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		<title>Baptism and the Disciple Maker</title>
		<link>https://church-planting.net/baptism-and-the-disciple-maker/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Esther Ritchey]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Aug 2020 09:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Discipleship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General Church Planting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[burial]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://fourgen.org/blog/2020/8/4/baptism-and-the-disciple-maker</guid>

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<p>By: Stan Rodda Over the years, much has been written on the topic of baptism. Churches have split over the topic. Commentaries have been written. The purpose of this post is not to clear up 2000 years of controversy surrounding baptism. It is to simply say that if we want [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://church-planting.net/baptism-and-the-disciple-maker/">Baptism and the Disciple Maker</a> appeared first on <a href="https://church-planting.net">Passion for Planting</a>.</p>
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<p>By: Stan Rodda</p>


<p class="">Over the years, much has been written on the topic of baptism. Churches have split over the topic. Commentaries have been written. The purpose of this post is not to clear up 2000 years of controversy surrounding baptism. It is to simply say that if we want to see a disciple making movement, then we must train and equip disciples of Jesus to baptize people when the opportunity arises.</p>
<p class="">Let’s face it, many pastors and church leaders are a bottleneck for their church’s growth. Everyone has to come to them for next steps, advice, counsel, church info and even baptism. Many people want to be baptized by the pastor, but the reality is that this slows down the movement of the church. It slows it down because now we can only get to as many people as the pastor can counsel and baptize. That doesn’t seem to be how it is in the book of Acts.</p>
<p class="">When 3000+ were baptized, it seems the 12 multiplied their efforts. They would baptize one and that person would help baptize the next. The number of baptizers went from 12 to 24 to 48 to 96 and so on. It’s why one of my metrics is not simply numbers of people baptized, but is to actually track unique baptizers. How many new disciples are baptizing someone else? I believe that’s how we will get to a disciple making movement.</p>
<p class="">So let’s make baptism simple. Let’s make it reproducible to the everyday disciple of Jesus. For the most part, we will use Romans 6 as our backdrop.</p>
<h2>Baptism is Surrender to King Jesus</h2>
<p class="">The book of Acts records that when 3000+ gave their lives to Jesus at Pentecost, that their primary wrestling match was with the identity of Jesus. Acts 2:36 records that Peter says, “…this Jesus whom you crucified is both Lord and Messiah.” Jesus is actually the King of all things and you crucified Him.</p>
<p class="">The people were convicted and asked what they should do. The answer was first to repent. Repentance is a change of mind. And what was it they were having to change their minds about? The identity of Jesus. They crucified a guy they thought was crazy, a drunk, a rebel. Yet He wasn’t. He was Lord and Messiah. He was and is the King.</p>
<p class="">Baptism is first and foremost a surrender to King Jesus.</p>
<h2>Baptism is a Death</h2>
<p class="">When I surrender to King Jesus, I must die to my old self. I let go of my old way of living. If Jesus is King, then I must live a different kind of way. My way of living isn’t good enough. So in baptism I identify with King Jesus in His death. Jesus died on a cross and I am laying down my old way of living.</p>
<p class="">As your disciples are leading others, this must be understood. Baptism is not a feel-good moment where I just keep doing what I want. It is the moment I am dying to my own way of living and thinking. My mind and actions are completely changing to what King Jesus would have for me.</p>
<h2>Baptism is a Burial</h2>
<p class="">Everyone who dies is buried. No one dies and is laid on top of the ground with a little dirt sprinkled on their forehead. They are put under the ground. When I die to my old way of living in surrender to Jesus, I am symbolically buried in the water. I go under the water as if my old life was being put in the ground. I leave the old me buried in the waters of baptism.</p>
<h2>Baptism is a Resurrection to New Life</h2>
<p class="">When I come up out of the water, I am a new person. I have identified with Jesus in His death, burial and now resurrection. There is now a new life that I am called to as I pursue King Jesus. I am not who I was. I am who God says I am now.</p>
<p class="">Disciples of Jesus need to be trained and empowered to walk one of their disciples through baptism. To be able to help them see what decision they are making and to baptize them. Baptism at it’s simplest is surrender to King Jesus, a death, a burial and a new life. Here are a couple of practical questions you can ask yourself in regards to baptism and disciple making?</p>
