Simple Doesn't Mean Stupid or Unbiblical

I love this article written by a colleague here in Cape Town. We teach these principles but more importantly we strive to practice them as a way of life. If you want to make disciples of the lost, grow your church or start new churches with those who don’t know Jesus, I think you will find the article immensely helpful…

Viral - Creating Disciple-Making Movements

By Daniel Wesley - 5 April 2013

Around the world, missiologists have recognized and described 100 different disciple-making movements that are exploding in some of the least likely places you would imagine.  Some of these movements have seen millions become followers of Jesus in a few short years.  One particular movement, among mostly Muslims and adherents to tribal religions, has seen 18,000 house churches planted in just 7 short years. The churches in this movement have 35 people on average and are entirely made up of former Muslims, Animists and Atheists.  There are movements in China and India that far surpass this numerically.  So what can we learn from these movements that may be useful to us in the context of college ministry? They all have common elements that are easily adapted into a university ministry.

Follow Then Believe

There are varied names for the approach and various differences between different movements, but one common ingredient in all these movements is raising up “followers” among unbelievers.

Follower - someone who respects Jesus, is willing to learn from Him/about Him and even attempt to honor Him in his or her life.

This was the religious context into which Rabbi Jesus entered 2000 years ago. People would associate themselves with a teacher or rabbi, learn from him, follow him, and obey him. Jesus took it further. He was not content with merely showing His followers a way to live, but showing He was the way to live life with God. He did not only want external obedience but inward transformation that came through faith. BUT He usually began by asking people to follow Him. It is important that we notice from Scripture that Jesus had people following Him in simple obedience before they had “accepted” Him or embraced the fullness of who we know Him to be.  In fact, many times they would help introduce Him to their friends before they really understood fully who He was. (John 1:43-46; John 4:28-30).

Needless to say, they eventually did come to fully believe, but their initial lack of understanding and/or poor theology did not keep them from Jesus, or keep Jesus from them.  The result was that these early followers turned the Roman world upside down within a century.  No doubt each of them had different points at which they understood who Jesus was, stepped into the fullness of faith and experienced regeneration, but amazingly many were called “disciples” before that happened! Don’t take my word for it, go back and read about the disciples (Luke 5-6, John 1, Matthew 10 and Mark 3).  As you read through the gospels, notice the different ways many of his disciples lacked basic Christology leading up to Jesus’ death and resurrection and, in a few cases, after His resurrection.  It is interesting that most us have assumed that we must “get someone saved” before we teach them to follow Jesus. It seems the Jesus model is oftentimes the reverse. What if teaching them to follow Jesus is really critical to saving faith and to making future disciples? Doesn’t this correspond to our experience as well? We were intrigued, attended something, were exposed to Jesus, wanted to explore this more, maybe talked to others, and even sometimes did things we thought might honor God. Then at some point God’s Spirit and His grace broke through and we truly believed and truly committed our lives to Jesus. On the other hand, haven’t you known people who made a “decision” for Christ, but whose lives never changed?  Perhaps we should invite people to follow Jesus in obedience and let the Holy Spirit bring conviction in His timing. (I know this is mind-bending a little, but bear with me on this.)

So how do we help people to start following Jesus regardless of their “salvation status?”  It is quite simple actually. There are 6 simple transferable steps we can use to lead unbelievers forward in following Jesus.

Prerequisite: Gather a Group of Unbelievers

This might be the hardest step for many. But didn’t Jesus mix it up mostly with those who didn’t know Him? Didn’t He say He was called to the “sick”? They could be from a dorm, an athletic team, a club, a study group, or some neighbors. You could do this yourself, or better, have a student you want to train do this. In fact, the latter method is preferred if you are wanting to start a movement. Train, empower, release….this does not mean doing it for them! (Eph 4:12).  Of course, in your own life you should be modeling this as well with your unbelieving peers.

