Another Coffee
Break:
Practical
Discipleship
Once again I'm
out of sync with my normal publishing schedule for these Coffee Breaks. Della's mother, Opal Hendershot, went home
to be with the Lord just over a month ago.
At 83 years of age she's had a rich and full life, the overwhelming
majority of which was spent walking with the Lord. Ever since Della's step-dad went home in
2001, we've mostly cared for her mom.
She outlived both her first husband (Della's natural father) and her
second husband. The last few years have
seen declining health with congestive heart disease and she has repeatedly said
-- and especially during the past few months -- that she wanted to go home.
Even
though we've prepared for this day and thought we were quite ready for Mom's
homegoing, it still caught Della off-guard and turned out to be quite a
struggle for her emotionally. The
homegoing service Friday, May 11th was nothing short of spectacular, being
filled with praise, worship and testimonies of lives changed or influenced for
the sake of the Kingdom of God. Much of
the family was able to gather together for the event with Della's brothers and
her sister traveling, along with our daughter, Danielle, and her husband,
Anthony, and our youngest son, Joshua, and his wife, Michelle, all of them from
Alaska to be here.
Bob
Widmann, who pastors Cornerstone Assembly, did a spectacular job of ministering
at the funeral, and five people responded to the message of salvation at the
conclusion.
The
loss of Della's mother meant that we've had estate matters to take care of, and
those things have kept us incredibly busy and pushed to long hours with family
members helping to dispose of legal matters and distribution of possessions
throughout. Hopefully, the long-overdue
release of this Coffee Break will get things back on track.
We
really could continue our discussion on the Call of the Bridegroom, and perhaps
this Coffee Break will serve as an addendum to that study. One of the things that seems abundantly clear
is that there has been an excessive focus within the structured church world on
getting people born again and missing entirely the disciplined walk with the
Lord Jesus Christ that must commence immediately upon making the initial
commitment.
The
Great Commission (as we are so inclined to call it) is not a commission from
the Lord to get people "saved."
Contrary to some of the popular translations, Jesus did not simply say,
"Go ye therefore and teach all nations....." His command was that we go forth and
"disciple" all nations."
The
NASB translates the Greek text accurately, putting it like this: "All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on
earth. Go therefore and make
disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and
the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you;
and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age." (Matthew 28:18-20)
There's
a huge difference between simply preaching and teaching, and
"discipling." The truth of
this understanding really began to spread throughout the body of Christ during
the Charismatic Renewal during the early 1970's. I remember when -- at a World Map Conference
-- Bob Mumford was the scheduled speaker and he stepped aside for Juan Carlos
Ortiz to share the remarkable successes of the "discipleship"
ministry Juan Carlos was seeing in Argentina.
As
has been and continues to be true, whenever real truth begins to be propagated
within the body of Christ and Christians begin to grow and mature and become a
genuine threat to Satan's lies and deception, he seeks to contaminate the
message with extremes and thereby render the truth either unpalatable to most
Christians or laced with so much error that it becomes totally rejected. I watched this take place following Juan
Carlos' sharing.
What
worked spectacularly for the Argentinean Revival (as it has been sometimes
referred) with the teaching and practical applications of the disciplined walk
in Christ Jesus mostly failed in North America.
It wasn't that what Juan Carlos Ortiz shared was wrong, or that his
methods and applications were wrong. The
problem was that the message and applications of discipleship as
integrated into Argentinean culture and life simply did not
translate well into American (or more accurately, "westernized")
lifestyles and culture.
Many
of my pastor friends attempted to apply Juan Carlos' methodologies within their
American churches with explosive and disastrous results. It became known within this country as "the
Discipleship Controversy," and because of the failures and damaged lives
that resulted from the misapplication of the truth, large segments of the body
of Christ rejected the whole idea of being discipled.
Just
because South American methodologies mostly failed in North America doesn't
mean that the message of discipleship and discipling was or is wrong! Far from it!
Each part of the world -- OK, let's make it more personal -- each and
every segment of society has a uniqueness to it that requires a practical
understanding and application which makes it work.
Let's
talk for a minute about some of the practical aspects and principles of true
discipleship.
