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  • What Does It Mean to Make a Disciple?

    What Does It Mean to Make a Disciple?

    There is a word that gets used a great deal in church circles — so often, in fact, that I think we sometimes stop asking what it actually means. That word is discipleship. We have discipleship programs, discipleship groups, discipleship curricula. And yet, if you were to ask the average churchgoer what it means to make a disciple, you might get a long pause in return. I find myself returning to this question regularly, not because I have all the answers, but because I believe the church rises or falls on how seriously she takes it.

    Open Bible on a wooden table in warm light
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    The clearest starting point, as always, is Scripture. In Matthew 28:19–20, Jesus gave His followers what we now call the Great Commission:

    “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” (ESV)

    The heart of that command is the verb make disciples. Not make converts. Not make attenders. Make disciples. The Greek word behind “disciple” is mathētēs — a learner, an apprentice, someone who follows and imitates their teacher not just in what they know, but in how they live. That distinction matters more than we might first realize.

    From my perspective, a great deal of what passes for discipleship today is really just information transfer. We teach people what Christians believe — the doctrines, the verses, the categories — and we assume that if the right information gets in, the right life will come out. But the Great Commission does not end with baptism; it continues with “teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.” Observe. That word implies obedience, practice, lived-out faith. Paul captures the goal even more precisely in Colossians 1:28–29:

    “Him we proclaim, warning everyone and teaching everyone with all wisdom, that we may present everyone mature in Christ. For this I toil, struggling with all his energy that he powerfully works within me.” (ESV)

    The word translated “mature” here is the Greek teleios — complete, fully formed. Paul’s aim is not to produce informed Christians, but complete ones. That is a far more demanding vision, and I think it ought to shape how a church goes about growing its people.

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    What the Early Church Showed Us

    So what does this look like in practice? I find it helpful to look at the earliest snapshot we have of the church in Acts 2:42–47. Those first believers devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching, to fellowship, to the breaking of bread, and to prayer. They met together in the temple courts and from house to house. They shared meals and met one another’s needs. The result was remarkable: “the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being saved” (Acts 2:47, ESV). That picture is not a program. It is a way of life — woven together, shared, and lived out in community.

    For this reason, I believe Ephesians 4:11–12 deserves more attention than it usually gets. Paul writes that pastors and teachers are given to the church “to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ” (ESV). Notice what the text does not say. It does not say the pastor is given to do the ministry for the congregation. He is given to train the congregation to do it themselves. The pastor’s job is to produce disciples who can, in turn, make more disciples. That is the picture Paul has in mind — a whole body, fitted and held together, each part working properly, growing in love.

    Craftsman hands working with a saw in a workshop
    Photo by Ryno Marais on Unsplash

    The Apprentice and the Master

    Here is where an illustration helps me. Think of a young tradesman learning carpentry. He does not simply read books about woodworking. He works alongside a master craftsman, watching his hands, asking questions, making mistakes, and correcting them — week after week, year after year. Over time, the master’s skill becomes his own, not because he memorized instructions, but because he practiced. Discipleship works along similar lines. You cannot download Christlikeness. You have to live it, slowly, in relationship, under the patient tutelage of both the Word and the community of believers who are further along than you.

    I will be the first to admit that this kind of discipleship is slow. It does not scale as neatly as a weekend conference or a six-week study series. It requires time, relationship, and a willingness to stay with people through the messy middle of growth. That slowness, though, is exactly the point. The goal is teleios — completeness in Christ — and that is not a destination you reach in a semester. It is a lifelong apprenticeship with a patient Master.

    If you are in ministry, or simply trying to live faithfully in your local church, I would encourage you to hold this question alongside me: are the people around me simply learning about Christ, or are they learning to be like Him? That question, asked honestly and humbly and often, might just reshape how we invest our time, our relationships, and our energy in the months ahead.

    May we have the patience to do this work well — and the confidence that He who called us to it is with us always, to the end of the age.

  • God’s Eternity: Timeless Yet Present in Time

    God’s Eternity: Timeless Yet Present in Time

    I find myself returning often to a simple phrase, one I learned early in my theological education but which has only deepened in meaning as I’ve wrestled with it over the years: God has no beginning, end, or succession of moments in his own being. When I first encountered this definition of eternality, I confess I found it more bewildering than clarifying. How does one think about a being who exists in no particular sequence of time, who sees all moments with equal vividness, yet who genuinely acts within the stream of history? The mystery still humbles me; yet I’ve come to see that understanding God’s eternity—even partially—reshapes how we relate to him in prayer, in ministry, and in faith.

