One-to-one Bible reading is not a ministry or program, but a simple, relational, and powerful tool that can be injected into the ministries of a church. Far from growing your church’s to-do list, one-to-one Bible reading can help a church’s ministries refocus their attention upon discipleship and fuel that mission by empowering its volunteers. Here are three examples of how ministry leaders have refocused and fueled discipleship in their ministries by injecting one-to-one Bible reading.
Read MoreThe task of shepherding eternal souls is weighty, therefore those involved in ministry must take their preparation seriously.
Read MoreIn their book, The Vine Project, Tony Payne & Colin Marshall explain that “[Culture is] a way of summarizing the whole way you do things, the multifaceted web of […] beliefs and practices, formal & informal, that make up who you are and how you roll.” That means that any group of people, whether an ethnic community, a family, an office, or a team, that has a collection of shared beliefs and practices that seem normal to them, has a culture.
Read MoreAs citizens of the Kingdom of God, Jesus gave us the duty to, “[g]o therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you (Matt 28:19-20a).” In other words, he left us the job to make (“baptize”) and mature (“teach”) followers of Jesus Christ. That’s the duty that has been given to us by our King, but are we prepared to do it?
Read MoreThe idea of reading the Bible with someone sounded simplistic. Even if someone agreed to read with me, wouldn’t it feel awkward and forced? Could something like this do any good, or would it be completely ineffective? Though I had my suspicions, time has shown that not only is one-to-one Bible reading not simplistic, awkward, and ineffective, but simple, relational, and powerful.
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