Disciple-Making Recipe for Churches
This editorโs note highlights Randy Garissโs call for churches to rethink disciple-making so more people look like Jesus. It points to three essentialsโknowledge, relationship, and serviceโand urges churches to focus less on activity and more on forming disciples through teaching and lived practice.
- Disciple-making aims to help people look more like Jesus.
- Gariss emphasizes knowledge, relationship, and service as key ingredients.
- Teaching matters, but it must be more than classroom-style instruction.
By Mark A. Taylor
Randy Gariss believes not enough people todayโinside or outside the churchโlook enough like Jesus (READ GARISS’S COLUMN). And he asks, isnโt that the hallmark of a disciple, to look like Jesus? And isnโt the churchโs job to make disciples?
Discipleship as the Churchโs Priority
In this weekโs โReflections,โ he suggests we need to rethink our process for leading people to be more like Jesus. He offers three ingredientsโknowledge, relationship, and serviceโin a simple recipe for disciple-making.
I like what he says. I particularly resonate with his challenge to the church: Letโs shorten our list of activities, sharpen our focus on just these three priorities, and devote ourselves to the imperative of making disciples.
His column prompts us to elevate the church above the atmosphere or approach of a service organization or retail outlet or entertainment venue. The church is about helping people look like Jesus. Church members become more like him as they submit to a twofold process: deepening their own spiritual maturity as they commit to developing others.
I chose Randyโs column for this issue specifically because of what he says about teaching. (โReflectionsโ writers send their columns four times a year, without knowing which week weโll use them. Sometimes their topics fit perfectly with a theme issue. Sometimes their essays provide a change-of-pace to the pieces in the front of the magazine. Randyโs โReflectionsโ this week does both.)
Teaching That Forms Disciples
He says formal classroom teaching has too often been our sole strategy for developing disciples, and that has to change. But heโs quick to add we canโt build disciples without Bible teaching.
I have two responses. First, we should look at teaching as something more than teacher-talk poured into the brains of students sitting in rows an hour at a time. Jesus, the โmaster teacher,โ was most successful with only 11 students, and he did far more than talk to them. Jesus combined knowledge, relationships, and service in a teaching strategy that quickly changed the world.
Second, Randyโs column lifts up the reason Standard Publishing exists. Standard Publishing is here to help Christians do a better job of understanding and teaching the Bible. As this weekโs issue underscores, Standardโs ministry for generations has been equipping teachers to help students understand Godโs Word.
Your brothers and sisters at Standard Publishing understand our company canโt accomplish everything the church must do. But weโre committed to one primary goal: providing the church with excellent tools for teaching the Bible, โbringing the Word to life.โ
Randy wrote, โThe great church will teach and teach well.โ We want to partner with churches like yours to help make that happen.






