally, are people being equipped, empowered, supported, and held accountable for continuing the process by forming new groups and leading them while maintaining their connection with the existing (mother) group? This is where the process too often breaks down. To be a disciple you must make a disciple: disciples make disciples. The weekly process is to see to it that disciples are equipped to make disciples. They are then empowered to do it (why do you need to get somebody's permission?). The process is there to support you as you venture out to start a disciple making group. You never 'graduate' from your initial group. It is still there to help you walk through the issues you will face leading another group. Finally, you must be held accountable to the process. Knowing that we must give an account helps us stay focused and on target for our mission.

So, what are some ways you are involved in a weekly disciple-making process?

Grace and Peace,
Alan

Comments

  1. I am fortunate to have a circle of 4 close friends who hold me accountable in my discipleship journey and support me with prayers and unconditional love. We meet weekly via Zoom. This is a good thing which came out of the pandemic - people learned how to use Zoom to stay connected.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Who Invited You? Sermon for October 15, 2023

  Who Invited You? – Sermon at Lebanon UMC – October 15, 2023 [You may watch this sermon preached on Facebook] Let us pray… Our first lesson today comes from the Apostle Paul’s letter to the Philippians, the fourth chapter, beginning with the first verse. 1  Therefore, my brothers and sisters, whom I love and long for, my joy and crown, stand firm in the Lord in this way, my beloved. 2  I urge Euodia and I urge Syntyche to be of the same mind in the Lord.  3  Yes, and I ask you also, my loyal companion, help these women, for they have struggled beside me in the work of the gospel, together with Clement and the rest of my coworkers, whose names are in the book of life. 4  Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.  5  Let your gentleness be known to everyone. The Lord is near.  6  Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known...

An Unshakable Life: Holiness in a World of Distraction

  An Unshakable Life: Holiness in a World of Distraction Amos 8:1-12, Colossians 1:15-28, Luke 10:38-42 EUMC & BCUMC, July 20, 2025, Proper 11c An important theme in today's texts is Staying Focused on Priorities – Staying Focused on the Moment. Today's Gospel text – the story about Martha and Mary – is often unfairly and incorrectly used to say devotion to Christ is more important than service. That's not what's happening here. Jesus values service and action – remember the Parable of the Good Samaritan that comes right before this – context is important. The Greek word used here is diakonos (meaning “servant” or “minister”) and it embodies the Christian calling to live out faith through service. It reflects the church’s mission to care for others through acts of charity, compassion, and justice. This sacred responsibility takes many forms: humanitarian aid, working for social justice, and outreach to vulnerable communities. Diakonia, this service) isn...

An Inconvenient Gospel

  July 13, 2025 – EUMC & BCUMC – Proper 10, Ord 15 Deuteronomy 30:9-14 and Psalm 25:1-10, Colossians 1:1-14, Luke 10:25-37 Alan Swartz Have you ever wondered if good is good enough? I think of myself as a good person. I imagine all of us here today think of ourselves as good people. Isn’t that what God wants? I know I am a much better person than Adolph Hitler, or Joseph Stalin, or Jeffrey Dahmer. I mean, these were notoriously evil people. That is an easy comparison. Maybe I need to look around and see how I compare with others more like myself. I could check the social media feeds of other clergy or good Christian people that I know and see how I stack up. Ah, but the problem there is that I start to look and act an awful lot like the Pharisee who went to pray in the temple and seeing the sinner praying next to me I could plead, “Lord, I thank you that I am not like him!” (Luke 18:11) What am I to do? Bishop Gwinn encouraged pastors and church leaders to read the bo...