Bobby Harrington is associated with Renew.org and a broadly evangelical, non-denominational discipleship network; Alex Absalom has roots in the missional church and 3DM movements influenced by Mike Breen. The five-context framework draws on both biblical exegesis and sociological research on group dynamics, which some readers may find more pragmatic than theological in its final form.
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For far too long, the church has tried to make disciples using a one-size-fits-all approach. Some churches advocate 1-on-1 discipling, others try getting everyone into a small group, while still others training through mission trips or service projects. Yet others focus all their efforts on attracting people to a large group gathering to hear biblical teaching and preaching. But does one size really fit everyone?
Based on careful biblical study and years of experience making disciples in the local church, Bobby Harrington and Alex Absalom have identified five key relationships where discipleship happens in our lives. In each relational context we need to understand how discipleship occurs and we need to set appropriate expectations for each context.
Discipleship That Fits shows you the five key ways discipleship occurs. It looks at how Jesus made disciples and how disciples were formed in the early church. Each of the contexts is necessary at different times and in different ways as a person grows toward maturity in Christ:
Filled with examples and stories, Alex and Bobby show you how to develop discipleship practices in each relational context by sharing how Jesus did it, how the early church practiced it, and how churches are discipling people today.
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Written at a level adults can engage with
Theological
Does it accurately handle Scripture?
Is the teaching substantive and doctrinally grounded?
Usefulness
Does it reflect a Great Commission mindset?
Will it help readers grow in faith and obedience?
Does it present the gospel clearly?
Does it deepen personal prayer and spiritual intimacy?
Is it suited for group Bible study or church settings?
Does it equip readers to defend and explain the faith?
TheoScope Score = Biblical Faithfulness 85% · Theological Depth 15%