The
whole idea of a "disciple" is found in the core word:
discipline. A disciple is one who lives
his or her life in a disciplined manner obeying the tenets and principles set
forth by the mentor or the teacher or leader under whom they've submitted.
Living
a disciplined life is a whole lot more than simply refraining from certain
activities you might otherwise enjoy, or engaging in a certain careful and
controlled lifestyle. The
"disciple" learns to adopt the mindset, the thought processes, the
character and the nature of his/her mentor or instructor.
What
was it that happened to Peter when he stood outside warming himself by the fire
while Jesus was being interrogated by those who shortly thereafter crucified
Him? (See Matthew 26:69-73) First a young girl says to Peter, "You
were with Jesus of Galilee."
Shortly thereafter another young woman says to those standing by,
"This man was also with Jesus of Nazareth."
A
short period of time ensues during which conversation takes place between all
those gathered together -- conversation which includes Peter. Pretty soon some of those participating in
the conversation stop and say to him, "You certainly are one of them. Your manner of speaking clearly identifies
you.”
You
get the idea, I'm sure. Years ago when I
was ministering with Dwain McKenzie at Long Beach Christian Center, Dwain and I
periodically participated in conferences at Church on the Way in Van Nuys,
California. Anyone who's been around
Jack Hayford for any length of time knows that he has a very distinctive
speaking style and expressions you can identify anywhere.
We
often chuckled when we heard some of the elders or young men he was mentoring
in ministry. If you didn't see them and
simply heard them speak, you could be forgiven for thinking that you were
listening to Jack. They had his speaking
style down to a "T" along with many of his phrases or expressions.
That's
how it was with Peter. He'd been
discipled by the Lord Jesus Christ. His
mannerisms were affected. He carried on
a conversation like Jesus did. He spoke
like Jesus. He had yet to be filled with
Holy Spirit, however, and as a consequence lacked the boldness that comes with
that infilling.
Because
Jesus was being accused before Caiaphas of blasphemy, Peter's fears kicked in
and he was afraid of being known in this court setting as an associate or
friend of Jesus, or being one of His disciples.
In order, therefore, to convince the bystanders with whom he'd been
carrying on a conversation that he was not part of Jesus' disciples, he did
something that was so uncharacteristic of Jesus as to express himself first
with an oath, swearing [on his mother's grave?] that he didn't even know
Jesus. Then after being identified for
the third time as one who was normally seen with Jesus, he tried to convince
his accusers with the use of cursing and vulgar language.
But
Jesus' mannerisms, His speech and His countenance were known for peace, for
authority and (mostly) for exceptional gentleness. Peter may have temporarily put off those who
questioned his association, but Jesus' mentoring, His teaching, His instruction
and His discipling of Peter had made real change. When Peter heard the cock crow, it shook him
to the core of his being. He realized
that he had done just what Jesus had said he would do: he denied Jesus three
times. And Peter couldn't stick
around. He went out and wept bitter,
remorseful tears over his betrayal of Jesus.
You
see, Jesus had become Peter's best friend.
Yes, Jesus was Peter's Lord and Savior.
Yes, Jesus was the One who had sent him out to heal the sick, raise the
dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out demons, and preach the Gospel of the
Kingdom. And Peter had seen direct,
measurable, tangible results and consequences of functioning in the very onoma,
the character and nature of the Lord Jesus Christ. That ministry had affected his
household. His wife's mother had been
raised from her sick bed, made completely whole.
Remember
when Jesus sent the 70 out, two by two, and told them to "heal
the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out demons"? Then Jesus said to them,
"freely ye have received, freely give." (Matthew 10:8)
The
Greek text uses a fascinating word which our KJV translators rendered as
"received." The Greek lambano is one of those picture words which
conveys a whole lot more than our simplified "received." This word communicates the transfer or
impartation of some idea, some truth, some concept by the one (in this case,
Jesus) discipling. That transfer or
impartation is then seized upon, laid claim to and possessed by the one
receiving the impartation.
Does
that make it clearer for you?
Then
let's take this the next step. One
cannot disciple or bring under certain discipline if one is not himself under
discipline. Consider the centurion who
came to Jesus in desperation on behalf of his servant. Pay attention to the very particular wording
in this example in the Word.