<p class="">Who can you train this week to baptize others?</p>
<p class="">Who are you discipling now who needs to be trained to baptize those they are discipling?</p>
<p class="">How can you empower and equip your disciples to baptize others this week?</p>
<p class="">If we are going to take spiritual ground, we must unleash an army of disciple makers who are confident and competent to baptize others. To lead them to follow Jesus and walk them through the process of surrendering their lives to Christ. This is how we will get to movement in our time.</p>
<p class="">Let’s take Kingdom territory!</p>
<p>Source: <a href="http://fourgen.org/blog/2020/8/4/baptism-and-the-disciple-maker" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" data-wplink-edit="true">Baptism and the Disciple Maker</a></p><p>The post <a href="https://church-planting.net/baptism-and-the-disciple-maker/">Baptism and the Disciple Maker</a> appeared first on <a href="https://church-planting.net">Passion for Planting</a>.</p>
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		<title>DLP #007: How Christian Entrepreneurs Are Going to Change the World</title>
		<link>https://church-planting.net/dlp-007-how-christian-entrepreneurs-are-going-to-change-the-world/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sean Cronin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Jun 2019 09:00:49 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://brandonacox.com/podcast-007-christian-entrepreneurs/</guid>

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<p>DLP #007: How Christian Entrepreneurs Are Going to Change the World .et_post_meta_wrapper by Brandon Cox: The idea of a strict separation between sacred and secular is not a biblical one. Neither is the separation between “clergy” and “laity.” When you follow Jesus, you’re part of his kingdom in every realm [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://church-planting.net/dlp-007-how-christian-entrepreneurs-are-going-to-change-the-world/">DLP #007: How Christian Entrepreneurs Are Going to Change the World</a> appeared first on <a href="https://church-planting.net">Passion for Planting</a>.</p>
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<h1 class="entry-title">DLP #007: How Christian Entrepreneurs Are Going to Change the World</h1>
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<p>by Brandon Cox: The idea of a strict separation between sacred and secular is not a biblical one. Neither is the separation between “clergy” and “laity.” When you follow Jesus, you’re part of his kingdom in every realm of your life, so living out a Christian ethic and pursuing excellence and success in the marketplace by serving the needs of others and becoming generous is one way of positively impacting the world and drawing others to an understanding of God’s love for them. So let’s get past the stigma, break through our fears, and do this well!</p>
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<p>Christian entrepreneurs are going to change the world.</p>
<p>In Christian church history, there have been periods of time when the church has really created a strict dividing line between clergy and laity; that is, between professional priests, pastors, and ministers versus all of the “ordinary” members who are not called to a particular church office. I hope that we lose that because every Christian is a servant, a minister.</p>
<p>Some people are called to lead the church in a vocational capacity, but all of us are called to expand God’s kingdom together and all of us are ministers in the workplace.</p>
<p>We serve other people <em>wherever we go</em>, not just at church on Sunday.</p>
<p>We also shouldn’t compartmentalize our faith. Most of us believe that we go to school for our education, to work for our money, and to church for our religion. But faith doesn’t work that way. It affects everything. When I submit my life to Jesus as King, he takes over as King of everything. So you need to live an integrated, whole life.</p>
<p>This issue matters deeply to me, and it’s highly relevant, because God has put people in all kinds of positions of influence within society. In fact, he positions each and every one of us where we are to impact other people. He didn’t ask any of us to be an island unto ourselves, or to not have influence, or to not affect the world or the culture around us. I don’t believe he called us to isolate and withdraw and live life behind a wall and barricade ourselves off from the non-Christian world around us.</p>
<p>Personally, I feel strongly led to support and serve people in two particular positions of influence: <strong>pastors and entrepreneurs</strong>.</p>
<p>More pastors need to think in entrepreneurial ways.</p>
<p>I highly respect those who subscribe to the school of thought that there should be nothing professional about Christian ministry. I understand where you’re coming from. I’ve read John Piper’s book, <em><a href="https://www.desiringgod.org/books/brothers-we-are-not-professionals" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Brothers, We Are Not Professionals</a></em>. It’s a great book. It reminds us that we’re not just here to analyze markets and produce numbers. I completely agree.</p>
