Page 13 - Principles for Discipling Others-Student textbook
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4.  Exercise – must have some exercise to      4.  Witnessing…Spiritual Exercise for strength
                       have a healthy body                           Prov. 11:24,25 Mt 28:19,20  Mk 16:15
                   5.  Shelter – protection from the elements     5.  Holy Spirit …provides Spiritual shelter

               Without these, the spiritual Food and Water, Air, Rest, Exercise and Shelter…. spiritual babies might
               wither and dry up. In the physical realm, parents take this type of nurturing of their babies very
               seriously.  This is because a baby is a baby and has no conscious ability to care for itself.  It cannot walk,
               talk, feed itself, etc.  The parents must help care for it until it is able to care for itself.  So it is with the
               spiritual babe in Christ.

               It is so sad to ask a Christian “Have you grown in Christ over the last six months?  Are you experiencing
               the riches of life in Christ in a fuller way than you did last year?  Do you know Jesus better today than
               you did last month?”  Sadly, many answer by saying they are not aware of any growth. (It must be noted
               that babies and young children are not mature enough to reproduce themselves.  So it is with “babes
               and youngsters in Christ.”  Hence---the need for mature Christians to spend the time, energy, and
               investments to help them grow into mature reproducing Christians!

               God must feel a similar sadness and pain when His children get “stuck” at spiritual infancy, childhood, or
               adolescence---when they never reach spiritual adulthood with all the privileges and responsibilities it
               entails.  Of course, God’s love remains constant and immeasurable regardless. But like a human parent,
               God can also feel disappointment, pain, and loss. Certainly, some Christians remain in this kind of
               disappointing spiritual infancy because, for one reason or another, they do not want to grow up.
               However, plenty of folks get “stuck” because church leaders lack the knowledge, skills, and resources to
               develop healthy, maturing followers of Christ.  That’s the bad news. The good news is that church
               leaders can become more deliberate about making disciples---mature Christians who practice their faith,
               share it, and reproduce it in others!


               Methods of Discipleship from Jesus and Paul  (from Principles and Practice of Disciplemaking
               (https://bible.org/seriespage/lesson-11-principles-and-practice-disciplemaking)

               Jesus Christ and the apostle Paul stand out clearly as the two greatest disciple makers in the Scripture.
               In examining proper methods of discipleship, it would seem wise to look at the discipleship methods
               that both Jesus and Paul used. The first thing that one could point to is that both Jesus and Paul selected
               a few good men for the purpose of training. In regard to Jesus, Coleman well states, “men were his
               method.” (Robert E. Coleman, The Master Plan of Evangelism (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1993), 27.)  Luke writes:
               “Now it was during this time that Jesus went out to the mountain to pray, and he spent all night in
               prayer to God. When morning came, he called his disciples and chose twelve of them, whom he also
               named apostles” (Luke 6:12-16). The fact that Jesus spent all night in prayer showed the importance of
               what he was doing in selecting the disciples. He only chose 12. Beyond that, he focused on three (Peter,
               James and John). The whole future of the church would rest in the faithfulness of God working though
               only a few men.

               In regard to Paul, his discipleship method is seen in 2 Timothy 2:2: “And what you heard me say in the
               presence of many witnesses, entrust to faithful people who will be competent to teach others as well (2
               Tim 2:2). This verse describes the type of people who should be discipled, that is faithful people. Some
               have described them with the acronym FAT = faithful, available and teachable. There are some very
               prominent discipleship relationships in the Bible that illustrate its importance. Joshua had Moses; Elisha

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