Hearing the Beat of Your Community -
Adapted from Community: Taking Your Small Groups Off Life Support, this post deals with knowing your neighborhood in an effort to reach the people around you for Christ.

A brief excerpt from John Piper’s A Holy Ambition: To Preach Where Christ Has Not Been Named, posted at the hiding place blog.
In particular, what does “teaching them” in the Great Commission refer to? Sermons? Bible studies? Lectures? Maybe. But there’s a clue there in the text itself. Teaching them to obey all that Christ has commanded. This necessarily involves both modeling and verbal teaching. —
Trevin Wax
writing at his blog, “Kingdom People”
Read the full article here.

Part 5? Yes! The other four parts are here.

Hopefully you want to tell your story … not because you think you are so interesting, but because your story is about Jesus and what he has done for you.
So you get your chance … you are sitting at the coffee house. Your friend is sitting across from you. You’ve asked some good questions, like “Did you grow up around here? What did your family do for fun when you were a kid? Did your family have any faith tradition that you embraced?” And they have opened up. They have told you about growing up with parents of different faiths and how that left them confused. They mentioned the college years that they wish they could do over. They have told you about how they believe all religions are basically the same and that they are spiritual without being religious. Now it’s your turn.
What in the world do you say next?
If you felt a sinking feeling in your stomach as you imagined that moment, you are not alone. Most of us fear that moment when we get exactly what we have been praying for: an opportunity to share! Here are some simple tips to make it easy to share your story when the moment is right:
Douglas Cecil, in his book Seven Principles of an Evangelistic Life, gives us the ABC’s of sharing our faith:
Relax, people want to hear your story. And you never know, God might use to change someone’s life!
For more on sharing your story, see our free resource entitled Sharing Your Story: Your Most Valuable Tool for Sharing Christ.
By Michael Smith
Community Pastor
Fellowship Bible Church of NWA
mismith@fellowshipnwa.org
I therefore, a prisoner for the Lord, urge you to walk in a manner worthy of the calling to which you have been called, with all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another in love, eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. —
Paul
writing to the Church at Ephesus in Ephesians 4:1-3

Connecting in A Facebook World -

You are reading a blog … maybe you got here from Twitter … you are connected. In this article adapted from How to Be a Best Friend Forever: Making and Keeping Lifetime Relationships by Dr. John Townsend, the importance of real face to face connections in a social media world is highlighted. Great topic for a talk with the person you are discipling.
—Spiritual formation is slow work. Our culture demands results now.
—Becoming a real follower is one step forward two steps back kind of stuff. Our culture expects success on success.
—Bending our lives toward Christ’s model means denial of self. Our culture says gratify the self at all costs!
Discipleship is counter-cultural …
here’s what I mean:
—The soul work of growing faith IDEALLY happens in silence with nothing competing with the Spirit’s work in us. But culture is multi-task friendly, stimulus rich, and data intensive.
Jesus understood that the process of becoming a follower happened away from the crowds. Do we?
—
Excerpted from a great post by Andy Blanks. Read the whole post at Andy’s Blog.

“We don’t have to do evangelism. We get to!”
So writes Ross Appleton in this post from Gospel Centered Discipleship
A conversation I had this summer with my brother-in-law:
Me: “How was fishing this morning?”
Brother-in-law: “Um, it was fun in a different way. It was a lot of work.”
Me: “What do you mean?”
Brother in law:
“Well, I never got to fish. I took a friend and his kids out fishing.
They’d never been fishing before so I spent the whole time baiting their hooks, netting their fish they caught, retrieving fishing poles the kids dropped overboard. So it wasn’t fun per se. More rewarding than fun- but so fun to see their faces as they caught their first fish.”
“equip people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up” – Ephesians 4:12
So our job in leading is to cultivate an environment that encourages the people of God to be stewards of the gifts God has given them and help them use those gifts to minister to others. A couple practical ideas on what this might look like:Go home to your friends and tell them how much the Lord has done for you, and how he has had mercy on you. —
-Jesus in Mark 5:19
