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JOHN KOESSLER is a professor emeritus at Moody Bible Institute where he served on the faculty since 1994. Prior to joining the Moody faculty, John served as pastor of Valley Chapel in Green Valley, IL for nine years. He is an award-winning author who has written thirteen books and numerous magazine articles. He writes the monthly Theology Matters column for Today in the Word and is a frequent workshop leader at the Moody Pastor's Conference. John is married to Jane and they have two adult sons. They live in Ludington, MI.
When coworkers or friends watch you in operation, do they see a reflection of Christ? If we truly believe that Jesus Christ is not only the Son of God, but also our Savior and Lord, it is reasonable for others to expect to see proof of our commitment to Him in the way we live. That evidence is what biblically-minded Christians call discipleship. "Discipleship is faith expressed in real life, every day, in every way," says noted author and livelong disciple of John Koessler. But there is more to it than merely watching your language on the loading dock or dropping a few coins in a charity donation box. Discipleship implies a living relationship with the Christ we love, serve, and seek to imitate. For most of us there is room in this relationship for considerable improvement. If improvement is your goal, Koessler will take you on an incredible journey. This contemplative and practical book, along with its separate companion guide, will help you find the told you need to deepen your commitment to Christ. John Koessler (D. Min., Trinity International University; M. Div., Biblical Theology Seminary) is the chairman of the Pastoral Studies Department at Moody Bible Institute. He is the author if Names of Believers, Names of Israel, and God Our Father and the co-author of No Little Places. Dr. Koessler and his wife have two sons and live in Munster, Indiana.
Acknowledgments,
1. The Marks of Discipleship,
2. The Cost of Discipleship,
3. The Obligations of Discipleship,
4. Spiritual Formation and Discipleship,
5. Obstacles to Discipleship,
6. The Machinery of Holiness,
7. God's Gym,
8. Christian Virtues,
9. The Spiritual Journey,
10. The Biblical Pattern,
11. The Learner as Teacher,
12. The Corporate Context of Discipleship,
Notes,
THE MARKS OF DISCIPLESHIP
CHARACTERISTICS OF A FOLLOWER OF CHRIST
After I graduated from college, I worked a few years for one of the major automobile companies. Some of that time was spent on the loading dock in a shipping and receiving department. During the summers, the heat inside the trucks that I helped to load could be suffocating. That could make the guys' tempers a little short.
One especially hot afternoon, as I was helping one of the drivers arrange his load, he grinned at me and said, "You're a religious man, aren't you?"
I was surprised by his question. This was the first time we had met, and our conversation in the few minutes we had been together hadn't progressed beyond the usual superficial observations about the weather.
"As a matter of fact, I am," I replied. "Why do you ask?"
"Oh, I noticed that you don't talk like the other fellas who help me," he answered. "Most of them would be cussing by now because of the heat. You haven't said one swear word."
I was pleased that he had seen something in my behavior that seemed to him to reflect genuine Christianity. Yet I was sobered by the reminder that others I worked with on a daily basis would also be looking for proof of the reality of my commitment to Christ. How consistent was I under the close scrutiny of those who knew me best? Did I have the marks of a genuine Christian?
When sharing my faith, I had often heard people respond by saying, "I used to know someone who believed like you do ..." They would usually go on to describe some major character flaw reflected in that person's life. It was clear that my listeners felt such a shortcoming invalidated the other person's claim to the title of "Christian."
Something That Sets Us Apart
I would explain that Christians aren't sinless, only forgiven. But such reasoning hardly seemed convincing to them. If anything, my argument usually brought to mind other inconsistencies among those they knew who claimed to belong to Christ. The general assumption seemed to be that, although Christians aren't perfect, they should be different. There should be something that sets them apart as disciples. The Scriptures agree.
Horatius Bonar, the Scottish pastor and hymn writer of the nineteenth century, made this observation about the nature of the Christian life: "It is to new life that God is calling us; not to some new steps in life, some new habits or motives or prospects, but to a new life."
Discipleship is not primarily a matter of what we do. It is an outgrowth of what we are. Yet if this is true, it is reasonable for others to expect to see proof of the reality of our commitment to Christ reflected in the way that we live. Jesus' observation regarding false prophets is also true of disciples. They are recognizable by the fruit they produce: "By their fruit you will recognize them. Do people pick grapes from thornbushes, or figs from thistles? Likewise every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit" (Matthew 7:16–17).
So what are the marks of a disciple? Jesus Himself identified several important characteristics.
The Mark of Baptism
The first mark of a disciple is baptism. It is one of the first acts that identifies us as followers of Jesus Christ and initiates us into a life of obedience. When Jesus commissioned the church to go and make disciples of all nations, He identified baptism as the first of the two central tasks of disciple making (Matthew 28:19). After Christ's ascension, baptism continued to have a prominent place in apostolic preaching and practice. On the Day of Pentecost, the apostle Peter commanded those who believed to "repent and be baptized ... in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit" (Acts 2:38).