Invite unbelievers to study the “life of Jesus,” the “teachings of Jesus,” or the “Bible for themselves.”  You will find that MANY are open to this.  Avoid inviting them to your large weekly meeting or to a Sunday service.  That MAY come later, but begin by just meeting with them one-on-one and in small groups.  Try to avoid having one unbeliever with 5 or 6 believers.  Have your students meet with unbelievers one-on-one and then have them invite THEIR unbelieving friends to join them.  Don’t let the unbelievers be “outnumbered.”  If you need to be at the first few meetings or so, fine.  But your goal is to release your students to do this.  You can meet with them outside that time to debrief and coach them further.  Here is the goal: find people interested in Jesus, help them start to follow Him, and get them to invite their friends to do the same.

Ok, so once we have a small group of unbelievers gathered, here’s what it would look like:

  1. Thanks

    Invite everyone in the circle to share something for which they are thankful.  Celebrate with them as they share their gratitude.  While we are teaching them to be grateful to God for “every good and perfect gift” (Jas 1: 17), it is not necessary to tell them this in the early weeks. Just let them share and celebrate with them.   [Message: Gratitude is frequently the first thing we express to God when addressing Him and is how the Scripture describes the process of coming into His presence.  (Psalm 100)]

  2. Needs

    Have everyone share something for which they need prayer.  [Message: God is a living God who answers prayer and who is concerned with our needs.]

  3. Scripture

    Read a short passage of 5-15 verses. Read the passage in 2 different translations and let different people read.  Close the Bible and invite someone to share the story in his or her own words.  Make sure they understand that the goal is to merely repeat the story in their own words and not to draw conclusions.  After the first person has shared the story ask if anyone wants to add details that were missed.  [Message: Scripture is critical to following Jesus and is our first means of receiving truth.  Scripture is the plumb line by which we judge any word from God.]

  4. Listen

    Have everyone wait on the Lord for 1 or 2 minutes to see what part of the passage the Holy Spirit would highlight for them.  [Message:  God speaks to us by His Spirit and it is proper to learn to hear His voice most frequently through Scripture.]

  5. Obey

    After sharing what God highlighted from Scripture, have everyone share an “I Will” statement which expresses obedience to what was just learned.  Something important happens in calling them to obedience to Jesus. Be willing to challenge people with statements that are measurable and specific.  Avoid letting someone end with a vague immeasurable commitment like “I will be more grateful this week.”  Set the standard in the early weeks and the fellow group members will hold each other’s feet to the fire! Challenge them to hone their statements down to something more tangible. [Message: Obedience is part of what it means to love and follow Jesus.  The Christian life is faith in action.  Of course action doesn’t save someone but it will lead to true disciples of Jesus who have learned the importance of obedience.]

  6. Close the Loop

    Start your next meeting (notice I did not say “week 2” as you may want to meet more frequently than just weekly) by having each person review their “I will” statement from the previous meeting.  Be sure to CELEBRATE even partial obedience.  If a guy shares that he drinks himself to sleep every night and he reports that he went 3 days after the previous meeting without drinking, celebrate that fact and encourage him in how he grew in obedience.  Keep pointing them to Jesus as the “author and finisher” of our faith.

That’s it!  Now, we may have raised some questions (see below), but the basic idea is that we find people who respect Jesus and want to learn about His teachings.  We ask those people to meet so we can learn together what it means to follow Jesus.  We watch the Holy Spirit draw them and convict them through the process of learning to follow Jesus.  Then they go do the same with their friends. This appears to be the overwhelming model presented in the gospels. The epistles do an amazing job of expounding on concepts such as sin, faith and grace. However, let’s make sure we balance the gospels and the epistles in our approach to making disciples and watch God give us more incredible fruit, as He is already doing around the world.

Issues and Concerns

Naturally this model might raise some questions. I will attempt to briefly address a few here:

Questions for Discussion

  1. What do you like about this strategy? Dislike? Are you possibly apprehensive due to a tradition? A Biblical issue? A fear? Or something else?