    Open Bible on wooden table
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    The Timeless God Who Made Time Itself

    Let me start with what seems simplest: God has no beginning. The psalmist captures this with striking clarity: “Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever you had formed the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are God” (Psalm 90:2, ESV). This is not poetic exaggeration. It reflects a fundamental truth about God’s nature—he alone is self-existent, needing nothing outside himself to sustain his being.

    Here is where a crucial theological insight clarifies the picture. We live in a universe of time and space and matter; these three always occur together. But God created all things. Before the universe existed, there was no time, no space, no succession of moments one after another. Then God spoke, and time itself came into being. This means something remarkable: the Creator stands outside and above the very temporal framework he established. Time does not limit him or constrain him. He is not a being who grows older or weaker or changes as hours pass. To God, all of his existence is always somehow “present,” though I freely admit this strains my finite comprehension.

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    For this reason, the writer to the Hebrews describes Jesus—the eternal Word—as “the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8, ESV). There is no yesterday, today, or tomorrow in God’s being. He does not “become” different. His character, his counsel, his love—these do not develop or fluctuate. They simply are, eternally whole and unchanging.

    God Sees All Time, Yet Acts in Time

    Yet here we must pause, because the doctrine of God’s eternity can easily be misunderstood in a way that makes God seem distant or indifferent to the actual flow of history. So let me add something equally important: God sees events in time and acts in time. This is not a contradiction; it is the complement to his timelessness.

    Hands in prayer on open book
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    The psalmist again helps us see this paradox: “For a thousand years in your sight are but as yesterday when it is past, or as a watch in the night. You sweep them away as with a flood; they are like a dream, like grass that is renewed in the morning” (Psalm 90:4-5, ESV). God remembers the detailed events of a thousand years with the same clarity that we recall yesterday. At the same time, any single day to God is as vividly present as if it lasted a thousand years. Nothing ever fades from his consciousness. All of history—past, present, and future—is equally vivid to him.

    Yet even so, God knows the difference between 2000 BC and today. He observed and knew exactly what was happening as events unfolded. Paul writes, “When the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law” (Galatians 4:4-5, ESV). God acted at precisely the right historical moment. The whole narrative arc of Scripture—from Genesis through Revelation—is God’s own record of how he has acted over time to accomplish redemption. He does not view all moments as simultaneous in a way that erases the genuine progress of history. Rather, he sees it all as present while still respecting its sequence and temporal reality.

    I find this deeply comforting in ministry. It means that God is not distant from the struggles of this particular moment. He sees this Tuesday morning with the same intensity as he sees the final day of creation. He knows your name. He hears your prayer. He is present in your congregation’s joy and sorrow, not as a disinterested observer, but as the God who is acting, sustaining, redeeming—moving us toward his purposes through time itself.

    What This Means for Faith

    So what difference does God’s eternity make? I believe it frees us from two opposite errors. On one hand, we are freed from the anxiety that God might forget us or lose track of us as time passes. Your faithful prayer from ten years ago is as vivid to him now as it was then. His promises, once made, are eternally sure. On the other hand, we are freed from the temptation to think that God is so abstract and timeless that he does not care about real events, real suffering, real moments of grace in our lives. He does care. He acts. He enters time to meet us there.

    When I sit with a grieving family, or work through a difficult decision in ministry, or find myself wrestling with doubt, I return to this: the God who has no beginning or end sees my specific moment with eternal clarity. He is not surprised by what unfolds. He is not learning as time progresses. He has already seen the end from the beginning, as Isaiah proclaims (Isaiah 46:10, ESV). And yet he is genuinely present in this moment, acting, sustaining, moving me toward his purposes. That paradox—timeless yet temporal, infinite yet intimate—is the foundation of a faith that can be both intellectually grounded and deeply personal.

    This is why I can pray with confidence. God’s eternity does not distance him from me; it assures me that I am held in a love that has no beginning and will have no end.

  • Living in Light of a Certain Inheritance

    Living in Light of a Certain Inheritance

    Have you ever received something so precious, so undeserved, that it changed your whole perspective? That’s what happened the day I inherited my grandmother’s Bible—worn, marked up with her notes, filled with her prayers. It wasn’t valuable in the world’s eyes, but to me? Priceless. In Ephesians 1, Paul reminds us that every believer in Christ has received something far more precious: a guaranteed, eternal inheritance.

    Scripture focus: Ephesians 1:11-12 (ESV) “In him we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel of his will, so that we who were the first to hope in Christ might be to the praise of his glory.”


    1. Seeing the Truth

    Paul writes to a Roman world where inheritance was everything—your identity, your future, your security. To the Ephesian believers, that word carried deep weight. And Paul says, “In Him, we have obtained an inheritance.”

    This isn’t just a future hope. It’s a present reality. If you are in Christ, you already belong to Him, and what is His is yours. This inheritance is no earthly windfall. It is salvation in all its fullness—past, present, and future.

