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Coming to Terms with Discipleship
Dr. Charlie Bing
Discipleship affects every Christian. Not only are we to be disciples,
but we are to make disciples of others. But what is a disciple?
The meaning of discipleship has taken on greater significance with the
unabating interest in the debate over the relationship between salvation
and sanctification fueled by the Lordship Salvation controversy. Many
on both sides are being challenged in their assumptions about what a
disciple is. There remains a great need for biblical clarification on
the issue. This article will look briefly at the confusion over the concept
of discipleship, then attempt to define it from the NT data.
I. A Call for Clarification
For decades a chorus of voices has been calling for a more precise definition
of the biblical concept of discipleship while the Church goes on grappling
with fulfilling her great commission to "make disciples." Christians
have not lacked for books on how to be a disciple or how to make disciples
of others. Too often these books are based on assumptions about what
a disciple is while they take the meaning of discipleship for granted.
Yet our understanding of biblical discipleship shapes our practice of
evangelism, church growth, missions, and personal lifestyle.
A. Making Disciples
When discipleship became a buzz-word of zealous Christian groups,
there were some who were not happy with how it was being used (or abused!).
For example, in 1971, J. Dwight Pentecost introduced his book on discipleship
with this note:
The subject of Discipleship is frequently discussed today. Men are
called to become disciples without any definition of the concept, and
without any clarification of the requirements the Lord makes of those
who are His disciples. Hence no intelligent decision can be made concerning
this important question.1
Coming from a different perspective, but with the same concern, C. Peter
Wagner wrote in 1973,
The biblical concept of "disciple" has become a key term in contemporary
evangelical missiology. Faced with the fuzzy use of the term in much
popular literature and preaching, a closer look at the New Testament
meaning of the word, together with its implications for missions, is
now overdue.2
Little progress seems to have been made since then, however. Books on
how to make disciples and how to fulfill the Great Commission have proliferated
while confusion remains over exactly what a disciple is. One example
comes out of the Church Growth Movement and its founder, Donald A. McGavran.
His preliminary understanding of what a disciple is had to be clarified
because of confusion over the term. He later refined his definition of
discipleship by breaking it down into three separate categories he called
D1, D2, and D3, but some might say this only clouded the issue all the
more.3
Another more recent example is the popular book Jesus Christ Disciple
Maker, a book of methodology based on Jesus' training of the Twelve.
To be sure, in the introduction Hull thought he defined a disciple
clearly enough.4 But
in his follow-up book, The Disciple Making Pastor, he finds
it necessary to argue theologically for a more precise definition of
discipleship, stating, "The irony of the church is that we throw the
word disciple around freely, but too often with no definition. "5
It is not my concern to evaluate these authors' views of discipleship
at this point. I cite them only to show that a definition of the term
cannot be taken for granted among today's Christians. This was confirmed
to me by a recent visit to a Christian bookstore where only one of a
half dozen books on disciple-making made an attempt to define clearly
what a disciple is (and that attempt was not based on a biblical
study!). This is in spite of the fact that, in comparing the books, one
could discern several different assumptions about what a disciple is.
B. The Lordship Salvation Debate
The meaning of discipleship is most hotly debated and reaches its most
crucial significance in the Lordship Salvation controversy. The recent
debate on the meaning of discipleship has been led on the Lordship Salvation
side by prominent preachers such as John F. MacArthur, Jr. and James
Montgomery Boice. Both contend that to be a Christian is to be a disciple.6 The
view that discipleship is a commitment different from, but related
to, one's salvation experience is defended by Free Grace teachers
such as Charles C. Ryrie and Zane C. Hodges.7 Recognizing
the disparity in definitions of discipleship between the two sides, Homer
Kent has declared, "A fresh look at this matter is long overdue."8
The Lordship debate has done more than any other to show that there
are two very different views of discipleship in the evangelical church
today. The debate is important, for clearly discipleship is a foundational
concept of the Christian life which dictates all that we are to be and
much of what we are to he doing. If discipleship is becoming a Christian,
as Lordship Salvation teaches, then the church must preach a gospel of
commitment, surrender, and sacrifice as conditions of salvation, for
these are the conditions of discipleship. To do less is to lead people
to a false assurance of salvation. On the other hand, if discipleship
is a commitment different from the salvation experience, as Free Grace
proponents assert, then to teach a "costly" salvation is to pervert the
Gospel.
