Why Discipleship?

Not too long ago, churches offered Bible training for all ages—wanting to fully equip children to serve Christ. Today, many churches offer high-energy, entertainment-based programs—wanting to keep kids happy and to make recruiting easy. Children rarely use their Bibles. As a result, children today:

  • know more about video games than they know about God
  • love peer approval more than they love Jesus
  • serve themselves before they consider the needs of others.

In this generation as never before, cultural gravity relentlessly pulls Christian children down—and they are drowning. Statistics warn us that eight out of every ten Christian kids are drinking in the world’s value system. Nearly 80% of our children leave the church by the time they complete high school.

This problem is magnified today because the world’s value system is “post-Christian.” Fifty years ago, the church and western culture were sailing in the same direction. The Ten Commandments were respected and cherished across our society. Lying, cheating, stealing, and infidelity were universally recognized as wrong. Nations possessed a code of values that were based on solid moral footings. This, of course, is said to be passé! Our society no longer reflects a Biblical world-view. Western culture has reversed its direction, charting a course that openly opposes Christian interests.

Now, as churches and parents, we have lost sight of our educational moorings. We’re adrift at sea and not sure which harbor is home. As a direct result, most Christian kids today have no foundation. We’re raising a generation of children who have missed out on essential Bible training. When the world comes calling, many fall prey to dubious activities and deceptive philosophies. It is only natural that children who have routinely swallowed teaching about relativism and tolerance have little regard for moral absolutes. They turn away from their Christian roots and step off the gangplank into uncertain seas.

What does Jesus call His Church to do?

Jesus’ Great Commission “Make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:18-20) is the church’s primary mandate. Through 20 centuries, Jesus’ final challenge has stirred His followers to action. Discipleship is much more than “part-time Christianity.” Jesus’ preeminent passion, the focus of His ministry, His earthly delight—was His twelve disciples. It is certainly true that He ministered to the masses, but Christ poured His life into those twelve diverse men.

Jesus modeled discipleship to His select band of followers. The Lord knew that if He failed to effectively train the twelve, His mission would ultimately fall short of its global objective. Jesus really loved His disciples—and they knew it! Discipleship was Christ’s sole weapon to win the world. He never mentioned “Plan B.”

After Jesus’ ascension into heaven, His disciples knew what Jesus expected them to do. They were to go and repeat with other believers what Christ had done with them. Did His followers succeed? Absolutely! Not too many years later, antagonists to the Gospel reported that Jesus’ disciples had “turned the world upside down” (Acts 17:6). First and foremost, Jesus Christ calls the Church and every believer in the Church to follow His example and “make disciples.”

What do disciples look like today?

Discipleship is the ongoing process whereby Christians grow in Biblical knowledge, Christ-like character, and faithful conduct—to the glory of God. Walking in Jesus’ steps and being His disciple is the Christian’s highest privilege!

When we examine the lives of dynamic disciples throughout history, we consistently find three components:

  1. Knowledge: Growing disciples KNOW God intimately. They develop a reservoir of KNOWLEDGE based on a Biblical worldview.
  2. Character: Growing disciples LOVE God passionately. They display Christ-like CHARACTER in every area of life.
  3. Conduct: Growing disciples SERVE God selflessly. They demonstrate faithful CONDUCT that honors God and helps people.

The Bible illumines a finite number of “must know” topics to understand, “must be” traits to exhibit, and “must do” activities to experience. When a child’s developmental process includes that knowledge, those traits, and those experiences, we can be reasonably assured that we have done our part to build a lifelong disciple of Jesus Christ. Effective discipleship interweaves these three dimensions—knowledge + character + conduct.

Why disciple children?

Jesus Christ commissioned the Church with only one task—”make disciples.” With regard to children, most churches today are doing a poor job discharging that responsibility. If Jesus paid us a surprise visit, we would show Him our nice classrooms and resource centers. We might introduce Him to our teaching staff, invite Him to share snacks with preschoolers, and ask Him to teach the older kids. Afterwards, my guess is that Jesus might say: “Thank you for the tour. I can see that you’re having a good time together. You’ve invested in resources and environments. But I came today for another reason—remember the one thing I commanded you to do? Now, please show me your disciples.” What will you and I say when Jesus asks us that question?

