Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Born to Reproduce: Where is yours?


If you do not have a copy of Dawson Trotman's Born to Reproduce, you can read it online by clicking  HERE . (You can also download and print it; it's seven pages.)

Please read How to Majoring in Reproducing, pages 25 - 27 in the booklet, or from the middle of page 4 to the beginning of page 5 in the online document.

Trotman says: "What will it take to jar us out of our complacency and send us home to pray, “God, give me a girl or man whom I can win to Christ, or let me take one who is already won, an infant in Christ, and try to train that one so that he or she will reproduce!” How thrilled we are to see the masses fill up the seats! But where is your man?"

And so I ask, where is your man or woman?  Where is my man?

He might be next door.  Maybe she works with you.  It could be your son's friend who has no Dad; maybe it's your Dad's friend who has no son.

The truth is, he or she could be anywhere.  And that thought is intimidating!  Who is he?  Where is he?

"What will it take to jar us out of our complacency and send us home to pray?"

Christian, just know that he is there.  And pray.  God will deliver you to him or him to you.

Go. Please. Go and pray for your one.
You can make a difference.

Pray for your one.

Questions:

Do you believe God will bring someone to you?

Have you prayed, today, for that to happen?

If so, what is happening?

If not, why not?

All Scripture is taken from the NIV, 1984 edition, unless otherwise noted.
Quotes marked with an asterisk (*) are taken from :
Trotman, Dawson. Born to Reproduce. Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2008. Print.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Born to Reproduce: Who else is?



If you do not have a copy of Dawson Trotman's Born to Reproduce, you can read it online by clicking HERE.  (You can also download and print it; it's seven pages.)

 Please read How to Majoring in Reproducing, pages 25 - 27 in the booklet, or from the middle of page 4 to the beginning of page 5 in the online document.


In the last section, Trotman talks about multiplication. One person disciples one other, then each of them one more. Now there are four. He says "So the four of them in the next six months each get a man. That makes eight at the end of a year and a half. They all go out after another and at the end of two years there are 16 men. At the end of three years there are 64: the 16 have doubled twice. At the end of five years there are 1,048. At the end of fifteen and a half years there are 2,176,000,000. That is the present population of the world of persons over three years of age."


Can you imagine?  Over two billion reached in under sixteen years, starting with just two?

Wait, does fifteen years seem like a long time?  Well, I did some quick math.  If every single day of the year, there was a large stadium-type evangelism event, with 15,000 people in attendance - that's 15 thousand every day of the year, it would take over 397 years to reach the same number!  So, one x two, then two x two, and so on, is very effective.  Not to mention the depth to which people are being taken to, relationships being built.

So who is going to do it?

Why not you?





Questions:

Trotman asked "who else is majoring in discipleship?".  Not talking about programs or committees who have that title, but are not doing this work, is your church involved in discipleship to this level?

If not, why not?

Have you started praying for your one?.






All Scripture is taken from the NIV, 1984 edition, unless otherwise noted.
Quotes marked with an asterisk (*) are taken from : 
Trotman, Dawson. Born to Reproduce. Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2008. Print.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Born to reproduce - "You can't have two until you have one."



If you do not have a copy of Dawson Trotman's Born to Reproduce, you can read it online by clicking HERE.  (You can also download and print it; it's seven pages.)


Please read How to Produce Reproducers, pages 20 - 25 in the booklet, or from the middle of page 3 to the middle of page 4 in the online document.

I love the story that starts this section. It is that of a young man, a young sailor, who wanted to be a discipler. He went after this whole group of guys, but it did not seem that he was getting anywhere. Trotman relates the story this way:

He came to me after a month of this and said, “Dawson, I can’t get any of these guys on the ship to get down to business.”

 I said to him, “Listen, you ask God to give you one. You can’t have two until you have one. Ask God to give you a man after your own heart.”

 He began to pray.

And then it happened -- it happened!

And from one came two, from two four, from four, eight -- and so on -- until 125 men were saved aboard this sailor's ship -- before it was sunk at Pearl Harbor.


When Born to Reproduce was first written, men from that ship were serving four continents as missionaries.

Will you ask God for your one?


