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Grow & Go - March 2024

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The Joy in Discipleship

There are times when many of us struggle with having joy in this life. Yes, even Bible-believing, fully devoted followers of Jesus Christ. I have gone through seasons that seemed as if I were just spinning my wheels, where the busyness of life was so overwhelming that an end was not in sight.  Times when I had to stop and ask myself, what sort of kingdom impact am I making by doing this or that? There have even been situations when the brokenness of others around me seemed to drag the energy from my body or wear me out. Or seasons where my aging body informs me that I am not getting any younger. It is during times of joylessness I remind myself that the power of Christ is
magnified most during times of my weakness (2 Cor 12:9). More importantly when the realization sets in that my joy is waning, a redirect typically needs to occur from self to the Savior. When this redirect occurs, it typically is emphasized in the Word by the Holy Spirit, our helper, that I need to die to self (Lk 9:23), and that my real joy is found in discipling others. It is during our greatest of lows, that our need to cling to Christ becomes most evident.

When I say there is joy in discipleship, there is an unspeakable joy that should flow out of love – love for Christ, and what He has done on our behalf by dying on the cross. If not careful, we can forget what we were like before Jesus transformed us. We can forget the joy we first had when we were born again and if not staying in the Word, that love can diminish. If not mindful of our sinfulness, and the unmerited grace we received, we can see the work done in the name of Christ as burdensome. What helps me to remain focused and thwart this, is the giving away of myself to others in discipleship. What pushes me towards discipling another, is that I have experienced for myself the goodness of our Savior and Lord. Keeping our eyes perfectly affixed to our Savior helps us, helps me, to deny self and “count others more significant” (Phil 2:3)

It is very encouraging for me to see another Christian finding delight in the Word of God (Ps 119:16) and resting in the finished work of Christ (Jn 19:30). Let me encourage you to take what you know about Christ and His Word and invest that in another believer. If you have found yourself in a place where there is little joy or usefulness, there is a joy to be found in making disciples. In no way is discipleship easy, but considering what Christ paid that we may have life, there is a cost that we must count. The cost for us on this side of Heaven once we have been transformed by the gospel, is that we are to be making disciples (Matt 28:20). I think David Mathis best captures the essence of the joy in discipleship when he said, “Disciple-making is indeed costly – and designed by God, when healthy, to be a great joy-producing enterprise. It is not easy, but hard work. Yet it is deeply rewarding, with joys we do not otherwise taste apart from God’s work in and through us in ‘sharing our own selves’ (1 Thess 2:8) with others.”   Therefore, yes
discipleship is a mandate, it will cost us something, it is not easy nor should it be burdensome, and there can be great joy found in discipleship as we count the cost of following Christ. 

1. David Mathis. https://www.desiringgod.org/messages/the-cost-of-disciple-making, 2017.

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Grow & Go - February 2024

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God's Desire For Us Is Missions

It is very encouraging to me as a believer and to the church when a person has been transformed by the gospel, especially when it occurs from the outworking of intentional missions done by members within the local church. When a child, student, or adult comes to saving faith in Jesus Christ through one of Oakhill's local missional engagements such as Upward, the Food Pantry, or one of the various partnerships we as a church are involved, it invigorates the people of God to share the gospel increasingly more. All through the Scriptures God gives His church commands to evangelize the lost and make disciples. God's desire for us, this side of Heaven, is missional.

The mission of God's people can be heard in the Old Testament with Moses saying "Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might" (Deut 6:4). The fact there is but only One God and that we are to love Him over everything else, informs us where the focus of our worship, and the giving of time should be given. Theologically speaking, the work of missions flows from our love of the God of the universe and our knowledge that He has a desire to be worshipped (Is 45:23). This is not just a head knowledge or awareness that God exists, but a real understanding there "is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved" (Acts 4:12) than through Jesus Christ our Lord (Jn 14:6). The Holy Spirit as our guide then leads us to want to tell others about Jesus. The apostle Paul captures the essence of what our aim for missions should be when he said, "My heart's desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they may be saved" (Rm 10:1). We need to heavily emphasize the last words where Paul said, "that they may be saved." This same emphasis is our goal brothers and sisters. Once people are saved, the focus of our time, talent, and treasure should then be directed that people will be made disciples and "grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ" (2 Pet 3:18). As a church on mission, we can help others to lay down the idols of this lost and dying world by pointing to the saving power of God that is offered exclusively by grace, through faith, in Christ Jesus according to the Scriptures, for his glory (Eph 2:8-9, 1 Cor 15:3-4, 1 Cor 10:31).

One of the greatest ways that we can display God's glory within the local church is through missional living. I enjoy the way Jeff Vanderstelt frames what this looks like in his book titled – Saturate: Being Disciples of Jesus in the Everyday Stuff of Life. Missional living occurs when a group of the redeemed becomes centrally focused around one common theme, making Jesus Christ known. This occurs not just on Sunday, but in the everyday, and even mundane things of life. Praise the Lord we have Life Groups here at Oakhill that are very intentional about connecting people for ongoing fellowship and discipleship. These groups are comprised mostly of believers therefore, missional living is necessary to point others to the gospel "that they may be saved" (Rm 10:1). Living all of life missionally points others to the fact that proclaiming Christ and Him crucified is what has a real value this side of heaven. When we are living missionally, considering the fact we too have been saved, are being saved, and will be saved in glory, it becomes infectious and the lost become curious about "the hope that is in us" (1 Pet 3:15). My prayer is that as we are living missionally and people ask about the hope we have in Christ, that we have prepared ourselves to testify about it, and wasting no opportunities to share the gospel as the Lord provides.

Practically speaking, God's mission for God's people, is to live with intentionality on mission for Him. God desires that we make Him known here and among the nations (Acts 1:8). We can see this to be true from the Old Testament through to the New. This requires that people transformed by Christ and His word live missionally in ongoing discipleship with other believers and are prepared to proclaim the name of Christ at every opportunity. Jesus is mighty to save and we need to take His gospel of truth to the ends of the earth (Matt 28:19-20).

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