This series is designed to add to our understanding of the concept of disciple and discipleship by
examining the words themselves and the relevant passages in the NT. I
will relate the discussion of discipleship to the current Lordship Salvation
debate in particular. This first article examines the key words used
to denote discipleship and some important passages where they are found.
II. Discipleship in the New Testament
We will find that etymology is of little help in understanding
the theological implications of being a disciple. However, some issues
of usage will be very important to our discussion.
A. The Words Used
1. Disciple
The word disciple translates the Greek noun mathetes, which
is found 264 times in the Gospels and Acts. It is not found in the Epistles.
The noun has the basic meaning of "a pupil, apprentice, adherent."9 The
verb form, matheteuo, occurs four times in the Gospels and once
in Acts. It means to "be or become a pupil or disciple."10
That the meaning of the word disciple is never explained in the
NT indicates that the early readers understood it in relation to contemporary
rabbinic or Greek practice. It was used of learners who associated themselves
with a teacher, philosopher, or rabbi with the assumption that the pupil
would become like his teacher (Matt 10:25; Luke 6:40).11 The
greater the student's submission to his master, the greater the student's
transformation and likelihood that he would become the master's successor.
The master's ultimate expectation was that each of his disciples would
be proficient in his master's teaching.12
In the NT we find followers of various teachers called disciples. The
Pharisees claimed to be disciples of Moses John 9:28), because they were
students and followers of the law which Moses gave John 1:17). The Pharisees
also had their own disciples (e.g., Matt 22:16; Mark 2:18). Those who
followed the teachings of John the Baptist were called his disciples
(e.g., Matt 9:14; 14:12; Mark 2:18; Luke 11:1;John 3:25). Most prevalent
in the NT are those called disciples who identified themselves as followers
or learners of Christ (e.g., Matt 5:1;John 4:1; 8:31; 9:27-28), especially
the twelve chosen as apostles (e.g., Matt 10:1; 11:1; 20:17; Luke 9:1).
A disciple is one who puts himself in the position of a learner. In
relation to those who learned from Jesus, this definition in and of itself
does not distinguish between those who are unsaved, simply saved, or
saved and having made a deeper commitment. These distinctions are the
issue in the Lordship Salvation debate. The particular meaning of disciple in
any passage must be determined by the context, as we will see in the
discussions below.
2. Follow
The other word which speaks of discipleship in the NT is the verb usually
translated "follow" (akoloutheo). It is used over sixty
times in the Gospels in reference to following Christ. A parallel thought
is expressed by the phrase "to come after" (opiso elthein) in
relation to Christ (cf. Matt 16:24; Luke 9:23).
Like the word disciple, these terms do not indicate the spiritual
condition of the person in view. The Gospels speak both of those who
follow Christ in general and of those who follow with more commitment.
Large crowds followed Jesus (e.g., Matt 4:25; 8:1; 12:15; 21:9; Mark
10:32), but there were also individuals called to follow Him in a more
intimate relationship (e.g., Matt 9:9; 10:38; 16:24; Mark 2:14; 8:34;
Luke 5:27; 9:23).
However, Lordship Salvation proponents consider the invitation of Jesus
to "follow Me" an invitation to salvation. They argue not from the meaning
of the word, but from incidents where it is used. After citing several
encounters where Christ said "follow Me," Boice concludes,
The command to follow Jesus was not understood by Him to be only a
mere physical following or even an invitation to learn more about Him
and then see if one wanted to be a permanent disciple or not. Jesus
understood it as a turning from sin to salvation.13
This opinion is misinformed, because Jesus sometimes issued the invitation
to follow Him to those who were clearly already believers (e.g.,
Matt 8:21-22; 16:24; John 12:26; 21:19,22). Like the term disciple, the
significance of follow or come after must be determined
from the context.
