In my Spiritual Formation class we read out of a book full of devotional classics. The book is composed of excerpts from various books and authors from any point in time. In our last reading we had three different passages on three different areas or ways of discipleship and out of those we are suppose to write on something that God put on are hearts to stand out in the reading. The excerpt that impacted me the most was from Dallas Willard's book The Spirit of the Disciplines.
Willard takes the view that if you are a Christian then you must become a disciple. In his text Willard discusses that the New Testament is a book of discipleship. He counts out that the word disciple is found 269 times, whereas the word Christian only occurs 3 times and was originally used to refer to a disciple. Willard says "the New Testament is a book about disciples, by disciples, and for disciples of Jesus Christ." If this is true then all Christians are disciples, right? Willard goes on to say that "if we don't make convert s disciples, then it would be impossible for us to teach them how to live as Christ lived and taught." So, we are not automatically a disciple of Christ when we become a Christian. According to Willard we must as disciples continuously make more disciples. This shows us that becoming a disciple is a process, a decision, a commitment. One point I want to stress from the passage is What a disciple looks like?
We have established that we must be a Christian first and then through a process we continue to grow into a disciple. For me this process starts with a call, a call to the Lord. Next we must make a lifelong commitment to study, obey, and imitate the example God sent us in His son. In Mark 10:28 Peter said "Look, we've left everything and followed you!" This show a commitment to the Lord to follow Him. They left everything for Him. Discipleship requires a sacrifice, it calls for you to suffer in God's name. The Apostle Paul wrote numerous times to have joy and comfort in your suffering, to offer you bodies as living sacrifices in God's name. A disciple's life does not belong to himself, but to God. A disciple looks like a person of heartfelt desire, a desire to imitate Christ in every aspect of his being. Discipleship is a process, starting with a commitment to follow God and then going deeper with God in relationships and through the word. It is a sacrifice we must make of ourselves, to let God have us fully for all time.
"The correct perspective is to see following Christ not only as the necessity it is, but as the fulfillment of the highest human possibilities and as life on the highest plane." - Dallas Willard
In His Name,
David Mann

