Cigars and Discipleship


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Let me share what might be perceived as a radical thought: discipleship is better suited for taking place at the cigar shop than it is at your church.

“Dan,” you say, “are you serious?”

Yes. Yes I am. In fact, I am at a cigar shop now as I write this. Puff, puff! :-)=~

Now, let me unpack what I mean. What is church for? What is the goal of church? We gather together on a regular basis for corporate worship, teaching, training, praying and serving (Ephesians 4:11-16). Discipleship is the work that church equips us for, but it is not primarily a church activity. Discipleship is what the Christian engages in when he or she is not in church.

When we try to “do discipleship” at church we inevitably end up reducing it to a program or a decision. If you attend a church function, a Sunday school class, or a bible study, you are being “discipled.” If you ever made a decision to follow Christ, you are a “disciple.” That is not at all what discipleship is. Discipleship is not about class time, although learning is involved. It is not about formalized programs, although structured times and methods might be used. It may include those things, but it cannot be reduced to them.

If that is not what discipleship is, then what is it? To be a disciple in Jesus’ day meant leaving home and business to live with your rabbi. In so doing, you were committing to going wherever he went, to accept his authority, his interpretation of Scripture, and to emulate him in all areas of life. You learned and adopted his habits, his, attitudes, his likes and dislikes….everything. This was how Jesus taught His disciples. They left their boats and nets and tax collection booths and followed Him around and lived with Him for three years. By seeing how your rabbi lived out and applied the commandments of the Mosaic Law, you learned what grace and truth looked like in everyday life. It was an intense, intentional, personal apprenticeship that aimed at building the character, wisdom, and heart necessary to live in obedience to the will of God.

When Jesus gave what has become known as the Great Commandment, go and make disciples (Matthew 28:19-20), He obviously meant it in the way He understood discipleship. A Christian disciple is someone who looks at Jesus Christ as their Rabbi. Someone who is committed to Him, His teaching, His direction, His work, His mission, His worldview, His honor, and His glory more than anything else.

To disciple someone is to be in a relationship with another person where you are intentionally working with Christ to spiritually parent another person so that they can live for God through Christ—in whatever circumstances they might be in at that point in their life.

To be discipled means intentionally sitting under the care and guidance of a Christian as a spiritual son or daughter in order to learn how to live for God through Christ.

As a Christian, we are to be actively pursuing both sides of discipleship: being discipled and discipling others.

The point of gaining knowledge about the Bible, is not so you can be quizzed on it, but so that you can live it. You can’t live what you don’t know. Just because you know a lot about football it does not follow that you can play it. You cannot become a great golfer only by reading books. You have to practice it. And to really get good you need to learn from someone who is doing it, and doing it well.

Discipleship is not primarily theoretical; it is relational. Love is not something you learn by study. It is something you learn by living in relationship with others. It is more caught than taught. That is what discipleship is, it is helping another to grow in the practice of loving God and loving others (Matthew 22:37-40) in such a way that they are equipped do the same for others. It is walking with someone through life. It is sharing the love of Christ with them in what we say, what we don’t say, and by what we won’t say. It is modeling God’s love in front of them in all of life’s joys and heartaches. It is intentionally helping another person work out the grace that God is working into them.

There is a reason that the best-selling Christian books are “how-to” books. There are too few people in the church who are actively showing people how to live a life of love, and there are far too few people in the church who were willing to enter into such relationships.

Where do those personal relationships happen? Do they happen during church? Rarely. They happen around the dinner table, around the grill at a cookout, at the coffee shop downtown, on a camping trip around the fire, at the pub over a beer and chicken wings, on a walk in the park, late night calls on the phone, and yes, even at the local cigar shop.

Who has God brought into your life that He wants you to be incarnating His love to? Prayerfully consider that, then pick your place, and go to it. You’ll be glad you did.

13 Comments

  1. Hey Dan, you are SO right with this post. And the probem in some churches is not only have they reduced discipleship to programs, but some have ignored it altogether. The goal was getting people baptized — then these poor people were given Bibles, told to attend church, tithe, and left to themselves for the rest.

    Not only that, there is too much individualism in the church. We really don’t see ourselves as responsible for one another’s spiritual growth. We really need a change of church culture, a shift in understanding how things ought to be working. We need to think about it differently. Problem is, in my case, for example, I pastor a largely older/elderly church. They are so set in their ways.

    Anyway, I thought your reflection was awesome. I really appreciate how you articulated what discipleship is — or should be — all about. May God bless you in your life and ministry!

    Derek

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    1. Thanks for your reply Derek! I have experienced the same. Not too long ago the Schaeffer Institute conducted a survey of more than 1000 Reformed and Evangelical pastors showed that 81% of the pastors said there was no regular discipleship program or effective effort of mentoring their people or teaching them to deepen their Christian formation at their church. Glad you are working to address that in your neck of the woods.

      Grace,

      Dan

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  2. Another great post Dan! I haven’t been to a cigar shop in years, but that’s the right picture for discipleship, relaxed, matter of fact and very real, building relationships of trust between believers.

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  3. We are all students and teachers in all things in life why would faith be different? But you’ve been a spiritual father for a while now. I’ve learned, shared and i believe even taught in our relationship. These relationships are what makes life worth living.

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  4. Dan, once again you are spot on. The old adage or sign over the exit door of the church, “You are now entering the mission field” is so very true but so oft forgotten. Kingdom work takes place most often in the trenches where the sides are collapsing and we are in danger of being buried alive. I have had my most productive talks about Jesus while riding in a car with a sales rep or sharing a craft brew with them after work. I used to make it very clear that that was the reason God put me in that job and if I “happened” to sell something that day it was a bonus.

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    1. So true for me as well. Too often at church or seminary things end up being who is right or wrong. My best talks about the Bible, faith, Jesus, and spiritual things have been over a cigar at the local shop.

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