Luke
7:2-10: "And a certain centurion’s servant, who was dear unto him, was
sick, and ready to die. And
when he heard of Jesus, he sent unto him the elders of the Jews, beseeching him
that he would come and heal his servant. And when they came to Jesus, they
besought him instantly, saying, That he was worthy for whom he should do this: For he loveth our nation, and he hath
built us a synagogue. Then
Jesus went with them. And when he was now not far from the house, the centurion
sent friends to him, saying unto him, Lord, trouble not thyself: for I am not
worthy that thou shouldest enter under my roof: Wherefore neither thought I myself
worthy to come unto thee: but say in a word, and my servant shall be healed. For I also am a man set under
authority, having under me soldiers, and I say unto one, Go, and he goeth;
and to another, Come, and he cometh; and to my servant, Do this, and he doeth it.
When Jesus heard these
things, he marvelled at him, and turned him about, and said unto the people
that followed him, I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in
Israel. And they that were
sent, returning to the house, found the servant whole that had been sick."
First
of all, the centurion comes to Jesus recognizing that He (Jesus) is under
Father's authority. He understands what
being "under authority" actually means, namely, that he willingly has
subjected himself to the authority of his superiors. He lives a life of absolute discipline. As a result, he himself has been commissioned
and placed in authority over 100 soldiers who are "under authority" to
him as their superior.
The
centurion recognizes that Jesus operates under the authority of Father with
Father's commissioning, and that with that place of submission comes the full
backing and commitment of Heaven to support whatever command He gives. He has both seen and heard of the miracles
that Jesus does and knows that He could never do those things without first
having been commissioned and authorized by direct command.
This
is perhaps the most basic and fundamental aspect of
"discipling." The one who
disciples others must first be under the authority of Father, Son and Holy
Spirit. The discipler must have
personally seen, heard and -- through personal experience -- lived and walked
the discipline of Father through Jesus Christ, operating through the power and
enabling of Holy Spirit.
In
the past 65+ years of walking with the Lord, it has been my pleasure to lead
many to salvation through the Lord Jesus Christ. I've lost track of the number of people laid
hands on to receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit with the attendant signs,
and couldn't begin to tell you how many people I've baptized in water. That's all well and good, but the command of
Jesus is a whole lot more than that. The
issue isn't how many folks I've led to the New Birth: the issue is how many
I've successfully discipled in such a way that they duplicate the same
presence, authority and power of Holy Spirit manifested in and through me. That number, I'm sorry to say, is a whole lot
smaller than the number of those with whom I've prayed for salvation.
Evangelism
is a whole lot more than preaching and leading souls to the Lord. Evangelism -- at least Jesus' definition of
evangelism -- incorporates living a disciplined life under the command of Holy
Spirit. True evangelism involves
becoming involved with those whom you lead to Jesus and discipling them so that
the same Word of Life, the same Word of Faith, the same Word of Love exhibited
in your life is duplicated and manifested in them.
Make
sense? Good! Let me share a personal experience -- one
from 65 years ago for the sake of illustration.
As
a five-year-old, I lived, breathed, walked and talked Jesus. My father was my discipler at the time, and I
wanted in the worst way to duplicate the pattern I saw in him. I preached, testified, cajoled and did
everything I could to persuade my friends and playmates that they needed to
commit themselves to Jesus Christ.
It
was the winter of 1947. We lived at the
time in Nome, Alaska. It was a
particularly brutal winter with temperatures at or near 40 below zero for a
period of several weeks. The winter had
begun with a huge snowfall and subsequent winds had piled the snow in drifts so
high you could literally climb up on the roof of our church building.
Of
course the blowing wind, coupled with the cold temperatures, made the snow rock
hard; and that made it perfect for a bunch of kids who wanted to make snow
caves, igloos, or whatever. My brother
and I, however, had a different plan. We
borrowed one of Dad's hand saws and cut out a room roughly 8 X 8 X 5 in a huge
snow bank that swept over our house and church.
Naturally, we cut out a neat door and window. We followed that with cutting blocks of
hardened snow which made a perfect bench, an altar, a podium to preach from;
and, presto! Mom gave us some candles to use for light, and we had ourselves a
little church! Now, don't laugh. It was serious business to us.