One occasion where "follow Me" is associated clearly with salvation
is John 10:27-28: "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they
follow Me. And I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish;
neither shall anyone snatch them out of My hand." Both Boice and MacArthur
cite this passage to argue that following Christ signifies the obedience
that secures salvation.14
Two observations help us to understand the meaning of follow in
this passage. First, it is used to describe what the subjects are doing,
not to demand what they must do for salvation. It is a description of
the visual response of the sheep to the Shepherd's voice.
Second, the interpretation of "follow Me" is rooted in the larger metaphor.
John uses metaphors frequently to picture faith in Christ.15 Here
the word follow pictures faith in Christ in that it focuses on
the visible result of hearing. Faith itself is indicated by the sheep
hearing Christ's voice. Hearing stands alone to represent faith in 10:3,
8, and 16. Hearing is also used elsewhere by John to speak of faith (cf.
5:24-25; 8:43, 47). Given the pastoral metaphor, it is hard to picture
faith in any other way than in the sheep following the trusted voice
of the Shepherd.16
Lordship Salvation's interpretation of John 10:27-28 not only ignores
the metaphorical use of the term in this passage, it also neglects the
context. In the verse immediately before v 27, Jesus rebukes the Jews,
saying, "You do not believe, because you are not of my sheep." This contrast
of the Jews' unbelief with the belief of Christ's sheep in the metaphor
demonstrates that the focus of the discussion is on belief in Jesus as
Messiah and Savior.
The Lordship argument that follow in John 10:27-28 signifies
an obedient lifestyle that brings salvation is an unfortunate misinterpretation.
It does not prove that "follow Me" in the Gospels is an invitation to
salvation. It only shows how crucial the context is in interpreting the
term.
B. Discipleship in the Gospels
We will now see how the words disciple and follow are
used in relation to those who learned from or followed the Lord Jesus
Christ in the Gospels. They are used in a number of ways, which shows
that those called disciples had varying degrees of the commitment
to learn and submit.
1. Curious followers17
The broadest meaning of disciple in relation to Jesus Christ
comes from those instances where the term may be used of the multitudes
who followed Him. For example, in Matt 5:1 it is unclear whether the
multitude is identified synonymously with the disciples or the disciples
are a smaller group within the multitude. Likewise, in Luke 6:13 Jesus
chooses the twelve disciples from a larger group of followers also called
disciples. In these settings Jesus is teaching and the multitude is willing
to be taught, and thus in the general sense they could be called disciples
(Matt 5:2ff.; Luke 6:20ff.).
John 6 contributes an important truth about disciples. While the chapter
begins with a distinction between the multitude and the disciples (cf.
vv 2-3, 11, 22), we later learn that among the group of disciples are
unbelievers. After Jesus' Bread of Life discourse, John tells us that "many
of His disciples, when they heard this, said, 'This is a hard saying:
Who can understand it?'" (v 60). In His answer to them Jesus said, "But
there are some of you who do not believe," which John indicates included
Judas Iscariot, who would betray Jesus later (v 64). When the text notes
that "from that time many of His disciples went back and walked with
Him no more" (v 65), we are led to assume these unbelievers are a large
part of the departing group. However, at least one unbeliever, Judas
Iscariot, remains with the twelve disciples (v 67).
This interchange with Jesus in John 6 shows that the term disciple in
its broadest sense can even refer to unbelievers. They merit the term
because outwardly they are followers or learners of Christ, though they
may only have the barest personal commitment to Him. In fact, their motivation
seems little more than political (v 15), or to obtain free food (vv 26,
34), or simply to satisfy their curiosity.
In a comment on this passage, MacArthur admits in a footnote:
It is apparent that not every disciple is necessarily a true Christian
(cf. John 6:66). The term disciple is sometimes used in Scripture
in a general sense, to describe those who, like Judas, outwardly followed
Christ.18
This admission deserves more than a footnote! This is especially true
coming from one who goes on to rigidly espouse discipleship as a complete
and total surrender to Jesus as Master of one's life—and equates
this with salvation. MacArthur is acknowledging, though minimally, that
the context must inform one's definition of discipleship. In a review
of MacArthur's book, Kent supports MacArthur's view of discipleship,
but also agrees that the term is fluid, depending on the context. He
concludes from John 6:66 "the term itself merely means ‘a follower.’ The
nature of that discipleship must be derived from the larger context." It
is somewhat disconcerting when Kent then goes on to assert, without appeal
to any specific context, that "Those who have separated discipleship
from salvation have not done us any service."19
We see that even those of the Lordship Salvation persuasion agree that
the term disciple is flexible enough to refer to unbelievers.
2. Convinced followers
Those disciples who decided to remain with Jesus in John 6 include the
Twelve. Acting as spokesman, Peter confesses their faith in Jesus as
the Messiah (John 6:66-69). His statement springs more from a logical
and settled conclusion than a vow of personal devotion. These men, except
Judas, were convinced that Jesus was the Messiah, the Son of God, and
the Savior. At this point in the text, however, we see no deep commitment.
Sometimes we note in the Gospels those who were undoubtedly believers
in Jesus Christ, but who were reserved in their commitment to Him. Though
obviously committed as well as saved, some, like Mary, Martha, and Lazarus,
never followed Christ in the sense of leaving their homes and families.
John also mentions rulers of the Jews who avoided a full commitment to
Jesus Christ as Master:
Nevertheless even among the rulers many believed in Him, but because
of the Pharisees they did not confess Him, lest they should be put
out of the synagogue; for they loved the praise of men more than the
praise of God (John 12:42-43).
While some might argue circularly that because the rulers did not confess
Christ publicly they never truly believed, this would ignore the context
and the details of the text itself. Verse 42 begins with a strong adversative
(homos mentoi) showing that from among the Jewish nation
and leadership which did not believe in Jesus as the Messiah (vv 37-41),
there were individual exceptions who truly believed. If they were
not true believers in Christ, John's contrast is muted and meaningless.20 John
clearly declares that they "believed in Him."
Apparently, Joseph of Arimathea is one of the rulers who believed. John
describes him as "a disciple of Jesus, but secretly, for fear of the
Jews" (John 19:38). Joseph's request for the body of Jesus and the subsequent
public burial certainly ended his secrecy. Following Joseph's example,
Nicodemus joins him in Christ's burial. It is said of Nicodemus that
it was he "who first came to Jesus by night" (v 38). Though John does
not call Nicodemus a believer or a disciple, we get the sense from John
3 and this notation that he was in the same category as Joseph—a
secret disciple finally gone public.
Jesus even offered a degree of commendation to those who had less than
a full commitment to follow Him as Master. At one point, the Twelve rebuked
a man casting out demons in Jesus' name because, they said, "he does
not follow us" (Mark 9:38), or "he does not follow with us" (Luke 9:49).
Though not a follower in the fullest sense, the man was declared by Jesus
to be "on our side" (Mark 9:40), or "for us" (Luke 9:50), and Jesus implied
that he would receive a reward (Mark 9:41). In some instances, Jesus
was unsettlingly inclusive about who was considered a follower!
3. Committed followers
The preponderance of references to disciples in the Gospels speaks of
those who have submitted to Jesus Christ as Master of their lives. They
are committed to following Jesus as their Lord and Teacher in the same
sense in which others devotedly followed Moses, the Pharisees, or John
the Baptist. In this sense the term disciples is used most frequently
in the Gospels to speak of the smaller group of twelve apostles chosen
by Christ (e.g., Matt 10:1; Luke 6:13). In addition to the Twelve, however,
a larger group of seventy is also called disciples (Luke 10:1,
17,23). They too appear as those committed to Jesus in a special way
since they are sent out by the Lord to preach the Gospel.
The commitment involved in this deeper relationship is seen in the various
conditions that Jesus attached to discipleship as His ministry progressed.
He said that true disciples, or "disciples indeed" (alethos mathetai), are
those who "abide in My word" John 8:31). While a fuller interpretation
of this condition will be offered in the third article in this series,
it is enough to note here that this condition was stated to those whom
the text says had already believed in Christ John 8:30-31). The
word "abide" (from meno) denotes the more intimate relationship
that Christ desires of those who believe in Him (cf. John 14:21, 23-24;
15:4-10).
As Jesus began to teach the significance of His work on the Cross, He
also expounded other stringent conditions for those who would continue
as disciples in the deeper sense. In these conditions (Matt 16:24-27;
Mark 8:34-38; Luke 9:23-26; and 14:26-33), Jesus said a disciple must:
Deny himself
Take up his cross
Follow Christ
Lose his life
Not be ashamed of Christ
Hate his family and his own life.
The nature of these commitments and the fact that they were directed primarily
to those who were already His close followers argue that they are conditions
not of salvation, but of a deeper relationship to Jesus as Lord and Master.21 They
represent a progression in the revelation of God's will which must be accepted
if a believer would continue on the path of discipleship. By these conditions,
discipleship becomes something which is very costly to the Christian.
C. Discipleship in Acts
In Acts the term disciples seems to be equated with Christians
in general (6:1-2, 7; 14:20, 22, 28; 15:10; 19:10), especially in 11:26
where we read, "the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch." Acts
has no explicit mention of the deeper commitment or the conditions of discipleship
found in the Gospels. Lordship Salvation proponents argue from this that
there is no difference between a disciple and a Christian; believing
in Christ encompasses the commitment to surrender all of one’s life
to Jesus as Lord and Master and to follow Him in sacrifice and obedience.22
We must agree that Acts assumes Christians are disciples. Disciple is
one of several terms used to refer to Christians and is thus used more
technically than in the Gospels. However, the background for Acts cannot
be divorced from the Gospels. Whatever conditions for discipleship the
Gospel authors recorded must give form to Luke's view of discipleship,
especially those recorded by Luke himself. Furthermore, the bridge between
discipleship in the Gospels and in Acts is composed of the final missionary
commissions of Christ (Matt 28:19-20; Mark 16:15; Luke 24:46-48). Acts
records the fulfillment of these commissions as the Gospel is carried beyond
Jerusalem to the remotest parts of the world (Acts 1:8).
To develop this connection, a slight digression is necessary. Discipleship
in Acts must be understood in light of Jesus' commission to "make disciples" in
Matt 28:19-20:
Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in
the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching
them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with
you always, even to the end of the age.
Since Acts records the disciples' obedience to this command, it is necessary
to understand what Jesus means by "make disciples." Is He equating discipleship
with salvation, as Lordship Salvation teaches? Gentry insists that Matt
28:19 is simply a "fuller account" of the commission in Mark 16:15, which
says, "Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature." He
says, "The preaching of the gospel summarized in Mark is the making of
disciples in Matthew. "23
But we must take issue with Gentry's equating of the two commissions.
If "preach the gospel" in Mark is a summary of Matthew's "make disciples," then
preaching the Gospel includes baptizing and teaching obedience as elements
that define the Gospel. However, it is clear that Paul did not consider
baptism and obedience to "all things" which Christ commanded part of the
saving Gospel (cf. 1 Cor 1:17; 15:1-4; Eph 2:8-9), and we would agree.
The parallel between the two commissions is found in the participle poreuthentes, translated
in both passages as "go." In both places it should be understood as "having
gone or "as you go," which denotes a presupposed or simultaneous activity.24 For
Mark, the main activity is denoted by the finite verb "preach" (keryxate), but
in Matthew by the finite verb "make disciples" (matheteusate). Matthew's "go" equals
Mark's "go...preach the gospel" as the first step in making disciples.25 While
Mark's commission stops with gospel proclamation, Matthew speaks optimally
in making discipleship the ultimate goal, which harmonizes with his emphasis
on discipleship in his Gospel.26 The
other participles in Matthew, "baptizing" and "teaching," tell how to "make
disciples." After the Gospel is believed, baptism is the first step of
obedient discipleship, and teaching obedience to the commands of Christ
is the means by which believers develop as disciples.