    We have been saved (justification), we are being saved (sanctification), and we will be saved (glorification). This promise is sealed with the Holy Spirit and will one day culminate in resurrected bodies, a new heaven and earth, and eternity with Jesus.

    2. Grasping the Heart

    Why does God give us such an inheritance? Not because we earned it. Not because we performed well enough. But because we are in Him.

    “In Him” is Paul’s drumbeat throughout Ephesians. This inheritance is secure because Jesus Himself secured it. God predestined us according to His purpose, not our performance. Our assurance isn’t grounded in our feelings or our faithfulness—but in His eternal counsel and unwavering will.

    Friend, this means your salvation isn’t shaky. It’s as firm as the throne of God.

    3. Living It Out

    If our inheritance is certain, how should we live?

    With joyful freedom. With confident humility. With our eyes on eternity, and our feet grounded in today.

    When you know your future is secure, you don’t have to grasp for the world’s approval. You can serve freely. Love deeply. Worship boldly.

    And here’s the ultimate purpose: “…to the praise of His glory.”

    We don’t live for applause. We live to echo the worth of the One who saved us. We are walking testaments to the grace of God, trophies of mercy, heirs of glory. Let that shape your today.


    Take-home truth: In Christ, your inheritance is not just promised; it is already yours—secure, eternal, and all for His glory.

    Reflection questions:

    • What does it mean to you that your inheritance in Christ is already secured?
    • Are there areas of your life where you’re still trying to earn what Jesus has already given?
    • How can your life reflect the glory of God today?

    Prayer: Lord Jesus, thank You that in You, I have a glorious inheritance. Help me rest in that truth, live for Your glory, and reflect Your grace in all I do. Amen.

  • Embracing the 3D Gospel: Understanding Cultural Nuances in Faith

    When we think about the transformative power of the gospel, we often picture it as a universal truth that transcends all cultures and contexts. However, Chapter 1 of “The 3D Gospel” by Jayson Georges introduces us to the idea that while the gospel is indeed universal, its expression and impact can vary greatly across different cultural landscapes.

    Take the story of Gulzel, a young university student from Central Asia who embraced Christianity with a sincere heart. Her journey of faith began with the traditional message that many of us are familiar with: “Your transgressions separate you from God; therefore you deserve punishment. Jesus died for your sin. Believe in him, and your sins will be forgiven.” This message of forgiveness and reconciliation resonated deeply with her, offering a sense of peace and new life in Christ.

    Yet, Gulzel’s cultural context presented challenges that this standard message of forgiveness alone could not fully address. One poignant incident highlights the complexity of her situation. Returning from her mother’s village one Sunday evening, Gulzel found herself in a taxi with a male driver and three male passengers. What started as an ordinary ride quickly turned uncomfortable as the men began propositioning her and invited her to their homes for tea. Their behavior escalated when they stopped for vodka shots and became physically aggressive.

    In that moment of fear and vulnerability, Gulzel’s primary concern was not just personal safety but also the potential shame and dishonor that could befall her family if her plight were exposed. Even when she saw her uncle driving in the opposite direction, her instinct was to hide, driven by the desire to avoid bringing shame upon her family.

    This narrative reveals the intricate layers of guilt, shame, and fear that coexist in many cultures. For Gulzel, forgiveness of sins addressed her guilt before God, but it did not fully encompass her need for honor and protection from fear. The gospel, therefore, must be presented in a way that speaks to all these dimensions of human experience.

    The 3D Gospel framework posits that different cultures respond to the gospel through three primary lenses: guilt-innocence, shame-honor, and fear-power. Western cultures, which are largely individualistic, often emphasize guilt and forgiveness. In contrast, many Eastern cultures are collectivistic, placing a high value on honor and shame. Meanwhile, animistic and tribal cultures often focus on power dynamics and fear of the spiritual realm.

    For missionaries and those engaged in cross-cultural ministry, this means that effective gospel communication must go beyond a one-dimensional message. It requires a deep understanding of the cultural context and a holistic approach that addresses guilt, restores honor, and dispels fear.

    The story of Gulzel is a powerful reminder that the gospel is multifaceted and must be contextualized to meet the diverse needs of people from different cultural backgrounds. As we seek to share the good news of Jesus Christ, let us be mindful of these cultural nuances and strive to present a gospel that is truly transformative in every dimension of human life.

    Conclusion

    Chapter 1 of “The 3D Gospel” challenges us to broaden our understanding of how the gospel speaks to people around the world. By recognizing the different cultural dimensions of guilt, shame, and fear, we can more effectively communicate the richness of God’s salvation and meet people where they are. In doing so, we fulfill the call to make disciples of all nations, bringing the fullness of Christ’s redemption to every corner of the globe.