Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
A few years ago I was at a ministry event where we broke into small groups for a discussion and reflection time.
You know the type of thing.
The large group is divided into many smaller groups and you find a corner of the room to meet and you form a shape that loosely resembles a circle with chairs and then someone takes charge and you begin the assigned questions or whatever the purpose of the breakout is.
Now, these spaces can often be extraordinary and beautiful times.
But this particular night I was tired, I had been in a church service environment for several days and was ready to call it a day and go to bed.
Suffice it to say, I had low expectations that anything memorable would come of that night. And wouldn't you know it, I was right.
Well, mostly right.
The format was that each group would answer the same list of questions and then those groups would share their conclusions with the larger group.
And one question stood out to me, not because of the question, but because of the replies.
The question was simple enough, “How would you define discipleship to Jesus?”
A softball question. Slowpitch softball. Maybe even t-ball.
I wrote down my answer as we were asked to do and I felt good about my definition. Then we went around the circle and read our answers out loud.
And each answer was different. Some were mildly different, some were wildly different, but they were all different.
We were all self-proclaimed disciples of Jesus and we couldn’t agree on what that meant.
That is what I found so fascinating about that night.
In Jesus’ final words to his disciples, he leaves them with a vital set of instructions,
“Go and make more of you.” (my paraphrase and abbreviation)
Jesus is about to join the Father but, with the weight of final words and last impressions, he commissions his disciples to disciple.
As a kid, I memorized the Great Commission from Matthew 28, verses 19 and 20, and I suspect most of the people at this ministry event could have recited those verses from memory, and yet we could not agree on what Jesus meant by the term disciple.
Four years ago I was part of a team organizing and launching a church called Trailhead Church and we took the time to come up with a definition of discipleship to Jesus that was accurate, wordy, and completely unmemorable.
(I wish I could remember what it was, but like I said, it was unmemorable).
Then we came across some language from a church called Bridgetown where they defined discipleship to Jesus this way: a disciple (or apprentice) to Jesus organizes their lives around three goals, to
(1) be with Jesus,
(2) become like Jesus, and
(3) do what Jesus did.
And we liked that. The definition was helpful, easy to remember and blessedly short.
It is a succinct reminder of what we are called to be and do. So we repeat these three elements often with the hope that when we speak of discipleship to Jesus, we all are working from a similar definition and expectation.
And why does this matter?
It matters because Jesus really did tell his followers to “go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.”
A truly great commission.
A commission that was given to the Eleven and we believe, a commission given to you and a commission given to me.
And I don't know about you, but when I think about it, this charge from Jesus can feel daunting. Overwhelming. Like maybe I’m not up to the task. The original Eleven, sure, they were super disciples. But me? I’m just a guy trying to make sense of faith and sometimes my prayers feel flimsy and my love feels forced and I’d like to share my hope but there doesn't seem to be enough to go around.
So maybe I can sit on the bench and cheer the team on from the sidelines.
(Anyone relate?)
But before we excuse ourselves from Jesus’ commission because we just aren't all that awesome, it might be helpful to look at a bit more of the story. In the preceding two verses before the Great Commission, Matthew writes, “Then the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted.”
The soil that Jesus planted his Great Commission on was worship. And doubt. Not worship and great faith, not worship and exuberant hope, not worship and resolute, fully convinced hearts.
No.
Worship and doubt.
The Eleven spent three years with Jesus, watching, learning, practicing, participating. They came away with worship and doubt.
And Jesus wasn't put off by that.
He saw the worship and he saw the doubt and he still said, “Go and make disciples.”
But that isn't all he said. To those disciples 2,000 years ago and to us disciples today, he had one more thing to say. I like to imagine that Jesus, after telling them to go make disciples of all nations, then leaned in close, slowly, fondly, gazed at each friend, and said his final words.
“And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”
And so today, this week, and for the rest of your life, while you are worshipping and doubting and getting the two tangled together, keep coming back to three simple goals.
Be with Jesus.
Become like Jesus.
And do what he would do if he were me.
Because surely he is with us.
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant