An excerpt from my newest book Community Based Discipleship:
Discipleship has normally been thought of as an exclusively
Christian word that is used to define what devout believers are expected to
believe and do. This approach to discipleship has done a lot of good for
millions and millions of people over the long centuries of Church history, but
we should not assume that faithfully following one’s inherited or preferred
version of Christianity is always the functional equivalent of being a disciple
of Jesus.
If we are not careful, our discipleship can be inappropriately
molded by a longstanding Christian environment that has reduced discipleship
from a transformative relationship with God in the person of Jesus into a
manageable lifestyle that everyone understands and follows. We must also begin
to wrestle with the jarringly counter-intuitive fact that people around the
corner and around the world understand and use the words Christian or
Christianity to convey a wide variety of ideas, several of which have little to
do with discipleship to Jesus.
While Christians are
perfectly free to live according to their preferred or inherited version of Christianity, we should pursue discipleship
to Jesus above all things. Since all of us are called to be disciples and
extend discipleship to the people of the world, the question of how Jesus made
disciples and what a mature disciple is and does requires our best attempt at
an answer.
Community-Based Discipleship is available here,
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