In light of the commission in Matt 28:19-20, it is natural that Christians
should be called disciples in Acts, since Acts is the historical account
of the fulfillment of that commission. As a historian writing selectively,
Luke describes the early Christians in general as committed followers of
Christ who continued in His teaching. He does not concern himself with
the few believers who may not have associated with the Church. In Acts
the early converts were enthusiastic in their commitment to Christ with
but few exceptions.27 For
example, Luke notes how new believers do not hesitate to obey the Lord
in baptism (cf. 2:41; 8:13, 36; 9:18; 10:47-48; 16:14-15, 33-34; 18:8;
19:5). His historical perception of the early believers was that of a new
community following the Christian Way with diligence and the marks of true
discipleship as enunciated by Jesus: They continued in the Word (Acts 2:42;
cf. John 8:31), showed love for one another (Acts 2:42 and 4:32; cf. John
13:34-35), and were willing to deny themselves worldly gain (Acts 2:45
and 4:32-35; cf. Luke 9:24-25). Furthermore, the stringent conditions of
discipleship preached by Christ were not preached by the Apostles in Acts.
Indeed, it wasn't necessary, for these early believers were generally viewed
as committed to Christ in discipleship. Calenburg notes,
The sermons of Acts seemed to reaffirm the distinction between conversion
by faith in Christ and committed discipleship. The general use of the
term "disciple" for all believers and the practice of many new converts
implied [that] committed discipleship to Christ was the common and expected
response to His will as taught by the Apostles.28
That the first Christians were committed as disciples is no surprise in
light of the hostile Jewish environment. For a Jew to become a publicly
confessed Christian was ipso facto to bear the cross of Christ's
suffering through certain persecution, ostracism, or even death.
Christians are called disciples in Acts, because as Luke sees it, these
early believers are committed followers of the Lord Jesus Christ. There
is every indication that as a whole, these believers were meeting the conditions
for true discipleship found in the Gospels.
D. Discipleship in the Epistles
The assumption that Christians were committed disciples in Acts harmonizes
with the absence of the word disciple in the Epistles. Conceptually,
the idea of discipleship is communicated through the noun "imitator" (mimetes)
and the verb "imitate" (mimeomai).29 Calenburg
concludes that "The factors involved in such imitation were similar to
the conditions of discipleship, namely, observation, attachment, motivation,
submission to authority, and obedience."30
When Paul exhorts his readers to "imitate me" (e.g., 1 Cor 4:16; 11:1;
cf. Phil 3:17; 2 Thess 3:7, 9), he desires a committed response to him as
he is committed to and so imitates Christ (1 Cor 11:1; cf I Thess
1:6). Imitation is therefore the commitment of a believer to follow Christ
as a disciple. Bauder observes,
"Imitation" in the NT is consequently not conceived as the reproduction
of a given pattern. It is… an attitude of thanks in response to
the salvation that has been given to us (cf. H. Conzelmann, Epheser, 83).
The summons to discipleship can only be fulfilled, when a man is grasped
by Christ and undergoes the transformation which existence under the
Lordship of Christ involves.31
To imitate Jesus or Paul is to follow them so as to reproduce their character
and behavior. This "Christlikeness" is the goal of discipleship.
The Epistles, by implicitly equating discipleship with imitation, affirm
that discipleship is the commitment of believers to obey and submit to
the authority of Christ. However, since the Epistles never teach that salvation
is procured through imitation of Jesus Christ, neither is it procured through
discipleship, which is the same thing.
III. Conclusion
We have found in our study on the meaning of discipleship that in the
NT disciple is a somewhat fluid term. It is used of those who obviously
had never believed in Christ, of believers with limited commitment, and
of believers with the fullest commitment. The ultimate determination of
its meaning in any given passage must be the context. Sometimes, as in
Acts, consideration of the context involves the perspective of the whole
book.
To be a disciple in the broadest sense is to be a follower or learner
of Jesus Christ. In the narrower sense used by Christ later in His ministry,
it meant to be fully committed to follow and learn from Him in a life of
self-denial and obedience to His Word. This latter idea is the most relevant
to the Lordship Salvation debate and to our practice as Christians. The
stringent conditions Christ attached to this sense of discipleship should
not be made conditions of salvation, but should move us who are Christians
further into God's will.
