What is the best way to train new leaders?
Christopher Wright was asked how the local church should train leaders. His answer might surprise you. Watch this brief clip:
[HT: Verge Network]
What is the best way to train new leaders?
Christopher Wright was asked how the local church should train leaders. His answer might surprise you. Watch this brief clip:
Today we begin a new weekly series I’ll simply call “-ISMS,” a look at the dominant philosophies of our day. Some will be overtly religious; some will seem non-religious (at first); all are the lenses through which we tend to think and feel about ourselves, God and the world around us. First up, consumerism.
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Alan Hirsch gets to the heart of how everyone is a disciple of something and why someone cannot stay a consumer and become a growing disciple of Jesus.
(Let this 3 minute video provoke your thoughts.)
“Everyone is a disciple and no one stops being a disciple.”
“If we don’t disciple, then the culture sure will. (And it’s doing a good job of it.)”
Consumerism is being defined by what we consume. One’s meaning, identity, purpose and belonging becomes tied to the consumption of products. Consumerism is the most prevalent religion of our day.
Jesus’ call to all consumers:
DIE.
Only then will we truly live.
“Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.” —Jesus (John 12:24)
If you ever say to your pastor, “Pastor, It’s your job to feed me.” He should graciously remind you, “No, it is your job — and will become your joy — to feed others.”
[See Ephesians & 2 Timothy 2:2]
Consumers cannot become disciples who make disciples unless they are drawn outside themselves.