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PART 2 :: Are we on the brink of a new Reformation?
Last week I put up a post that discussed whether we are on the brink of a new Reformation. You can read that first post in its’ entirety here.
In summation, I believe that we are heading to that place in as much as the first Reformation had the wonderful effect of putting the Bible back into the hands of the people, the one we seem to be moving towards now is putting discipleship and mission back into the hands of ordinary people.
My suggestion was that when we focus more on the fruit that is produced (multiplying disciples who can do the same), the Kingdom always advances. If you’ve got a big tree (the church)…great…but it doesn’t matter too much if it’s not producing fruit.
Today, I want to look more at that idea of fruitfulness and why we should put all of our time, attention and energy into it. I think today’s discussion will give us an even deeper look as to why we are on the precipice of something.
To do so, here is an excerpt from my book Leading Kingdom Movements.
++++++++++++++++++
Jesus gave us a picture of a tree and said that good trees are supposed to bear good fruit. It’s a simple picture, really. One tree can give you quite a lot of fruit. But it’s more. In each piece of fruit is the seed of multiplication. Each piece of fruit has dozens of seeds that could produce more trees. And there wasn’t just one piece of fruit on each tree, but lots of fruit.
So let’s run this out:
- One tree
- One tree, hypothetically, has 100 pieces of fruit
- Each piece of fruit has, hypothetically, 20 seeds in it that can multiply into 20 more trees
- One tree = 2,000 potential trees
Multiplication is what Jesus is talking about in the Parable of the Sower. In another, you expect a return of 30, 60, 100 times what you invest with the one seed. It’s multiplication.
Let’s understand the context of what Jesus was going after. When Jesus talked about trees and fruit, he was referring to something very specific: people. He was saying that each person is a tree, and a disciple is someone who produces good fruit. If we take Jesus’ metaphor seriously, he seems to be suggesting that a disciple will produce thousands of disciples.
If you’re at all like me, that can seem incredibly daunting.
Then you realize where we started and do the simple math. You can’t get there by addition, but you can by multiplication. We take what we’ve been given, invest it, and let it multiply.
Multiplication has been the way of the church for thousands of years because it was the way of Jesus.
The early church had two things going for it:
- They had the Holy Spirit.
- They knew how to multiply missional leaders.
That was it. No budgets, buildings, or any real cash on hand. All around there was moral relativism, polytheism, hedonism run amok, persecution, and an Empire that seemed to hate the church with a growing intensity.
And they blew the roof off!
At the end of the day, you could launch a missional movement with those same two things—the Holy Spirit and a way to multiply missional leaders. The problem is that many of us don’t actually believe that.
If you were to go to Sheffield (which is now the epicenter of a worldwide missional and discipling movement), they would not tell you how many people attend the church. I doubt most of the people would even realize how big the church is, because it doesn’t function like a huge one.
If you asked how big the church is, they would simply tell you how many people they are discipling. That is what they count. They count how many people are engaged in active, accountable, discipling relationships. Their whole structure for church is built around making disciples and releasing them. So that’s what they count. That’s the metric that matters. That’s the Great Commission imperative.
How many disciples do we have?
St. Thomas Sheffield isn’t a massive church and the center of a movement because it has the best worship service, or the best digital experience, or the best preachers or teachers in the world. It’s because everything they do is about making disciples. They honestly believe that if you make disciples and release them to lead into their destiny, release them to be Agents of the Kingdom, everything will change.
If we are great at making the disciples, church growth will never be a problem, because being a disciple means you’re a missionary. It was never OK for us to be a large church and have very few missionary disciples. So we built something where that couldn’t happen. Making disciples was in the DNA from the very beginning, and it has carried through into the movement of which it is the heart.
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7 Responses to PART 2 :: Are we on the brink of a new Reformation?
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What do Apples and Christians have in Common? | Joshua Lee Henry -
2013/03/15
[...] In promotion of his new book, Mike has done a short blog series questioning the state of Christianity and declaring the possibility of a new reformation in our faith. Not so much one based on theology, but on missiology, and how the church makes disciples. You can check those posts out here. [...]
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Your article refers to Jesus’ teaching in John 15, and says “a disciple is someone who produces good fruit. If we take Jesus’ metaphor seriously, he seems to be suggesting that a disciple will produce thousands of disciples.” Perhaps a simple word study would be beneficial here, as well as a little more respect for the context of John 15. “Fruit” in the NT usually refers to righteousness, purity and good works… not converts or disciples. (See Rom 6:22, Gal 5:22, Eph 5:9, Phil 1:11, Col 1:10, Heb 12:11, James 3:17)
Thanks Jim. Of course as a student of the Bible for 40 years I know the passages to which you refer. However in John 15 Jesus is talking about fruit from the Vine which he clearly identifies with himself. Jesus is looking for the Branches to cooperate with him in his desire to multiply himself. Of course that requires us ‘abiding’ in him. Something I know I need to do more of. M+
What “good work” is greater than making disciples? Is there any fruit that brings more glory to God than the increase of Jesus worshipers? The Kingdom of God has always been about people, so it seems safe to say that nothing brings the kingdom more nearer than the making of more disciples. If a manufacturing plant is all about automotive production, it seems the most rewarding task (or fruit) would be to actually make an automobile.
Well stated Jim, but we could be understanding this as not just an either/or but a both/and thing. I assume if we do inculcate discipleship in ourselves and others, we will see “fruit” as in Gal. 5:22 and elsewhere, but also indirectly participate in “making” thousands of disciples? I do love the sense of the Church, the Body, re-emerging from the “boxes” (buildings) and becoming “organic and simple” once again . . . though Powerful in the Spirit.
The renewal of the church will come from a new type of monasticism, which has only in common with the old an uncompromising allegiance to the Sermon on the Mount. It is high time men and women banded together to do this.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, from The Cost of Discipleship
I’m wondering how Sheffield counts those in discipling relationships? What are the criteria? Is it just those in huddles? Or those everyone involved in a group (MC, small group, team ministry, etc)? What’s the criteria? I think it’s an intriguing metric, and if specific enough, can be quite useful.