<p>I also believe, however, that entrepreneurship is essentially a matter of being creative, and we can reflect the glory of God when we get creative.</p>
<p>Pastors need to ask themselves entrepreneurial questions, like:</p>
<ul>
<li>Am I thinking outside of my comfort zone and what’s familiar?</li>
<li>Am I willing to venture into new territory, take risks, try new things, get creative?</li>
<li>Am I willing to adapt my communication styles to the culture around me?</li>
</ul>
<p><em><strong>Related Reading: I wrote a blog post about <a href="https://brandonacox.com/7-ways-pastor-think-like-entrepreneur/">7 Ways Pastors Should Think Like Entrepreneurs</a></strong></em></p>
<p>I also believe that Christian entrepreneurs who are not working in the “church” space should think more ministerially. If you’re successful in business, if you lead people, if you start things, if you earn money, if you influence your community or your culture in the business world, then you ought to be seeking ways to <em>serve other people</em> and to <em>share your faith</em> with people in loving ways.</p>
<p>In the New Testament, we see Paul talking about being a tentmaker – being bivocational. We think of bivocationalism today as a necessary evil – something some pastors have to do because their churches are too small to pay them a full-time salary. Certainly there are those cases, and thank God for the men and women willing to serve in that role!</p>
<p>But I think we should begin to make room for a kind of bivocationism where we encourage pastors and church leaders to be entrepreneurial and to filter into the marketplace alongside everyone else in creative ways, while still faithfully remaining committed to church leadership as a primary calling.</p>
<p>This matters because, society’s foundations tend to rest on seven major pillars, and the church is only one of them. Like dominos, if you can move these seven pillars of society, then you can move society in a new direction.</p>
<p>The seven pillars of society are:</p>
<ol>
<li>Government and politics.</li>
<li>Media – the internet, news, television, etc.</li>
<li>Arts and entertainment.</li>
<li>Business and marketplace</li>
<li>Education, both primary and secondary.</li>
<li>Religion – the church and other houses of worship.</li>
<li>Family.</li>
</ol>
<p>The idea is  that if we can influence several of those pillars – government, media, arts, business, education, religion, and family – then we can tip all of society in a certain direction.</p>
<p>We think about ministry as taking place within the church, but that’s just one pillar, and it leaves the other six out. We need to be thinking about ministry as being spread across all areas of life.</p>
<p>God’s Kingdom is very subversive. Ed Stetzer wrote a book some years back called <a href="https://amzn.to/2M2OCVf" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><em>Subversive Kingdom</em></a>. I would pair it right with Scot McKnight’s book, <a href="https://amzn.to/2M2OCVf" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><em>The King Jesus Gospel</em></a>. Those two books really frame well my own viewpoints of what the Kingdom is.</p>
<p>The Kingdom of God is not of this world. It’s not one of the seven pillars. Religion is humanly established. It’s organized. It’s regulated. There are rituals or things that we manage from a human perspective, but God’s Kingdom, the Bible says, is <em>within you</em>. It’s invisible.It’s basically the rule and reign of Jesus. Wo everybody that says, “I follow Jesus” is part of the Kingdom of God.</p>
<p>The Kingdom of God operates on different principles than the kingdoms of the world around us. The Kingdom of God operates in the principle of purposeful, willing servitude toward other people. The subversive Kingdom is the idea that God’s Kingdom does not come in and dominate people, or culture, or any of those seven pillars of society. Rather, the Kingdom of God subversively springs up here and there within those different realms.</p>
<p><strong>God has called us to move as agents of his Kingdom and serve and influence the marketplace.</strong></p>
<p>The Church tends to lag behind. Whatever the world around us creates, we recreate fifteen years later and 85% as well. You see this in Christian film. You see it in Christian entertainment. We often give a free pass to very poor quality because we figure, “Well, this is the Christian version. It’s not supposed to be as good.” We just lag behind, and we wait for the marketplace to tell us what to do.</p>
<p>We need Christians to step into a leadership role – not a domineering leadership role, but instead as servants who contribute to the flourishing of humanity.</p>
<p>Let me give you four ways we need Christian entrepreneurs to show up and be present…</p>
<h3>1. We need people who will live out a Christlike ethic in the marketplace.</h3>
