Jesus’ Upside-Down Strategy

thank you notes for children’s ministry volunteers

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Jesus focused a disproportionate amount of time discipling the Twelve—and one of them didn’t even work out! This was His upside-down strategy to reach the world with the love of the Father.

Yet we have programs to run, meetings to lead, people to pray for, money concerns, attendance to monitor, administration to be done, messages to prepare, strategies to execute, visions to cast and crises that won’t wait till tomorrow.

We live in the great tension of the big and the small—a tension I carry with me each week as I set priorities. How do I focus on the few, my Twelve, when modern culture demands the big…and now?

It helps me to remember that so much in and around me resists focusing on the few. Why?

  • Discipling the few is slow. The kingdom of God is a mustard seed and always will be.
  • Discipling the few is hard. People are complex and formation is messy.
  • Discipling the few is limiting. Limits and rebellion are closely related. We have been resisting limits since the Garden of Eden.
  • Discipling the few demands a lot from me. I cannot give what I do not possess, and cannot help but give what I do possess. It requires I keep growing and learning.

Our contribution to this at EHS is to call the local church back to a robust discipleship through the embedding of The EHS Course and THE EHS Relationship Course.

This article originally appeared here.

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petescazzero@churchleaders.com'
Pete Scazzerohttp://petescazzero.com
PETE SCAZZERO is author of Emotionally Healthy Spirituality (Nelson, 2006), a groundbreaking work on the integration of emotional health and contemplative spirituality. He has also authored The Emotionally Healthy Church (Zondervan, 2003), winner of the Gold Medallion Award for 2003, Begin the Journey with the Daily Office (2008) and several best-selling Bible study guides. Pete is the founder and senior pastor of New Life Fellowship Church in Queens, New York City, a multiracial, international church representing over 65 countries.

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