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  • Evangelism vs. Discipleship

    Posted by Pastoral Care on August 15, 2025 at 12:14 am

    Key Scriptures

    Matthew 28:18–20; Acts 2:41–42; 2 Timothy 2:2

    Introduction

    Many believers are passionate about evangelism — sharing the good news so people can meet Jesus. Others are passionate about discipleship — helping believers grow into maturity.

    The truth is, the Great Commission calls us to both. Evangelism without discipleship is like delivering a newborn and leaving them without care. Discipleship without evangelism is like feeding the same family but never inviting anyone new to the table.

    Jesus’ model was clear: win them → grow them → send them.

    Biblical Foundation

    • Matthew 28:18–20 – The Great Commission includes going (evangelism) and teaching (discipleship).
    • Acts 2:41–42 – New believers were added and then devoted themselves to teaching, fellowship, and prayer.
    • 2 Timothy 2:2 – Paul instructs Timothy to pass on what he learned to faithful people who will teach others.

    Kingdom Principles

    • Evangelism starts the journey; discipleship sustains it.
    • Evangelism is the front door; discipleship is the house where growth happens.
    • Every believer can do both.
    • You may lead someone to Christ and also walk with them as they grow.
    • The goal is multiplication.
    • Disciples make disciples, who make disciples — spreading the Kingdom exponentially.

    Practical Differences: Evangelism => Discipleship

    • Sharing the good news => Teaching and walking with believers
    • Short-term entry point => Long-term growth process
    • Focused on conversion => Focused on transformation
    • Introduces to Christ => Deepens relationship with Christ

    How They Work Together

    • Step 1: Evangelism — Introduce someone to Jesus through words, actions, and love.
    • Step 2: Discipleship — Walk alongside them, helping them grow in faith, prayer, and the Word.
    • Step 3: Multiplication — Equip them to reach others and repeat the process.

    Common Pitfalls to Avoid

    • Stopping at conversion – Leaving new believers without support.
    • Overloading new believers – Expecting them to grasp deep theology too quickly.
    • Separating the two – Treating evangelism and discipleship as unrelated instead of connected stages.

    David led his co-worker to Christ over lunch. Instead of leaving it there, he invited him to a small Bible study, introduced him to church friends, and met regularly for prayer. Within a year, his co-worker was discipling a new believer himself — evangelism flowed naturally into discipleship.

    Action Challenge: “This Week’s Mission”

    • Think of one person you know who is not yet a believer and one who is a new believer.
    • Pray for both, and look for a way to share the gospel with the first and encourage or mentor the second.

    Interactive Discussion Prompts

    1. When you lead someone to Christ, what simple first steps could you take to help them grow?
    2. Have you experienced a time when someone invested in your spiritual growth? How did it shape you?

    Share your thoughts for feedback.

    Pastoral Care replied 1 week, 1 day ago 1 Member · 0 Replies
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