Although Christians differ over how baptism should take place (it has been done by sprinkling, pouring, and immersion), all agree that baptism is the initiatory rite of the Christian faith. John Calvin called it "the sign of the initiation by which we are received into the society of the church."
It is a rite that has both individual and corporate significance. On the one hand, baptism symbolizes to observers and the individual alike the person's union with Christ in death and resurrection (Romans 6:3–4). At the same time, it signifies that the believer has also been joined to the larger fellowship of the church: "For we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body—whether Jews or Greeks, slave or free— and we were all given the one Spirit to drink" (1 Corinthians 12:13).
Baptism by water also symbolizes the believer's entrance into the sphere of the Holy Spirit. The metaphor of drinking in 1 Corinthians 12:13 points to the Holy Spirit's ministry at our innermost level. The Holy Spirit is said to "live" in every believer and His controlling presence is more powerful than the presence of the sinful nature (Romans 8:9). But the benefit we receive from His ministry is not merely an individual one. Those who are individually joined to Christ by their union with the Spirit are also joined to one another. Water baptism signifies my entrance into the community of the Spirit.
Similarly, the symbolism of baptism serves as a public statement of the believer's personal commitment to Christ and conveys a promise from God to the believer. Baptism, according to John Calvin, is a public confession before men. "Indeed," he explained, "it is the mark by which we publicly profess that we wish to be reckoned God's people, by which we testify that we agree in worshipping the same God, in one religion with all Christians; by which finally we openly affirm our faith." The apostle Peter used the legal language of contractual agreements to refer to baptism when he called it "the pledge of a good conscience toward God" in 1 Peter 3:21. The Greek term that is translated "pledge" literally meant "answer" and referred to a legal procedure in which questions were asked and commitments made on the part of those who entered into a contractual arrangement with one another. Baptism is a pledge of commitment made to God that springs from the cleansing that has come through faith in Christ.
On God's part, however, baptism contains an implied promise of forgiveness. New Testament preaching linked baptism to the promise of cleansing from sin (Acts 2:38; 22:16; cf. Mark 1:4; Luke 3:3). The connection between these two, however, is not an automatic one. The Bible does not teach that the rite of baptism in and of itself conveys the forgiveness of sin. Although Peter wrote that baptism "now saves you," he clarified that it is actually the resurrection of Christ that does the saving and not the water of baptism (1 Peter 3:21). When some in the Corinthian church began to boast about who had baptized them and divide into factions in the name of their favorite apostle, Paul wrote that he was glad that he had baptized so few. "For Christ did not send me to baptize," he declared, "but to preach the gospel" (1 Corinthians 1:17). Such a statement makes no sense if baptism is the means of obtaining forgiveness through Christ.
Because it symbolizes the believer's union with Christ through the Holy Spirit, baptism also contains an implicit promise of transformation. Baptism's picture of burial and resurrection points to a radical change in the believer's nature: "We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life" (Romans 6:4). Those who are in Christ are alive in a way that was not true prior to Christ.
The apostle Paul linked baptism with the Old Testament rite of circumcision and said that those who have been baptized have "put off" the old nature (Colossians 2:11–12). New Testament scholar C. E. B. Cranfield commented, "Paul expresses in the most decisive and emphatic way the truth of our having died with Christ; for burial is the seal set to the fact of death—it is when a man's relatives and friends leave his body in a grave and return home without him that the fact that he no longer shares their life is exposed with inescapable conclusiveness."
All who enter into a relationship with Christ die to the old self. Positively, they have been "clothed" with Christ (Galatians 3:27).
God's promise in baptism is the promise of forgiveness and a new life. My commitment in baptism is the pledge to live in accordance with the change that Christ has brought about in me by His death and resurrection.
The Mark of Obedience
True discipleship is also marked by obedience. The second major component of Jesus' directive in the Great Commission was to teach disciples "to obey everything I have commanded you" (Matthew 28:20). Obedience is not optional for the Christian. As Jesus' popularity increased, He warned followers that obedience would be the true test of their discipleship. According to John 8:31–32, "To the Jews who had believed him, Jesus said, 'If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.'"
Passages like this can make us uncomfortable because they seem to imply that our status as disciples is earned. There is a condition here, but its force is one of evidence rather than of cause. Jesus did not say that we become disciples by holding to His teaching. The obedience spoken of here proves that those who obey were truly His disciples in the first place. This may sound like a semantic game, but the order is vitally important. If discipleship depends upon my obedience, then the primary focus of Jesus' statement is on my ability to comply with all that God commands. If, on the other hand, obedience depends upon the reality of my discipleship relationship with Jesus Christ, the primary focus is on Christ Himself. In John 8:31–32 discipleship comes before obedience. Obedience is the consequence, not the cause.