<p>In other words, we need people who will live and serve and do business the way Jesus might do business. I’m not suggesting that Jesus would <em>do</em> business. I’m just saying that Jesus came up with ideas like <em>going the second mile</em> for people, <em>taking the high road</em>, being brutally committed to <em>honesty</em> and <em>authenticity</em> and <em>charity</em>.</p>
<p>All of that originated in the mind of God and in the mind of Jesus, and so businesses that are committed to solid ethics, to honesty, to truth, to generosity, to charity stand out in an age of corporate corruption and greed.</p>
<h3>2. We need people who will serve others in Jesus’ name in the marketplace.</h3>
<p>Zig Ziglar was very successful and became very wealthy by the end of his life and yet still managed to be, even though he was a motivational speaker and a great salesman, very humble and very Christlike in his life.</p>
<p>Zig used to say, <em><strong>“You’ll have everything you want in life if you help enough other people get what they want.”</strong></em></p>
<p>So we need servant-hearted, generous leaders who will elevate others.</p>
<h3>3. We need people who will create wealth from the marketplace to support missions.</h3>
<p>When I hear about Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, or so many others who have made millions or billions of dollars and then have established foundations and trusts in their name whereby they can continue to distribute money through charitable causes throughout the years to come, I think that’s awesome! I think we ought to celebrate that, and I think we ought to duplicate that, that Christians.</p>
<p>If we really have a desire to eradicate AIDS and other diseases, to improve education, to tackle issues like poverty and healthcare around the world, and if we really want to plant churches, raise up leaders, and share the Gospel everywhere that we possibly can, then we need to be creating wealth from the marketplace that can be given to missions.</p>
<h3>4. We need people to be creative thought leaders in the marketplace.</h3>
<p>This goes back to the idea that we shouldn’t just sit around and wait for the world to invent everything. Christians should feel the freedom to be innovative.</p>
<p>Innovators change the direction of society. When you think about the most influential people in history, so many of them were innovators. We know who Gutenberg was because he invented the printing press, and out of the printing press came all of the books and libraries and the bookstores that we know today.</p>
<p>Christians ought to be right in the middle of shaping the culture around us. We shouldn’t be afraid of science, psychology, and other various disciplines but instead, fully engaging and being creative thought leaders in our marketplaces. This kind of engagement will make for better communities.</p>
<p>Here are four next steps for you to take in light of this challenge…</p>
<h3>1. We need to get over our limiting beliefs.</h3>
<p>I talked about <a href="https://brandonacox.com/podcast-005-limiting-beliefs/">our limiting beliefs in the last episode</a>. Our limiting beliefs hold us back.</p>
<p><em>I just could never do anything great.</em></p>
<p><em>I’m not supposed to be earning money.</em></p>
<p><em>I shouldn’t be thinking about my potential.</em></p>
<p><em>My platform doesn’t/shouldn’t matter.</em></p>
<h3>2. We need to cut through the stigma surrounding success and wealth.</h3>
<p>We need to move beyond the stigma surrounding entrepreneurship. This is not about getting rich quickly, or having tons of money so we can go on a permanent vacation and never work again. Where’s the influence in that?</p>
<p>But entrepreneurial acumen, when cultivated properly, contributes something very valuable to the culture.</p>
<h3>3. We have to overcome our fear.</h3>
<p>We’re not risk takers by nature. I don’t believe in taking dumb risks, but we do have to get over our fear of taking any risk at all. We have to be willing sometimes to step outside of our comfort zone and try new things and venture in a new territory. We have to get over our fear.</p>
<h3>4. We have to think about the potential.</h3>
<p>We need to think about what society could look like if Christians felt empowered to apply their faith in every facet of life. What would it look like for Christianity to influence the world around us?</p>
<p>Christian entrepreneurs, let’s go change the world together, okay?</p>
<p><small>Photo credit: <a href="https://unsplash.com/photos/omKdUQ9R3Zo" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Adeolu Eletu</a></small></p>
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<p>Source: <a href="https://brandonacox.com/podcast-007-christian-entrepreneurs/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" data-wplink-edit="true">DLP #007: How Christian Entrepreneurs Are Going to Change the World</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://church-planting.net/dlp-007-how-christian-entrepreneurs-are-going-to-change-the-world/">DLP #007: How Christian Entrepreneurs Are Going to Change the World</a> appeared first on <a href="https://church-planting.net">Passion for Planting</a>.</p>
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