Everyday Disciples: Covenant Discipleship with Youth
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About this ebook
Everyday Disciples: Covenant Discipleship with Youth by Chris Wilterdink resources pastors, youth leaders, and youth groups with information and planning materials related to Covenant Discipleship and accountability practices. Covenant Discipleship encourages youth to connect with Christ and one another through mutual accountability. It also encourages a networked support structure for living in the world as Christ followers.
Chris Wilterdink
Director of Young People’s Ministries Development. Chris has a BA in English Education, and an MS in Project Management, and over 15 years of local-church youth ministry experience. He is passionate about leadership and faith development in young people and helping ministry leaders understand their value in the lives of young people. A Stephen Minister, Chris is a native of Colorado living in Franklin, TN with his wife Emily, 2 children, and sausage-shaped beagle.
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Everyday Disciples - Chris Wilterdink
INTRODUCTION
Everyday Things, Every Day
When we think about natural or human events that change the world, the easiest moments to recall are famous events or people that seemingly shock the world and things are different afterward. In history class, this would be called the great man theory. Popular in the 1800s (the same time that Methodism was booming in the United States), the theory said human history can largely be explained by the arrival of highly influential individuals that make change happen. The world is different because of Jesus or because of the apostle Paul. The world is different because of Genghis Khan. The world is different because of Mother Teresa, Martin Luther, Martin Luther King Jr., John Wesley, John Calvin, Rosa Parks . . . The world is also different because of the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004, the Industrial Revolution, the 2011 earthquake in Japan, the Manhattan Project, the bubonic plague, famine, and many other natural or human-made events. The list could go on and on. Yet for their infamy, these people and events are just moments in the long timeline of God’s relationship with people and the world.
Smaller acts, done regularly by many, actually shape our world and our lives in a much greater way than a handful of moments. Take, for example, the earthworm. These armless, legless creatures make a huge difference in shaping the world, through doing what they are designed to do every day. One earthworm can digest thirty-six tons of soil in one year, and in places where earthworms are common, an average of twenty-five worms live in a square foot of soil. That means about 2.5 million worms per hectare (about 2.5 acres) are just being worms: eating dirt and changing the shape of our world by moving more than forty-five metric tons of dirt a year! The world has about 1,386,000 hectares of farming land, so worms just doing their thing every day move over 6.2 billion metric tons of earth every year (Land Use table, A4, FAO Statistical Yearbook). Every year, worms move enough earth to equal the weight of 118 Great Pyramids of Giza!
World changers don’t need to be big and famous; they need to live into their purpose every day. As people, we are created to be in relationship with God, to be stewards of the world and caretakers for our brothers and sisters. Covenant Discipleship is a way for people to do everyday things every day—and that leads to transformation. Yes, there will always be famous people or historical markers that define ages or generations, but the slow and steady process of salvation in the world happens because of everyday people doing everyday things every day.
Good News, Better News
There’s an old joke that goes something like this: The good news is that there is a Messiah, a Savior. The better news is that it’s not you!
The gospel of the life of Jesus is literally good news! So we take comfort in the fact that we are not the saviors of ourselves or the saviors of the world. God, through the life of Jesus and the presence of the Holy Spirit, has already provided that salvation. The better news is that we can be partners in grace. By living out Christ’s teachings, we put ourselves more often into places where we can make a difference and differences are made in us. We are participants in God’s kingdom.
The good news about covenants, discipleship, accountability, and the acts of compassion, justice, devotion, and worship is this: In some way, we are already doing them! We are keeping promises to others. We are living out some of Christ’s teachings. We are accountable to others, and we are already trying to make the world a better place and better ourselves. Covenant Discipleship provides a framework and language for us to identify what we are already doing as disciples of Jesus Christ.
The better news then is that the support found in Covenant Discipleship groups improves the chances that the good things we do now become regular habits, and that those everyday habits have the potential to change the world and change who we are. This better news also means that Covenant Discipleship will keep us looking for new and different ways to live out our faith. Being in a Covenant Discipleship group keeps faith alive, healthy, growing, and dynamic. By sharing our own stories and experiences and listening to stories from others, the chances that we’ll see God and experience Jesus in different ways are greatly improved.
An Introduction
Disciples who live by a covenant together are an every day
people. They seek to honor God and love neighbor every day. Seemingly small everyday acts, when done every day, become the mustard seeds of faith that can move mountains. Everyday people doing everyday things every day can transform the world and themselves for the better.
Covenant Discipleship, as a concept and practice, adapts the accountability aspects of early Methodist class meetings. Today’s Covenant Discipleship groups, for any age group, should not simply re-create a model of community from the 1800s. However, Covenant Discipleship groups for youth today should keep two important elements from John Wesley’s original class meetings: mutual accountability and support. Young people thrive in connection, in communities of support. Covenants are sacred agreements between God and people that create relationships because of commitments to each other. Discipleship is an active following of Jesus’ life and teachings. Patterning our own lives after the teachings of Jesus is no small feat. People are beings designed to be in community and relationship with each other. What better way, then, to pursue a life of discipleship than with the support and encouragement of a community?
Covenant Discipleship groups help encourage accountability and action for youth who seek to intentionally pattern their lives as Christians. Groups in which open discussion encourages members to better love God and love neighbor are a model way for young people to be active participants in their own discipleship journey. Covenants are God’s way of being in community with humanity, and patterning our lives as disciples of Jesus Christ is one way to reply to God’s call for relationship. John Wesley found that by combining covenants (offers of relationship initiated by God) with discipleship (a life patterned after Jesus’ life and teachings) among small groups of Christians encouraged the participants in those groups to live more complete Christian lives—ones focused on personal and social transformation.
Members of a Covenant Discipleship group write a covenant with each other that outlines how each member of the group will live out his or her faith as a disciple. Then the group meets regularly to keep each other accountable to the promises participants have made, with the help of a class leader or guide. These groups help youth thrive in mutual accountability as they journey toward Christian perfection. They don’t require space, don’t require curriculum; they just require a little leadership to get going and a commitment from members to do everyday things every day. Regular meetings and consistent action create transformation over time, and the changes in a person and in a culture that come about because of intentionality can be incredible.
This resource is intended for adult leaders of youth who are committed to helping them grow as disciples of Jesus. Read on for a little insight into the history of Covenant Discipleship, an ideal way to live a more balanced Christian life. Use this resource in combination with the resources for adults and children, Disciples Making Disciples: A Guide for Covenant Discipleship Groups and Class Leaders by Steven W. Manskar, and Growing Everyday Disciples: Covenant Discipleship with Children by Melanie C. Gordon, Susan Groseclose, and Gayle Quay, to inspire your whole church to engage in this method of creating world-changing disciples of Jesus Christ. May John Wesley’s words from The Character of a Methodist
encourage you:
Is thy heart right, as my heart is with thine? I ask no farther question. If it be, give me thy hand. For opinions, or terms, let us not destroy the work of God. Dost thou love and serve God? It is enough. I give thee the right hand of fellowship. If there be any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any bowels and mercies; let us strive together for the