Rooted in God's Grace
The Scriptures speak of two very different kinds of obedience. One could be called "legalistic" obedience. The other might be described as "grace-rooted" obedience. Legalistic obedience is rooted in human effort and achievement—obeying God's commands in order to earn a righteous standing in God's sight. In Paul's day those who depended upon religious rituals to make themselves right with God epitomized this kind of obedience. It is the polar opposite of grace-rooted obedience (Galatians 5:3–4). The objective in legalistic obedience may seem like a good one—the observance of God's commands—but it is flawed because it overestimates the human capacity to comply. It produces an obedience that is grounded in self rather than in God.
Grace, like legalism, also has obedience to God's commands as its objective. According to Romans 2:14, it is not those who hear God's Law who are declared righteous but those who obey it. But the difference with obedience that's rooted in grace is that it is grounded in Christ's righteousness rather than my own. It is "the obedience that comes from faith" (Romans 1:5). For the Christian, faith is obedience because it focuses on the one who obeyed all God's commands on my behalf. When I trust in Jesus Christ, my faith is credited to me as righteousness (Romans 4:5). Grace- rooted obedience recognizes that righteousness can only be received as a gift. It cannot be earned as a wage. My obedience is an expression of gratitude for that gift.
It is not surprising, then, that Jesus repeatedly identified love as the primary motive for obedience. "If you love me," He told His disciples, "you will obey what I command." "He who does not love me," He warned, "will not obey my teaching" (John 14:15, 24).
Rooted in Our Relationship with Jesus
There are other motives for obedience mentioned in Scripture that seem more "selfish." Grace-rooted obedience does not look for a wage, but it does expect to be rewarded. Yet even these rewards are ultimately rooted in our relationship to Jesus Christ. For example, Jesus promised those who kept His teaching that its truth would make them free (John 8:32). In the context of John's gospel, however, truth is not merely a set of propositions. Ultimately it is embodied in the person of Christ Himself. "I am the way and the truth and the life," Jesus declared. "No one comes to the Father except through me" (John 14:6). "The truth of which John writes," explained commentator Leon Morris, "is the truth that is bound up with the Person and work of Jesus."
There is propositional content to the truth of Christ. Those who rejected Him rejected His teaching. Conversely, when Jesus said that those who held to His teaching would find the truth, ultimately He meant that they would find Him. They would enter into a relationship with the one who is truth. Those who believe in Jesus receive the person of Christ (John 1:12). "Jesus is clear that this truth, that truth that is the way and the life, is himself," William Willimon observed. "We really [would] have no idea what the truth is, living as we do in a culture of lies, had not Jesus shown us a life that is true to God."
Likewise, the freedom spoken of in John 8:31–32 is not primarily a matter of social status. I find freedom in Christ who is the truth because I enter into an entirely new relationship with God, with His Law, and even with myself. Because Christ took upon Himself the curse that is the consequence of disobedience to God's Law, even though He Himself had never disobeyed it, I am free from that Law's penalty. I am no longer under what Paul called "the curse of the law" (Galatians 3:13). This blunt phrase is a forceful reminder of how desperate bondage to sin truly is. In itself God's Law is holy, righteous, and good (Romans 7:12). The Law's weakness is our sinful nature. The Law is spiritual; we are unspiritual, "sold as a slave to sin" (Romans 7:14). When God's Law comes into contact with our sinful condition, the result is toxic.
I recently read the news story of a woman who suffered from a food allergy so severe that if she were to eat certain foods like peanut butter, she would go into shock and eventually die. When her husband kissed her on the cheek after eating the same foods, her face broke out in welts. In her case, what was intended to nourish instead had the potential to kill. This is similar to the effect that God's Law has on the sinful nature. When it comes in contact with the Law, the sinful nature produces a desire for the very thing that God's Law forbids (Romans 7:8). Paul described the tragic result this way: "The very commandment that was intended to bring life actually brought death" (Romans 7:10).
Christ's death frees us from slavery to the sinful nature and gives us a new freedom to obey (John 8:34–36; Romans 6:18, 22).
Rooted in a Desire for Answered Prayer
Answered prayer is another motive for obedience in the Christian life. In 1 John 3:21–22 we seem to be promised unlimited answers to our prayers: "Dear friends, if our hearts do not condemn us, we have confidence before God and receive from him anything we ask, because we obey his commands and do what pleases him." J. C. Ryle echoed this verse when he observed, "The name of Jesus is a never-failing passport to our prayers. In that name a man may draw near to God with boldness and ask with confidence."
However, although answers to prayer are indeed guaranteed in this passage, those answers are limited by several important qualifications. First, the promise is made to those who have a clear conscience. Only those whose "hearts do not condemn" them and who "have confidence before God" can be assured that they will receive anything they ask. Second, the promise is made to those who are in tune with God. They "obey His commands and do what pleases Him." It is no wonder, then, that their prayers are answered. It's not because they have earned the right to receive their requests from God, but because they know how to ask "according to his will" (1 John 5:14). In other words, the secret is in the relationship.
Excerpted from True Discipleship by John Koessler. Copyright © 2003 John Koessler. Excerpted by permission of Moody Publishers.
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