|
EDITORIAL
Why Discipleship
Fails
Michael
Zigarelli
click here for a printer-friendly version
A guy I read
about recently—a pastor—fell into a timeless trap. He’s been pretty
happily married for a number of years, he has great kids ranging in
age from 5 to 14, and he’s got an attractive, supportive wife.
Besides all that, his ministry is going gangbusters—lots of impact,
evidence of changing lives, the whole nine yards.
So it came as
a shock to folks when he ‘fessed up to having an affair. It wasn’t
so much the
“fifteen-years-younger-and-twenty-pounds-lighter-than-my-wife” sort
of affair. It was actually more emotional than physical. But what’s
the difference? Sin is sin.
Here’s the
rub, though. This isn’t just some schlep whose been brainwashed by
watching too many episodes of Desperate Housewives. This is a
pastor we’re talking about. A teacher. A counselor. A
discipler of other Christians. He clearly knows the right
thing to do and he makes a living sharing that information with
others. When it came right down to it, though, for reasons that are
understandable but not justifiable, he made a really bad choice. His
knowledge of the right way didn’t protect him from the wrong
way. Now his life’s a mess, and so are his family and his ministry.
That’s a
sordid story retold everyday everywhere. Seemingly solid
Christians—people who know how they’re supposed to live out their
faith—fail miserably at living out their faith. They’re ogres at
home, they’re dictators at work, they lie when it’s
pragmatic, they lust for people and things, they get into all sorts
of debt, they indulge gossip, they drive aggressively, they live a prayerless life. Some of them cheat on their spouses, too. And we
fellow believers cringe as the world rolls its eyes.
Why does this
happen so frequently? Why is it that even when we know what’s right,
we often do what’s wrong? A lot of reasons, for sure, but the most
basic is this: We never really intended to do what’s right, at least
not consistently. Indeed, that’s a personal failure, but it’s also a
failure of how we disciple people.
What I mean is
this: Consider how we typically train up (i.e., disciple) Christians
in the twenty-first century. We give them lots of information about
Christian living and then implore them to live up to those
standards. We put out countless books, articles, sermons, podcasts,
classes, conferences, radio shows and so on, all pointing people
toward proper practice as a believer—toward proper behaviors.
But then, later, we discover that this was a woefully insufficient
approach.
That’s because
the practice of Christianity—behaviors like going the extra mile,
forgiving people repeatedly, praying for enemies, putting family
before work, leading by serving, treating people the way you want to
be treated, etc., etc.—should not be our primary focus in
discipleship. Teaching people “the right thing to do” should not be
our primary focus. Encouraging people to ask “what would Jesus do?”
should not be our primary focus. Rather, to disciple someone well is
to focus incessantly on transforming their intentions, not
their behaviors. The authentic, consistent Christian life begins
here, at the beginning of who we are.
This is hardly
a new or original idea. William Law said it far more poignantly
almost 300 years ago in A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life:
“if you stop and ask yourself why you are not as pious as the
(early) Christians were, your own heart will tell you that it is
neither through ignorance nor inability, but purely because you
never thoroughly intended it.”
That’s
hauntingly accurate. Our major problem as Christians is not lack of
knowledge about what to do, it’s the intention to do it. We have
plenty of knowledge. We know the right behaviors. We know we’re
supposed to be loving, compassionate, humble, merciful, gentle,
self-controlled, faithful to God…and spouse. But knowledge minus
intention equals hypocrisy. Just ask the pastor. He had all the
knowledge in the world and that couldn’t save him. He failed because
he stopped intending to succeed.
There’s an
imperative lesson here for churches, for Christian schools and
universities, for parents, for small group leaders, and for anyone
else entrusted by God to disciple others: The foundation of our
failure is foolish intent. Whether we’re discipling our kids or our
friends or our students or our congregation or whomever, we should
avoid the common error of making right behaviors our focal point.
That’s as powerless as treating cancer with a “get well soon” card.
Instead, we first have to administer chemo for their character—we
have to help them kill off malignant intentions so that in their
place can grow the healthy intention to be a fully devoted follower
of Jesus Christ.
How to do that
is the subject of innumerable resources. I’d recommend starting with
almost anything from Dallas Willard, but in particular The Spirit
of the Disciplines, Renovation of the Heart, and chapter 9 from
The Divine Conspiracy, a meaty and profound chapter called “A
Curriculum for Christlikeness.” You might also consider Richard
Foster’s classic Celebration of Discipline to better
understand how we build and sustain the intention to be a disciple,
as well as the time-honored works of the shoulders he stands
on—people like Thomas à Kempis, George Fox, William Law, Ignatius of
Loyola, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, A.W. Tozer, and John Wesley.
There’s far
too much at stake to be cavalier about this. Too many of us are
providing destinations without directions, forming ideals without
forming intentions, discipling the head without discipling the
heart. Remember, it was Jesus himself who indicated the proper order
for discipling people: He said “out of the overflow of the heart the
mouth speaks” (Luke 6:45). And Solomon said it centuries earlier, as
well: “Above all else guard your heart”—the innermost core of who
you are—“for it is the wellspring of life” (Proverbs 4:23).
Our
discipleship efforts fail when we get this backward, when we emphasize
surface-level, behavior-modification issues. Instead, our target is
the person’s heart, their character, their relation to God: Our
target is their intention to live faithfully. Right behaviors
will then follow more naturally.
If we can get
that straight in our churches and Christian schools and families,
we’ll hear a lot fewer stories about Christians who know right but
do wrong.
Michael
Zigarelli
is an Associate Professor at Messiah College in
Grantham, PA and the editor of Christianity9to5.org.
|