The
first order of business was to gather our friends and playmates to "have
church." Howie (my brother) led the
singing. I preached a 15 or 20-minute
salvation message and had "an altar call" just like Dad's. It wasn't a game, and I wasn't pretending. This took place during a three-year period
between the ages of four and seven when I had constant visitations from angels. Mom had taught me to read by reading the
Bible, and by this time I knew it fairly well -- at least I knew the pertinent
parts of it as far as salvation and baptism were concerned.
You
see, I was learning from Dad's example and the pattern he'd set for me. He was my discipler. Three of my playmates that day responded to
the salvation message and knelt at that snow altar to receive Jesus Christ. Their response was real and from that day
forward I continued to teach them from the Word. I could only teach, of course, those things
that were real to me, but my objective was to transmit them into the lives of
my three friends.
Well,
at forty below zero, you don't baptize anyone in water, so you wait until
spring when water (especially after an abundant winter like that one)
abounds. Seems like it was in May or
early June when the temperatures were between 40 and 50 degrees (above zero, of
course) and deep mud puddles flourished everywhere. (When Dad built the church in Nome he didn't
include a baptismal tank, so we just did the logical thing.) By now I had passed my sixth birthday. My friends were ready to be baptized, and we
found a suitable mud puddle where they could be immersed. We didn't think about changes of clothes or
anything like that. I walked into the
water and, one by one, they came in after me to be baptized. I never knew whether they got in trouble with
their folks for coming home soaking wet in their clothes, but we all knew that
we had taken the proper steps as far as the Lord was concerned! (OK, no fair laughing! Like I said, it was real and we were
serious!)
In
the years that followed, all three of those first converts went on to become
strong Christian believers, and one of them went on into pastoral
ministry. It was my first experience at
discipling, and I followed the pattern that my discipler, Dad, had set for me.
Let
me wrap up this Coffee Break with a simple and practical definition of
discipleship.
To
disciple (according to Jesus' command) means to essentially duplicate the Jesus
in you in someone else. There's more to
this picture, but I think I'll leave it there for today.
See
you again in a few days.
"Ministry by definition is the spiritual work or service of any Christian or a group of Christians. One of the greatest revelations we can ever embrace is that whatever we do in life, is ministry, because the light of God in us and through us never goes dim. Every job, every assignment, our family, our leisure and whatever pathway that the Holy Spirit may lead us, is ministry." (Robert Ricciardelli)
Blessings on you!
Regner
Regner A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
CAPENER MINISTRIES
709 South 7th
Street
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
(509) 515-0133
All Coffee Break articles are copyright by Regner A. Capener, but authorization for reprinting, reposting, copying or re-use, in whole or in part, is granted – provided proper attribution and this notice are included intact. Older Coffee Break archives are now available at http://regnersrangers.multiply.com/journal/ and are being slowly added at http://www.AnotherCoffeeBreak.com. Coffee Break articles are normally published weekly.
If you would like to have these articles arrive each morning in your email, please send a blank email to: Subscribe@AnotherCoffeeBreak.com. To unsubscribe, send a blank email to Unsubscribe@AnotherCoffeeBreak.com.
CAPENER MINISTRIES is a tax-exempt church ministry. Should you desire to participate and covenant with us as partners in this ministry, please contact us at either of the above email or physical addresses, or visit http://www.RiverWorshipCenter.org.
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
(509) 515-0133
All Coffee Break articles are copyright by Regner A. Capener, but authorization for reprinting, reposting, copying or re-use, in whole or in part, is granted – provided proper attribution and this notice are included intact. Older Coffee Break archives are now available at http://regnersrangers.multiply.com/journal/ and are being slowly added at http://www.AnotherCoffeeBreak.com. Coffee Break articles are normally published weekly.
If you would like to have these articles arrive each morning in your email, please send a blank email to: Subscribe@AnotherCoffeeBreak.com. To unsubscribe, send a blank email to Unsubscribe@AnotherCoffeeBreak.com.
CAPENER MINISTRIES is a tax-exempt church ministry. Should you desire to participate and covenant with us as partners in this ministry, please contact us at either of the above email or physical addresses, or visit http://www.RiverWorshipCenter.org.
No comments:
Post a Comment