In his book, Transforming Children into Spiritual Champions, George Barna wrote, “…ministry to children is the single most strategic ministry in God’s kingdom” (p. 14). God has given parents primary responsibility for the spiritual training of their children. But many parents don’t know where to begin. They feel overwhelmed with this responsibility. So, parents often entrust this task to the Church, or to chance.

This is why disciplemaking is the most pivotal ministry that churches can provide. It is time for churches to encourage and equip parents to carry out their responsibility. The vitality of the next generation of Christians pivots on its willingness to do so. Churches must plan purposeful ministries to disciple parents and children. As your church considers the needs of children, please remember Jesus’ highest priority. Discipleship is the one thing we cannot neglect.

How can we motivate kids?

Many kids have lost interest in spiritual matters. They are discouraged about trying to please God. From their perspective, it is not “cool” to be godly. So they focus on their own desires and let the world guide them. The number one challenge in churches today is to overcome mediocrity. Christian kids are satisfied with luke-warmness.

To counteract this trend, some churches have replaced content-rich children’s ministries with high-energy programs. This may keep kids from being bored and it may eliminate the need to recruit volunteers, but it also severs teacher-learner relationships that foster discipleship. If we routinely motivate kids with flashy events, we are doomed to the “bigger and better” cycle. Each new program must offer more energy, excitement, and “wow” than the previous one.

Instead, we must move kids from extrinsic to intrinsic motivation. Throughout the Bible, God uses a variety of cause-effect techniques to motivate His people. Some are positive and some are punitive; some are earthly and some are eternal. Some are fascinating and some are frightening. Remind children that every human being will someday meet the Creator face-to-face—and give an account to Him.
Every child can be motivated—though not every child responds to the same stimulus. Find ways to lift your child’s eyes from self to God. Help him or her realize that our omnipresent God is both loving and just. Establish an appropriate system of rules and rewards. Reinforce attitudes and behaviors that honor God. Show how faith is relevant to life. Encourage, affirm, model, pray.

Summary

Unless a force greater than the influence of gravity is exerted on an object, it will fall to the earth. Unless Christianity exerts a stronger influence than the world, the enemy’s persuasive tactics will pull our kids from the truth and ultimately cause them to fall away. The Great Commission hinges on the effectiveness of the church’s educational ministries.

“As a result, we are no longer to be children, tossed here and there by waves and carried about by every wind of doctrine, by the trickery of men, by craftiness in deceitful scheming; But speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in all aspects into Him who is the head, even Christ, from whom the whole body, being fitted and held together by what every joint supplies, according to the proper working of each individual part, causes the growth of the body for the building up of itself in love.” (Ephesians 4:14-16)

Discipleship is the one thing that kids REALLY need. To navigate the turbulent seas and reach the spiritual harbors that God intends, kids need a firm foundation in God’s Word. They need help to grow into solid disciples of Jesus Christ. They need our help. Children’s discipleship is the hope of the world!

 

The Story

We are so excited to introduce some exciting happenings in LifeKids Tri-Towns in February 2012!!!  For the year of 2012 we are going to explore “The Story”, a chronological study through the Bible that explores the beautiful messages of God’s

love and care for his children. Each lesson is designed so that your child will be made completely aware of God’s message through Bible verses, Bible points, the stories, and various activities.  We will have 45 minutes to dive deep into scripture in a discipleship GROW hour followed by an upbeat and fun filled learning time in our WORSHIP experience filled with group worship, live skits, Bible memorization and FUN!

 

While we as a class explore God’s Word, we encourage you to extend that exploration to your homes. Share your own love of his Word with your child, talk about what you are learning in our new GROW adult classes, allow your child time to freely talk about and ask questions about what is being learned. Be sure to encourage sharing of the activity sheets or have your child tell you the Bible story that has been highlighted each week. Even allow him to tell you about some of the discussions that have taken place and continue them at dinner or family reflection time!

 

This is a family experience … God is the all-loving Father. We are his children. As The Story unfolds for all of us here at LifeBridge Tri-Towns share the experience with your child.

 

We have been blessed with this incredible story! Let’s help make our children incredible and faith-filled storytellers.

 

We are excited to have you be a part of our journey through the Bible!

 

Schedule for LifeKids in February of 2012 in their new classroom locations!

9:00-9:45 GROW experience

9:45-10:00 Snacks

10:00-11:15 WORSHIP experience.

