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Todd Stiles Denomination: Nondenominational Email: Send 'Thank-you' |
Synopsis: You can’t get it from downloading a bad file. It doesn’t creep in from an infected disk. Yet these viruses exist invisibly, silently sabotaging the "hard drive" of our disciplemaking efforts. Yes, undermining many potentially effective strategies and approaches are two common outreach "viruses" that can limit the scope and impact of any disciplemaking effort. |
| Virus Alert: The "Itises" of Outreach |
“Programitis” - The mission is clear: “Go and make disciples.” So we plan special events and design promotional gigs, encouraging our teens to go, find their friends, and bring them to our evangelistic appeals. Once it’s over, we take a break, only long enough, though, to plan another one and do the same thing again. While there is nothing inherently wrong with this approach, it can self-destruct if our students only feel called to evangelize when the program deems necessary. If this is the extent of our going, our approach is too ritualistic, veering from the relational base upon which disciplemaking is best built. Slowly but surely, our schedules, not the Spirit, take charge; we live and die by the calendar. Programitis has crept in, bringing with it the small and unhealthy bacteria of this outreach virus.
A closer look at Matthew 28:19-20 reveals that the word “go” in v. 19 is a participle (going), and the emphatic words in the construction are “make disciples.” In other words, Christ was saying “while you are going, make disciples.” He expected these disciples, in the daily routine of life, to keep disciplemaking as their number one priority, not just when there was a big-ticket show in town. Consequently, for the words of Jesus in Matthew 28 to be obeyed, we must weave into the life-fabric of our students a disciplemaking way of thinking and living that occurs during the normal course of everyday life. When, in the life of our students, programmed events replace personal connections, we have moved from a relational approach to a programmatic one (i.e., Programitis). Over the long haul, this is harmful to the mindset Christ was emphasizing.
A blend of both has proven beneficial by many ministries. In this scenario, a quality event is married to weeks -- even months -- of training and emphasis in the area of our natural friendships. Still, be careful! The perception that making disciples only takes place when the church schedules it can spawn an infection of Programitis.
“Segmentitis” - It is unfortunate that we’ve seen such a sharp and distinct dichotomy between the words evangelism and discipleship. The two are married, not divorced. And together they form the one goal we’re pursuing: Making disciples. Splitting them leaves us heavy on one end, the state of most youth groups and ministries. We should look at both as imperative, the two necessary components of a disciplemaking group.
Sure, some are better at one than the other. These people are called specialists. And while specializing in one area can prove productive if we keep an eye towards the entire process, it can also breed the beginnings of Segmentitis, which ultimately leaves us dysfunctional. Too often, we unknowingly separate the various elements of disciplemaking into such categorized units that none work together. Instead of various parts making up the whole, we have many “wholes” trying to do their “part.”
In John 4, when Jesus insightfully corrected the disciples about their false view of sowing, watering, and reaping, He clearly pointed out, though all the elements are crucial, “being glad together” regarding the harvest was most important. He refused to allow His followers to segment and prioritize their roles. Essentially, Jesus proposed not only a team mindset, but a league mindset. Making disciples requires more than one’s own unique ability (player) and extends beyond our own community (team). It involves the input of people from the past, present, and future (league) who humbly do their part with a “big picture” mindset.
Most often, Segmentitis occurs in post-event connection. Because typical event planners and leaders spend the bulk of their time on things prior to and during the event, we mentally begin to view the event as the closing ceremony to weeks of work. In reality, the event is the opening ceremony, an orientation to a potential relationship with God that lasts a lifetime. Yet, many close up the file just at this critical point and tuck it away for future reference. “It’s over,” we say. “On to the next one.” We’ve been infected by Segmentitis.
Wondering how you can avoid prolonged contact with these viruses? What steps can you take to remove the unhealthy presence of these spiritual bacteria from your disciplemaking intentions? Here are some reflective questions to help you diagnose any current infection.
Programitis
Segmentitis
Consider these “prescription” tips for overcoming the viruses and restoring health.
Todd
YLC
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