Tag Archive | Jesus

The Bible’s Cure for a Weary Soul

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Weariness

It affects all of us, no matter what type of denomination, organic church vs. traditional, involved in ministry or not, we all get tired. While we all get tired physically, the weariness that strikes so much harder is the weariness of soul that comes on believers in busy or difficult seasons of life. So often the well-meaning church (like Job’s friends) offers us advice for how we are to handle that weariness:

“Take more time for yourself.”

“You need a retreat to spend more time in prayer.”

“You need to reprioritize your schedule and quit a few things. You’re doing too much.”

“Maybe you just need to take your mind off of things.”

The list can go on.

But, like the advice of Job’s friends, while this may be good advice it doesn’t get to the root of what’s going on. How do I know? I’ve watched friends fall into weariness and try various versions of this advice. I’ve fallen into weariness myself and tried them.  In each case, the person who was weary gets some kind temporary rest, but the long term problem is never dealt with.

The Bible has a solution for the weariness of the soul so many of us go through. It’s called looking at Jesus:

…let us run with endurance the race God has set before us. We do this by keeping our eyes on Jesus, the champion who initiates and perfects our faith. Because of the joy awaiting him, he endured the cross, disregarding its shame. Now he is seated in the place of honor besides God’s throne. Think of all the hostility he endured from sinful people; then you won’t become weary and give up.

Hebrews 12:1-3

Friends, the writer of Hebrews says that if we spend time looking at Jesus and considering His example, it will strengthen us against weariness.  Jesus is the one who initiates and completes our faith. He is responsible for the starting it and He is responsible for getting us to the finish line.

More importantly, I find that when I am truly discouraged and weary of soul, it’s because my life or the service God has called me to hasn’t gone the way I wanted. Whenever I get into that place, instead of lamenting how much better someone else has it or grumbling and complaining, I remind myself that the Son of God left His Father and came down to Earth.  I remind myself that He was persecuted, beaten, mocked, and killed for the same Gospel I’m trying share with others.

When I think about Jesus remaining faithful and steadfast in the midst of such pain and difficulty, it strengthens my heart to keep going. His example of patience and trust in the Father and His love for me in spite of the difficulty around Him refresh my heart and help me keep going. The weariness fades when I see Jesus enduring faithfully in worse situations than I am in.

Depending on your level of weariness you may need to take active, physical steps. You may need to take some time to go on a retreat. You may need some time in prayer away from the things in your life that stress you. But I guarantee at the base of your weariness is letting your issues and problems seem so much larger than Jesus’.  If instead we can take the time and look to Him, we will avoid being weary and giving up.

If you’re weary today, make the time. Look at Him. Remember the hostility he endured. Let His example strengthen you to obey in tough circumstances.

He will do it.

Photo Credit: Christ! by Babak Fakhamzadeh

Why You Should Know How to Share the Gospel and Disciple Others

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Several years ago I had a friend who I started talking to about discipleship. I looked him in the eye and asked him, “If you lead someone to Jesus today, would you know how to help that person grow in the Lord?” A kind of glazed look came over my friend’s face as he realized that he really didn’t know what would come next if he lead someone to Christ.

My friend isn’t alone. In fact, my experience in Christianity in the West tells me that very few people know how to share Christ and fewer know how to disciple those they lead to Christ. This hinders the spread of the Gospel.

Before we go too far, I feel like it’s important to say that I understand not every Christian is going to be an evangelist. I don’t primarily consider myself an evangelist and many of the people I know who share the gospel regularly aren’t evangelists either. But every believer should have a basic understanding of how to share the gospel and disciple new believers. This is part of what Paul means when he says that “we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ,” (Ephesians 4:15). Every believer is called to be a witness and a disciple (and therefore a disciple maker), but not every believer is called to be an evangelist. 

You are called not just to be a Christian and pursue your calling, but regardless of your calling to lead people to Christ along the way. And as you lead them to Christ, you will need to baptize them and instruct them in following Jesus. Don’t settle for anything less than that.

If you are an elder or teacher in the body of Christ, make sure that those around you can articulate the gospel and know how to respond when someone says yes to it. This can make the difference between leading one person to Christ and many more people coming to Christ through the testimony of a new brother or sister.

For those of you who don’t know how to share the Gospel with those around you, here is a clear, simple, reproducible way to share it that we’ve used many times with those we know:

Many times, though, leading people to Christ is the easy part. Teaching them to obey the Risen Christ and helping them to lay aside their old lifestyle is much harder.  So next week, we’ll look at a process we’ve used here to raise up disciples.

Until then, what do you think is the main difficulty you have in sharing the gospel and discipling new believers? Let me know in the comment section.

Photo Credit: The Bible by Chris Yarzab

Church Planting, Redefined

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One of the things that we’ve learned over the past ten years has been that if you set out to plant a church, you may attract a lot of people, Christians may flock to what you’re doing, but you won’t necessarily make disciples.

On the flip side, if you set out to make disciples of Jesus, you will inevitably wind up with a church. I like to say it like this: Church planting is best understood as a discipleship process that leaves a church in its wake.

This is a shift from what is commonly done. Most church plants start with a core team that is selected from an existing church. The core team leaves the existing church, begins meeting in another location, and hope that unbelievers show up at the new location. This is usually accompanied by some amount of outreach to get new people to join the church.

In this model, significant amounts of time and energy are focused on creating a meeting that attracts people. And while this is usually not the intent, the kind of people that this new church attracts are often very similar to the people who start the church: Middle class, somewhat moral people. And many times this ends up being people who are dissatisfied with a previous church and are already believers.  Church planting was supposed to be “the best methodology of evangelism under the sun,” but when we primarily engage already saved believers with our methods, we give away our opportunity to be effective in reaching people for Jesus.

But church planting can be something different.

It can look more like baptizing new believers than preparing sermons.

It can be more like loving on the broken than setting up tables.

It can be meeting with newly baptized believers and teaching them the Bible than writing a doctrinal statement.

It can be teaching other believers how to share the Gospel and endure hardship instead of working on your church’s website.

It’s effective because it’s not building the church programs and expecting disciples to get made, but building disciples and expecting the church to be born.

So instead of starting a meeting with existing believers, gather two or three existing believers who are hungry to reach the lost with the love of Jesus.  Spend time with these believers talking to lost people and engaging them with the gospel. As they come to Christ, teach them to follow Jesus and obey His commands. Baptize them. Help them get into the word. Teach them to share the love of Jesus.

Eventually you will come to the command to gather with other believers and encourage each other. But prior to that, you and your small group will have practiced this several times over in trying to be obedient to the other commands.

And as two or three people come to Jesus from the lost and begin to become disciples, you will begin to see a functioning church emerge that isn’t built on meetings but is built on following Jesus and interconnected relationships.  The reward is not only a church, but a church made up entirely of people who never knew Jesus prior to their involvement.

So make disciples and churches will emerge.  As churches emerge men and women will be sent out to preach the Gospel and make more disciples. The point is that discipleship continues to go out from where you are and touches people who have not yet given their lives to Christ.  It’s a “go-ing gospel” that touches people outside the boundaries of the church.

Most importantly, when we teach people to obey Christ, it’s the seedbed for a movement that can spread far beyond you and I and touch the ends of the earth.

And that my friends, is what we really wanted from church planting, anyways, right?

Photo Credit: IMG_0507_HDR by Mars Hill Church Seattle