1. ubf has always approached discipleship with the multiplication-pyramid ideas. It never works. So the leaders in the pyramid end up resorting to severe guilt-tripping or obedience-pushing. Here is a slide from the 2010 ubf training material:
http://www.priestlynation.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/102.slide25.jpg
2. Here is proof that the multiplication approach didn’t work. Over 50 years, ubf is about 8,657 members in total worldwide. And I really shouldn’t say “members”. The official member shepherds probably total far less than 1,000. Everyone else is just attending.
http://www.priestlynation.com/archives/1492
My 2 cents. :)
]]>Truly, we are married to God, and then called to His service in specific contexts, not the other way around.
Oh, and I definitely say “I do!”.
]]>Acts 2:41, Acts 2:47 and Acts 5:14 speaks of people being added to the number of believers. Even this was done by the Lord.
The quote above is so telling: “…if we just follow this multiplication plan, the entire world will be converted to Christianity in thirty years. That was more than thirty years ago.”
If a church wants to follow the multiplication/pyramid approach to making disciples, I think that church will have to become a lot like the Cybermen in Dr. Who!
“Cybermen were originally a wholly organic species of humanoids originating on Earth’s twin planet Mondas that began to implant more and more artificial parts into their bodies as a means of self-preservation. This led to the race becoming coldly logical and calculating, with every emotion all but deleted from their minds.”
]]>Alan Hirsch, an Australian missiologist, in his book, The Forgotten Ways, speaks of the early church in Acts and why she exploded, and explains why the gospel is expanding in China, Asia, S. America, but not in the U.S., Europe and the “civilized” world. Looking forward to your subsequent articles.
]]>It does not work as even a get-rich-quick scheme. Why would we apply it to our spiritual life and work?
The problem with pyramid scheme evangelism (you raise 12 disciples and they each raise 12 disciples) is the same problem with pyramid schemes. Your success is dependent on the success of the people beneath you. So raising disciples becomes a high-stakes gamble.
Is this person the one? The one who will stay? Who will accept mission? Who will grow? Who will marry? Who will devote their lives to doing this too?
Which eventually becomes…is this person worth this amount of time? I don’t think they will stay. I don’t think they will be bible teachers. This isn’t what they want. And along with this is enormous pressure to find new disciples who will work in your chain of discipleship.
It stops being about teaching people who Christ is, how to love and worship Him with your life, how to love each other. The results can’t be the work. It can’t be in numbers. When God wants the world evangelized, it will be. Is there any spiritual benefit in praying to raise up 120 disciples versus raising up one person to know, love, trust Christ and to live a Christ-centered life each day? One that is full of meaning and joy?
And what if you never raise up a disciple? Do you just not love Christ enough? What if that is not God’s role for you in His great plan? What if you have planted seeds in thousands of people that take root later on in their lives? Is your spiritual life a failure?
While I see the passion and desire to serve God with great numbers, I also see the human thinking behind those kinds of thoughts. If that is how God thinks, it seems to me that Jesus’ ministry would have looked a lot different.
]]>The problem with multiplication/duplication is that our world and our culture are now changing at a very rapid pace. One generation may figure out how to contextualize the gospel and raise disciples in a particular time and place. Having some success, they proceed to develop systems, formulas and programs to churn out disciples in the familiar mold. But by the time those systems are in place, the culture has changed and the mold has become obsolete. We really, really need to develop our personal relationships with Christ and learn how to follow the leading of the Holy Spirit afresh in each generation.
But even in earlier times, multiplication/duplication was not the main mechanism by which the church grew. Scripture and ancient church history tell a different story.
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