We cannot ignore the degrees of discipleship presented in the NT. Whether
as a minimal commitment or full surrender, discipleship denotes a direction
or an orientation more than a state. It is a journey, not
an arrival. Anywhere on one's journey toward Christ, one can be
called a disciple. Though all disciples find themselves at different points
on the journey, the committed disciple is seen as well on the way with
his destination clearly in view.
Therefore, we must regard with suspicion those who make absolute statements
about what a disciple is or those who make the simplistic charge that the
Free Grace position teaches two classes of Christians: ordinary Christians
and super-Christians.32 Though
sometimes used to refer to Christians in general (as explained in relation
to Acts), the majority of uses by the Lord Jesus indicates that full-fledged
discipleship is when a believer fully submits to Christ's Word and Christ's
will in all areas of life. Lordship Salvation not only confuses discipleship
with salvation, but also confuses entry-level discipleship with the ultimate
goal of committed discipleship.
Only when we recognize what a disciple is in the NT can we effectively
fulfill our Lord's commission to make disciples and become fully committed
disciples ourselves.
Footnotes:
1.
J. Dwight Pentecost, Design for Discipleship (Grand Rapids: Zondervan
Publishing House, 1971), 11.
2 C.
Peter Wagner, "What Is 'Making Disciples?"' Evangelical Missions Quarterly 9
(Fall 1973): 285.
3
See Donald A. McGavran, Understanding Church Growth, rev. ed.
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1980), 170; or read an analysis
of McGavran's view of discipleship in C. Peter Wagner, Church Growth
and the Whole Gospel: A Biblical Mandate (San Francisco: Harper & Row
Publishers, 1981), 130-33.
4
Bill Hull, Jesus Christ Disciple Maker (Old Tappan, NJ: Fleming
H. Revell Company, 1990; originally published at Colorado Springs, CO:
NavPress, 1984), 9-12.
5
Bill Hull, The Disciple Making Pastor (Old Tappan, NJ: Fleming
H. Revell Company, 1988), 54-60.
6
See John F. MacArthur, Jr., The Gospel According to Jesus (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan Publishing House, 1988), 29-30, 196-98; James Montgomery Boice,
Christ's Call to Discipleship (Chicago: Moody Press, 1986), 13-23.
7
Zane C. Hodges, The Hungry Inherit (Portland, OR: Multnomah Press, 1980),
77-91; The Gospel Under Siege (Dallas, TX: Redenci6n Viva, 1981), 35-45;
Absolutely Free! (Dallas, TX: Redenci6n Viva, 1989), 67-76; Charles C.
Ryrie, Balancing The Christian Life (Chicago: Moody Press, 1969), 178-79;
So Great Salvation (Wheaton: Victor Books, 1989), 101-14.
8.
Homer A. Kent, "Review Article: The Gospel According to Jesus," Grace
Theological Journal 10 (1989): 75.
9 A
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian
Literature, compiled by Walter Bauer, trans. and adapted by William
F. Arndt and F. Wilbur Gingrich, 2nd ed. rev. and augmented by F. Wilhur
Gingrich and Frederick W. Danker (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1979), s.v. "mathetes," 486-87.
10
lbid., s.v. "matheteuo," 486. This is the intransitive
meaning.
11
See also K. H. Rengstorf, s.v. "mathetes," in Theological Dictionary
of the New Testament 4:415-41; and Richard D. Calenburg, The New
Testament Doctrine of Discipleship" (Th.D. dissertation, Grace Theological
Seminary, 1981), 20-40.
12 Shmuel
Safrai, "Master and Disciple," Jerusalem Perspective 3 (November-December
1990): 5, 13.
13
Boice, Discipleship, 17.
14
Ibid., 166-67; MacArthur, The Gospel, 178.
15
For example, "come" (John 5:40; 6:35,37,44,65; 7:37); "enter" (10:9); "eat" (6:51-58); "drink" (4:14;
6:53-56; 7:37); "accept" (1:12; 5:34). See George Allen Turner, "Soteriology
in the Gospel of John," Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 19
(Fall 1976)272-73.