All Scripture is taken from the NIV, 1984 edition, unless otherwise noted.
Quotes marked with an asterisk (*) are taken from : 
Trotman, Dawson. Born to Reproduce. Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2008. Print.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Born to Reproduce: Day 6 - Growing Up


Today we continue our study on Dawson Trotman's Born to Reproduce.


Please read pages 13-19 in the booklet, or the section entitled "Spiritual Babes",  which starts at the very end of page 2 in the online document.


Dawson Trotman says:  "One other thing that can keep people from having children is immaturity. God in His wisdom saw to it that little children cannot have babies.  A little boy must first grow to sufficient maturity to be able to earn a living, and a little girl must be old enough to care for a baby."


Where do you think you are, spiritual maturity-wise?  This is not a question of knowledge - knowledge of theology, doctrine, the Bible or whatever; as Trotman goes on to say, "I know many people who can argue the pre-, the post- and the amillennial position and who know much about dispensations, but who are still immature."


No, this is a matter of growing up, growing close.  It is a matter of submission and application; a matter of right living.  Don't get me wrong, theology is important!  Study is important!  But only if the move you toward Christ.



There was a time when each of us found all the fulfillment we needed in someone feeding us, putting us to bed, holding us, and making the occasional funny face at us.


But we grew.  We developed.  Relationships became important, as did responsibility.  Doing the right things and doing them well.  Raising our families.  When we see that adult who still thinks and lives like a teenager, self-centered and avoiding life's responsibilities we shake our heads, right?


Trotman makes the case, and I could not agree more, that what we disdain in the physical world, we make generous allowances for in the spiritual world.


Salvation is important (the church falls short in that message as well, but that is for another time).  However, salvation is but the first step.  Jesus did not say 'go ye and make church members' or 'go ye and make converts', He said "go ye and make disciples"!  


The church has been struggling with this from the beginning.  Paul wrote a letter to the church in Corinth saying "Brothers, I could not address you as spiritual but as worldly —mere infants in Christ.  I gave you milk, not solid food, for you were not yet ready for it. Indeed, you are still not ready."


What would Paul say in a letter to your church?


Questions:


How "grown up" do you feel?
What steps do you take to keep growing?
What challenges does your church face in this area?



All Scripture is taken from the NIV, 1984 edition, unless otherwise noted.
Quotes marked with an asterisk (*) are taken from : 
Trotman, Dawson. Born to Reproduce. Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2008. Print.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Born to Reproduce: DAY 5 – Impairment



Today we continue our study on Born to Reproduce
Dawson states that there are three hindrances that can prevent spiritual reproduction that have direct correlations to similar hindrances to physical reproduction:  in both realms there must be union, there must be a certain level of maturity, and there must not be a preventative disease or impairment.  It is the last of those three which we will discuss today.  

About this, Dawson says:  “Another factor that can hinder reproduction is disease or impairment to some part of the body that is needed for reproductive purposes. In the spiritual realm sin is the disease that can keep one from winning the lost.

Sin is the disease.

If we have determined, as asked in our last discussion, that we want to make disciples, ( in Dawson’s terms – that we want to have spiritual children), and if we have determined to live in union with Christ, then the next step in to live healthy lives.

Sin is the disease.
We must address this carefully, but accurately.  Do you have to be sin-free in order to begin to disciple someone else?  That is a tall order.  The world is a messy place.  God calls us toward holiness and perfection, and that is the direction to which we must be moving.  But we are not to wait until we are perfect before we reach to disciple, to mentor someone else.

Still, sin is the disease.

We are all prone to error.  We all slip up.  Let’s just say it – we all sin.  But one thing that will constantly keep us from bringing others into discipleship is ongoing, intentional, unrepentant sin.  That is a disease in our spirits; a disease that brings death.  James wrote about it this way:  but each one is tempted when, by his own evil desire, he is dragged away and enticed.  Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death. (James 1:14-15)

What we are seeking here is spiritual reproduction that leads to new life.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Questions:

Can a person be saved and continue in a lifestyle of sin?  

What kind of sins might these be?  

Are there any traces of these in your own life?

All Scripture is taken from the NIV, 1984 edition, unless otherwise noted.
Quotes marked with an asterisk (*) are taken from :
Trotman, Dawson. Born to Reproduce. Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2008. Print.Trotman, Dawson. Born to Reproduce. Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2008. Print.