BY STEPHEN DUNN
About a year ago we made a fundamental shift in the language of the
congregation that I serve as Lead Pastor. We began speaking of disciples instead of members.
The latter tends to be an exclusive and organizational word. And
thanks to Mastercard and other marketers, membership has come to connote
privileges rather than responsibilities.
Disciple on the other hand is a more organic term and it infers
lifestyle and learning. A disciple has not arrived, they continue to
become as they learn to think, act and be like the One of whom they are a
disciple. It was in a Finance Commission meeting where we were
discussing how to get members to give their fair share, to measure up to
the expectations and needs of the Church. Tithing, of course, was part
of this conversation. It was then when one of our older members said,
"This is not a membership issue, it's a discipleship issue." He went on
to note that members think in terms of what is necessary to be in good
standing. Disciples give. It is who they are.
Profound, isn't it?
It's more than semantics. It is a religious world view.
Now at the church we teach discipleship and form groups of people on
mission with Jesus. We have Membership Orientations to describe the
formal needs of the organization.
We also use this definition of disciple.
A DISCIPLE IS A PERSON WHO LIVES IN DAILY OBEDIENCE TO THE WILL AND PURPOSE OF GOD, COMMITTED TO BEARING FRUIT FOR THE KINGDOM.
This linguistic change is helping us make a cultural shift from
membership to discipleship. It is moving us beyond maintaining the
organization to mobilizing for mission.
(C) 2012 by Stephen L Dunn
This was originally published on my blog IMMEASURABLY MORE (Discipleship Version)
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