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The Trellis And The Vine (2000)

The Trellis And The Vine (2000)

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4.12 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
1921441631 (ISBN13: 9781921441639)
Language
English

About book The Trellis And The Vine (2000)

The book starts with an excellent introduction as it stirs up much challenges and common issues many leaders would face in the church. From there author laid a solid biblical ground to the purpose of Church and how Jesus calls us to be the "disciples-making" disciples. Then he continued to present how it would look like in modern day churches. Author followed closely to the theme of trellis and vine, which overall made the book very convicting and practical. Highly recommended to all church leaders who wish to see the body of Christ grow and the kingdom expand! There are many books out there that concentrates on the topic of how to do discipleship in the church. Some are exceptionable and some are inadequate and poor. There are so many notions on how to do discipleship in the church. Some are business, market, or professionalized-driven rather than Bible-driven. Discipleship that is Bible-driven is concerned about the glory of God and people’s spiritual well-being/Gospel growth.If you desire your ministry to operate in the realm of changing lives, rather than meeting the criteria of the world, which is based on success, rather than excellence, I recommend that you read this book. Some of the major themes that you will be exposed to is the call to be pastor-trainers/trainers for the sake of Gospel. If you have the ministry mind of a pastor-trainer and the desire to see Gospel growth, then you will have a ministry mind that will help you change how you do discipleship and minister for the sake of the church’s health.Some components that I really appreciated about this book was its emphasis on the vine as being the foundation for ministry. The vine is evangelism and discipleship. Too many times, churches focus on the trellis (i.e. programs, structures, etc.). Not that they are not important, but we must be careful not to put the horse before the carriage. As a result, they spread themselves thin because the priority is not seeing the lost get converted or seeing believers get discipled.Some people come for programs or desire different types of ministries to suit their needs, but they do not desire to make disciples. Leaders need to be careful not to give into this pressure or live under the umbrella of people’s wishes, but must take serious heed to Jesus’ command to make disciples (cf. Matthew 28:19-20). To not take heed, will be disastrous to Gospel growth. You may have a growing church due to more programs, etc., but the essential notion to keep in mind is whether the saints are being discipled. Building disciples from the pulpit is not enough. The book points out that you will need to meet with people whether it be one-on-one or more. And as the numbers grow, you will need more workers in order to keep up with the demand and you will need to take the notion of training new workers seriously. It is not a one man show. It is about finding more faithful workers to come alongside in doing the work of the ministry (2 Timothy 2:2).As people are growing in discipleship and zealous to grow more and more, they will come up with new ideas and will desire to grow others. It will be a little messy and you will probably think there needs to be more structure. The author describes that as a good thing because they are growing. Because you are working with people who are tainted with sin, you will need to expect some chaos, etc. But overtime, through your conviction (“knowledge of God and understanding of the Bible”), character (“godly character and life that accords with sound doctrine”), competence (“ability to prayerfully speak God’s word to others in a variety of ways”), things will begin to gel (78).Another point of importance when it comes to discipleship, is the book’s wise exhortation to trainers, “The motivation to serve and to be trained will come from the gospel and from a deep work of the Spirit in people’s hearts. It won’t come from you going on and on about training, and harassing people until they finally sign up! It’s grace, not guilt. Don’t make ‘training’ the new test of true discipleship” (165). That is a great quote to keep us humble.There are so many other important points to consider, but I will leave you off with this vital point that the book tells one to take mental note of for pastors and trainers, “…we must be willing to lose people from our own congregation if that is better for the growth of the gospel. We must be happy to send members off to other places so that the gospel may grow there as well. And be warned: this will happen if you take gospel growth and training seriously. If you pour your time into people, and mentor and train them, the consequence will often be that some of your best people–in whom you have invested countless hours–will leave you. They will go to the mission field. They will join a church-planting team in another part of your city. They will take a job in a different part of the country because the gospel need is so great there. They will undertake further training, perhaps at theological college or seminary. A commitment to the growth of the gospel will mean that we train people towards maturity not for the benefit of our own churches or fellowships but for the benefit of Christ’s kingdom” (83).

Do You like book The Trellis And The Vine (2000)?

Really helpful book. Read it about a year ago and I often think back to what I learned from it.
—BookWorm

Good basic outline for returning to disciple-making rather than campus building.
—stephanydmbell

Great book for any church leaders. I would highly recommend this.
—Tasia

Helpful, very pragmatic.
—Alicia

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