  2. Could you see any advantages to such a model if you are trying to make many new followers of Jesus on your campus?

  3. How could you implement this into your ministry?  Think of a pilot program with a few students. (think: who, when, where…)

“Daniel Wesley” is a Trainer for CPx (Church Planting Experience).

The God Story

Creation to Christ

Lesson One: Creation

There is one true God and He created all that is. He lives by His Holy Spirit in the hearts of true Christians who are born again.

  • God created the heavens and earth - Genesis 1:1-24

  • God created man and woman - Genesis 1:25-28

Truths to learn and obey from these Bible verses about creation:

  • God is the creator not a spirit in the creation, He is personal and infinite.

  • God created man and woman for three reasons: friendship with God, to love and care for each other, and to oversee creation and preach the good news of Jesus.

Lesson Two: Rebellion

We have all sinned against God through disobedience and rebellion. The penalty of our sin is death.

  • Rebellion in Heaven - Revelation 12:7-9

  • Rebellion in Heaven - Isaiah 14:12-15

  • Every human being has sinned, death is penalty of sin - Romans 3:23, 6:23

  • Our sin causes great sadness to God - Genesis 6:5-6

Truths to learn and obey from these Bible verses about rebellion:

  • Satan is a liar and deceiver, he attacks with temptation, accusation and deception.

  • Sin is rebellion/disobedience.

  • God gave death as the punishment for sin.

Lesson Three: Sacrifice

The punishment for our sins requires a sacrifice for forgiveness.

  • Sacrifices in the Old Testament as a picture of Jesus - Genesis 22:1-14

  • The sin offering - Leviticus 4:1-3

  • Jesus died so we can return to God - Luke 23:21-34

  • Jesus’ sacrifice was made one time for all people - Hebrews 10:12

Truths to learn and obey from these Bible verses about sacrifice:

  • The penalty for our sin is spiritual death.

  • God has provided a way to escape the penalty of sin.

  • Jesus is God’s sacrifice for our sins.

  • There is no need for other sacrifices - Jesus is the sacrifice for all time for everyone.

Lesson Four: Return to God

God asks us to repent and return to Him.

  • The lost son returns to his father - Luke 15:11-20

  • There are two things we must do to return to God - John 1:12-13

  • Our sins are forgiven when we return to God - 1 John 1:9

  • We are born again and God’s spirit lives in us - John 3:6, Romans 8:14

Truths to learn and obey from these Bible verses about returning to God:

  • Returning to God is a way of acknowledging our need for forgiveness.

  • Returning to God is an act of godly sorrow for our sin.

  • Returning to God releases God’s forgiveness.

  • When we return to God we become the children of God.

Lesson Five: Commission/Fulfillment

Telling others about Jesus.

  • When we return to God we receive new life - John 3:3-7, 15-17

  • We become God’s friends and co-workers on earth - John 15:13-16

  • We are sent to tell others about Jesus - Acts 1:8, Matthew 28:18-20

Truths to learn and obey from these Bible verses:

  • We are all called to go and make disciples, to baptize them, to teach them.

  • We should gather people in simple churches to grow in Christ.

Discovery Bible Study

D-Group Elements: Up, In, Out

Discovery Bible Study – A Big Step in the Disciple Making Journey

There are three elements of a D-Group or “discovery Bible study”. Every group meeting should strive for keeping to the “one-third, one-third, one-third” principle: one third in worship/prayer/accountability/vision (Up), one third for discovery Bible study (In), and one third for praying for friends, family and neighbors and the nations (Out).

The Up, In, and Out is also sometimes referred to as Breathe out, Breathe In, and Open Your Eyes, based on John 20:19-23:

Breathe Out - speak out thanksgiving to God in very simple worship, speak out needs and confession, and speak out accountability

Breathe In - take in God's Word

Open Your Eyes - look outward to others who need to know God loves them

Every D-Group should be focused on reaching out to non-Christians. D-Groups are successful if they are reaching and making disciples among those who don't know Jesus. To get to the place where D-Groups are growing into new churches being planted among non-Christians, many, many D-Groups need to be started. Some D-Groups will fail. It is not unusual for a high percentage of D-Groups to stop functioning if new believers are not coming to faith or people are not following through with coming to the meeting and obeying what God says to them. Success is measured by obedience and multiplication.