16
See Rudolf Bultmann, The Gospel of John: A Commentary, trans.
G. R. Beasley-Murray, eds. R. W. N. Hoare and J. K. Riches (Philadelphia:
The Westminster Press, 1971), 343-44. He contrasts the metaphorical use of
follow, which he takes as equivalent to believe, with its
meaning of discipleship in other passages in John. Essentially the same
view is taken by Zane C. Hodges in The Gospel Under Siege (Dallas:
Redención Viva, 1981), 43-45.
17
This convenient outline of Curious, Convinced, Committed I credit
to Dr. J. Dwight Pentecost, who has greatly influenced my understanding
of discipleship.
18
MacArthur, The Gospel, 196, n. 2.
19 Kent, "Review
Article," 75.
20
Among those who agree that these rulers actually believed are Raymond
E. Brown, The Gospel According to John, The Anchor Bible (Garden
City, NJ: Doubleday & Company, 1966), 1:487; Leon Morris, The
Gospel According to John, The New International Commentary on the
New Testament (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1971),
605; J. H. Bernard, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel
According to St. John, The International Critical Commentary (Edinburgh:
T. & T. Clark, 1928), 2:452; Archibald Thomas Robertson, Word
Pictures in the New Testament, (Nashville: Broadman Press, 1931),
5:232.
21
This assertion and an explanation of these conditions will be the substance
of the third article in this series.
22 MacArthur, The
Gospel, 196; Kenneth L. Gentry, "The Great Option: A Study of the
Lordship Controversy," Baptist Reformation Review 5 (Spring
1976): 49-79; Charles Price, Real Christians (Colorado Springs,
CO: Navpress, 1987), 54.
23Gentry, "The
Great Option," 70; See also Boice, Discipleship, 159-169; Kent,
Review Article," 75.
24
Robert D. Culver, "What Is the Church's Commission?: Some Exegetical
Issues in Matthew 28:16-20," Bibliotheca Sacra 125 July-September
1968): 243-53; D. A. Carson, "Matthew," in Expositor's Bible Commentary, vol.8,
595.
25
So William Hendriksen, Exposition of the Gospel According to Matthew, New
Testament Commentaries (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1973), 999; Wagner, "Making
Disciples," 286-87.
26
Sheridan explains the emphasis on discipleship in Matthew from this Gospel's
purpose: For Matthew, the comprehensive charge to his followers by Jesus
is 'to make disciples of all nations.' Teaching others to observe what
Jesus had taught them is the way to achieve this. In a sense, Matthew's
gospel is a manual for discipleship, and we may expect to find in the
lengthy discourses to the disciples not just instruction for the twelve
limited to their historical mission but essentially what they are to
pass on in their efforts to make disciples." Mark Sheridan, "Disciples
and Discipleship in Matthew and Luke," Biblical Theology Bulletin 3
(October 1973): 240-41. See also Michael J. Wilkins, The Concept of
Disciple in Matthew's Gospel (Leiden, The Netherlands: F. J. Brill,
1988), 221-22; Wolfgang Trilling, Das Wahre Israel: Studien zur Theologie
des Matthäus-Evangeliums, 3d. auflage (Münehen: Kösel-Verlag,1964),
21ff. Trilling
begins his Matthean theology with this commission and its emphasis on
discipleship.
27
Exceptions would be Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5:1-11), Simon the sorcerer
(8:13ff.), and the Ephesian sorcerers (19:10-19). Even so, the latter
two accounts lead us to believe that these believers would probably continue
in Christ's teachings.
28
Calenburg, "Discipleship," 238-39. See also 197-200.
29
So W. Michaelis, s.v. "mimeomai," in TDNT 4:673; W. Bauder, s.v. "mimeomai," in New
International Dictionary of New Testament Theology (NIDNTT) 1:492.
30
Calenburg, "Discipleship," 239.
31
Bauder, Ibid.
32
For example, see Dallas Willard, "Discipleship: For Super-Christians
Only?" Christianity Today 24 (October 10, 1980), 24 25,27. |