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Choose the Life: Exploring a Faith That Embraces Discipleship

Choose the Life: Exploring a Faith That Embraces Discipleship

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Character based discipleship
Review: "Choose the Life" addresses fundamental reasons why many discipleship programs fail to work. Bill Hull's thesis is as follows, "A transformed life is needed, a life of depth of true disciples who have chosen to follow the life that Jesus lived. The reason the mission languishes is the acceptance of a nondiscipleship Christianity that creates shallow believers with hollow lives who don't affect those around them. This has led to the marginalization of the gospel and has retarded its spread because of its lack of authenticity and power" (215).

I have been a long-time fan of Bill Hull's writings and his passion for disciplemaking. With stark vulnerability, Hull reveals his own weaknesses and reasons why disciplemaking wasn't working as he desired at his Church. Hull asserts that character is formed in community and the New Testament model of discipleship should have the following characteristics:

1. A disciple submits to a teacher who teaches him or her how to follow Jesus.
2. A disciple learns Jesus' words.
3. A disciple learns Jesus' way of ministry.
4. A disciple imitates Jesus' life and character.
5. A disciple finds and teaches other disciples for Jesus.

Hull states, "The reason characteristics 2 through 4 are most common is that they are the least challenging of the five. Frankly, people can do these without having to change. It goes back to the indictment that we have found ways to be Christian without becoming Christlike. Items 1 and 5 make it all work" (37).

"Choose the Life" goes far beyond methodology to the underlying principles of how discipleship can be effective to transform others. Throughout the book, Hull emphasizes the necessity of relationships of trust in an environment of grace. Hull emphasizes that "people only accept truth they trust" (130). Hull candidly reveals his own spiritual journey how he, as a successful pastor, author, and discipleship leader, experienced brokenness before God resulting in a new perspective on ministry. "The key to developing character is brokenness before God. This brokenness is a product of humility and submission. These are the very qualities that Jesus modeled as his core" (194). God led him to an entirely new understanding of humility and submission to God, "I had so romanticized the concept of brokenness that I saw it as an event with a beginning and an end rather than a process - a state of being" (197). This is a significant concept for a proper understanding of brokenness.

I would be remiss if I did not reveal the source of the ideas which led to Bill Hull's spiritual revelation from success to significance. Hull clearly credits Bill Thrall and Bruce McNichol from Leadership Catalyst and their seminal book on character based leadership, "The Ascent of a Leader." Hull has masterfully applied the principles from the Leadership Catalyst workshop " Forming the High Trust Culture" to the disciplemaking context. I recommend that anyone who is serious about discipleship, attend the "Forming the High Trust Culture" workshop from Leadership Catalyst to learn the biblical principles which enables truth to transform others - I have witnessed firsthand its amazing effectiveness in transforming others into the likeness of Jesus Christ. "Choose the Life" emphasizes the necessity for a disciplemaker to develop the inner life because ministry flows from being. This will be one of the primary textbooks for my students in discipleship.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Character based discipleship
Review: "Choose the Life" addresses fundamental reasons why many discipleship programs fail to work. Bill Hull's thesis is as follows, "A transformed life is needed, a life of depth of true disciples who have chosen to follow the life that Jesus lived. The reason the mission languishes is the acceptance of a nondiscipleship Christianity that creates shallow believers with hollow lives who don't affect those around them. This has led to the marginalization of the gospel and has retarded its spread because of its lack of authenticity and power" (215).

I have been a long-time fan of Bill Hull's writings and his passion for disciplemaking. With stark vulnerability, Hull reveals his own weaknesses and reasons why disciplemaking wasn't working as he desired at his Church. Hull asserts that character is formed in community and the New Testament model of discipleship should have the following characteristics:

1. A disciple submits to a teacher who teaches him or her how to follow Jesus.
2. A disciple learns Jesus' words.
3. A disciple learns Jesus' way of ministry.
4. A disciple imitates Jesus' life and character.
5. A disciple finds and teaches other disciples for Jesus.

Hull states, "The reason characteristics 2 through 4 are most common is that they are the least challenging of the five. Frankly, people can do these without having to change. It goes back to the indictment that we have found ways to be Christian without becoming Christlike. Items 1 and 5 make it all work" (37).

"Choose the Life" goes far beyond methodology to the underlying principles of how discipleship can be effective to transform others. Throughout the book, Hull emphasizes the necessity of relationships of trust in an environment of grace. Hull emphasizes that "people only accept truth they trust" (130). Hull candidly reveals his own spiritual journey how he, as a successful pastor, author, and discipleship leader, experienced brokenness before God resulting in a new perspective on ministry. "The key to developing character is brokenness before God. This brokenness is a product of humility and submission. These are the very qualities that Jesus modeled as his core" (194). God led him to an entirely new understanding of humility and submission to God, "I had so romanticized the concept of brokenness that I saw it as an event with a beginning and an end rather than a process - a state of being" (197). This is a significant concept for a proper understanding of brokenness.

I would be remiss if I did not reveal the source of the ideas which led to Bill Hull's spiritual revelation from success to significance. Hull clearly credits Bill Thrall and Bruce McNichol from Leadership Catalyst and their seminal book on character based leadership, "The Ascent of a Leader." Hull has masterfully applied the principles from the Leadership Catalyst workshop " Forming the High Trust Culture" to the disciplemaking context. I recommend that anyone who is serious about discipleship, attend the "Forming the High Trust Culture" workshop from Leadership Catalyst to learn the biblical principles which enables truth to transform others - I have witnessed firsthand its amazing effectiveness in transforming others into the likeness of Jesus Christ. "Choose the Life" emphasizes the necessity for a disciplemaker to develop the inner life because ministry flows from being. This will be one of the primary textbooks for my students in discipleship.


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