Up - "Breathe Out" – Accountability, Worship, Prayer, Vision - This is the part of the group time for building community and experiencing loving fellowship. How? Through reporting how it went obeying what God said in the last D-Group, then praying for one another and worshipping together. It doesn’t matter if people are believers or not, lead by example into loving community by encouraging people to share needs and then lovingly praying for each other. As facilitative leader, model asking each other how each person is doing. Take time to care for one another and turn that into body ministry and worship times. After meeting 3-4 times and leading the group, ask others to lead. Coach them behind the scenes how to do it, and then give them feedback later.

  1. Is there anything you are thankful for you would like to share with the group? Let that lead to spontaneous worship through prayers of thanksgiving.

  2. Is there a need you have that we can pray for? Pray for each other and see if someone in the group can meet the other person’s needs.

  3. Follow up to last week’s meeting – how did it go sharing with the 3 people they prayed for and putting into practice what God said in Bible study, the “I will obey God by…” statements. 

  4. Share vision!! Why are we doing this this way? Model then coach others to grasp, then share the vision for the values of the discovery approach

In - "Breathe In" - Discovery Bible study  – This is the part of the group time for learning from God’s word with interactive discussion around 4 simple steps: read, restate, reflect, report. There are two assumptions that are crucial to this part of the disciple making process: Holy Spirit is the best teacher – you can trust Him! And two, the Bible is the best source of truth to be taught. Let the Spirit do the teaching! Resist all temptations to go into teaching mode. It kills the possibility for people to hear the Spirit for themselves in the Word. Helpful questions: What does this passage teach us about God? About people? About ourselves?

Below is a 4 step process to discovery Bible study:

  1. Read – One person read a passage – keep it a short passage if possible, or read a Bible story. Another wonderful way to do this is not to teach the passage, but for someone to tell the passage as a story, and then for each member to repeat the story until everyone knows it. allow 2 or maximum 3 minutes to tell the story. You can take a chapter in the Bible and turn it into a story! Or to be creative, ask people to act out the story.

  2. Repeat - Someone repeat the story or passage in their own words. The rest of the group can add or fill in anything that was left out. (this protects the group from being taken over by one person or going off on a tangent).

  3. Reflect- The group takes a few moments of silence to think about the passage (pray that people will hear God speaking to them, convicting them, encouraging them, and giving them revelation about who He is and His love for them). Reflection can focus on what they learn about God, or what they learn about people, or themselves, but it may be best to see if the group will not need those questions to simply hear god speak to them from the Bible passage. 

  4. Report – Ask each person to share one thing that stood out to them from the passage they think they could apply to their lives, ONE THING they should obey. We call this the "I will..." statement. For example,  "I will obey God with his help by...."

Out - "Open Your Eyes" - Commitment to pray and obey - Commit to pray for others people in the group know who don’t know Jesus, and to obey the truth God spoke during the Bible study. This is the part of the group time to look outward by praying for 2-3 people who don’t know Jesus, and making a specific declaration of obedience, the "I will" obedience statement.

  1. Ask the group to make a list of friends and family who don’t know Jesus personally.

  2. Ask them to focus on 2-3 of the people they will pray for.

  3. Ask everyone to bring their list each week and report back to the group how it went sharing with their 3 friends/family they prayed for.

  4. Focus on obeying one thing God spoke in the Bible study time, and then when you meet back next week, in the first part of the meeting how it went speaking to friends and family about Jesus, and obeying the one thing God spoke to them.

Finally, each person rehearse what they learned and how they will share with others. Finish with an, "I will obey Jesus by..." restating what they will obey. Pray for a people group or neighborhood or nation that needs Jesus.