I serve with an organization that focuses on discipleship. When people hear our vision for training college students to mature in faith and impart it to others who can teach others (2 Tim 2:1-2), one question inevitably hijacks the conversation.
So what materials do you use?
I struggle to answer this question because it often comes with a wagon-load of assumptions.
- To many people, “discipleship” means having a program of instruction.
- A program of instruction requires manuals and/or participant workbooks.
- Therefore, those who succeed at “discipleship” must have some excellent “materials” that others could benefit from.
I disappoint terribly when I respond, “Our main materials are the books of the Bible.”
I really don’t intend any disrespect by it, so I usually begin by listing a few books we’ve found to be helpful. But I always drive that train right back to the station of Scripture. Sometimes blank looks are my reward.
The Benefits of Good Materials
Study guides, Bible study workbooks, leaders manuals, and classroom curricula all have a role in Christian education. Their role is like the role of a tee in Little League baseball.
A tee is the first guidepost for a child learning to play the sport. It assures the child that he can hit the ball without fearing it will hit him. It defines where to stand, where to swing the bat, and when to run. It’s a good friend and capable mentor.
As the athlete develops, the tee endures as a tool. Even the pros use tees to help them perfect the mechanics of batting.
The tee is not part of the big game, however. The tee trains and refines, but it also launches players into the real thing.
In the same way, we need good materials to show us the way. Young Christians can practice the basic mechanics of Bible study with a good guide. Leaders can gain confidence when they have a structure already provided. Mature believers can fine-tune their understanding of Scripture and stay connected with their generation by checking the insights of others.
But the materials are not the meat.
The Dangers of Good Materials
- We unintentionally communicate that the Bible is not enough to grow a Christian (or to introduce someone to Christ).
- We rely on the “experts” and don’t learn to think for ourselves.
- We go to study guides too quickly, and short-circuit our understanding of a passage.
- We assume we can’t learn how to study the Bible ourselves.
- At worst, we enable a culture of study guide addiction in the church and enforce a priestly layer of materials mediation between people and God.
A Vision for Good Materials
I know it might sound hypocritical, as I’m writing materials on the dangers of materials. There’s something in there that could sound self-contradictory.
But my goal is to provide materials that train people not to need more materials – at least as the substance of their walk with God. The best materials will remain supplemental.
Imagine if your small group wanted to do a study of marriage and their first idea was to study the Song of Solomon together.
Imagine if you asked people for advice about a parenting struggle and they pulled out their Bibles to answer the issue.
Imagine if your congregation’s debate over the church budget was driven by people quoting verses about godly money management.
Imagine if all the core members of your church invited their neighbors to discussion groups in their homes about one of the Gospels.
Discussing a book or following a program isn’t wrong. It’s quite useful if it hits the target.
But doing it all the time is like going to the shooting range with a Nerf gun.