What is “Think Tank”?

Our family ministry is so excited about Think Tank: A Parent’s Retreat.  It’s going to be a great time for our parents to be encouraged through worship, a message and small group discussion.

January 21st- from 9am-4pm!  Come and enjoy some fellowship and grow deeper in your walk with God and hey….  get some great new ideas on parenting!

For more details or to sign up- come by the family table!

This week in LifeKids- December 11

Early Childhood LifeKids:

This week we continued the story of Jesus’ birth.  This week was about the long travel that Mary and Joseph made to Bethlehem for Jesus to be born, and that the stable is the place God chose for His only Son to be born.  Remember as we talk about Christmas, that this is Jesus’ birthday!

Check out the Parent Resource tab for Parent Cue Cards from this week!

Elementary Students:

This week, we discovered that you can’t take it with you! A rich young ruler has a big question in our Bible story (Luke 18:18-25). We want to get Wrapped Up in the right thing and not overvalue our stuff. Bottom Line: Don’t let stuff get in the way of loving Jesus.
One of the best ways to show your love for God is by giving to others. What did Jesus really want from the ruler? Jesus really wasn’t after the guy’s stuff; He was after his heart. Jesus knew that this guy was trapped by his stuff and Jesus wanted to set the guy free. This can be summed up in this week’s Basic Truth: I can trust God no matter what.
What do you think the people listening thought as the rich young ruler walked away sadly? Our monthly memory verse changes the way we define what it means to be rich. It says “Be rich in good deeds … be generous and willing to share,” 1 Timothy 6:18, NIV. Living generously shows the people around us what we love and trust in most.

Check out the Parent Resource tab for Parent cue and God Talk cards from this week!

Introduce your child to our AWESOME God!

Children ask, “What is God really like?” Schools, friends, television, and other sources expose children to a variety of ideas. Much of what kids hear about “god” does not even resemble the God who reveals Himself in the Bible.

God delights to disclose Himself to all who seek Him. Knowing the Lord personally and enjoying His greatness is the highest privilege of every Christian! The Bible is the one inspired place to find out about God—His personality, His attributes, His Names, and His character. A child’s basic outlook and attitude toward life is shaped by the way he or she pictures God.

Introduce your child to our awesome God. Each week, explain and discuss one of God’s attributes, names, or character traits. Encourage your child to know God truly and intimately. Just as a jeweler delights in each facet of a beautiful diamond, your love for God grows as you examine each aspect of His character (see 1 Chronicles 29:11; Proverbs 2:4-5; Acts 17:24-25).

This week in LifeKids

EARLY CHILDHOOD LifeKids

In the busy season of making Christmas lists, putting up Christmas decorations and baking various Christmas goodies, take a moment to think about the most important gift that was given.  God gave us Jesus.  This is what we are focusing on the month of December.  This week we are talking about Mary and the Angel- God told us He would give us Jesus.  Angels were used to send important messages at this time, think how exciting and inspiring to be one of the people who had a message delivered, like Mary, Joseph or the shepherds.

This weeks challenge: As we are setting up our Christmas decorations, singing Christmas songs, going Christmas shopping- start to talk about the true meaning of Christmas.  To celebrate the birth of Jesus.

 

ELEMENTARY LifeKids

December is the perfect month for an Extreme Makeover! So this week in our Elementary LifeKids, we are talking about when Jesus tells the parable of a rich man, (Luke 12:13-21). The rich man gets wrapped up on storing up more stuff and ends up losing everything that really matters.
The rich man did what we all have a tendency to do—to focus on what Jesus or God can do for us, instead of thinking about ways we’ve already been blessed or how we can bless others. That’s why our monthly memory verse says, “Be rich in good deeds … be generous and willing to share,” 1 Timothy 6:18, NIV.
When we realize that it’s really a lie that stuff makes our lives better, then it’s easier for us to be generous. We define generosity as making someone’s day by giving something away. We can’t really live generously unless we believe that I should treat others the way I want to be treated.

Home Activity:  http://www.churchsupplier.com/shopsite_sc/store/html/coins.html

Make a penny box specifically to hold money to give to someone in need, or to tithe.  Discuss how important it is to give, rather than receive.

Things to discuss with your kids this week: There’s an old saying, “It’s better to give than receive.”  What do you think that means?