Discipling 4: Eat Together

In my quest to understand how to make disciples who multiply, the most common answer I’ve had is “I don’t know”. Christian authors I’ve talked with can explain their discipleship models in detail, but if I ask them why their kids turned out so well, how they discipled them, they don’t know. It just happened. Then they say things like “life on life” which I’ve never understood. What does that mean?

Several months into this I started asking better questions, and one of the things I discovered is that meals are a big deal. It’s possible that church in the first century wasn’t around a house, but around a meal: the Lord’s Supper. That is, the meal wasn’t the warm-up before the church service, it was church.

“Hey Robert [my Ugandan friend], of all the people you’ve successfully discipled, how many of them did you eat with versus meet with?”

“About 50-50”

“Oh, I don’t mean they became pastors or church leaders, I mean the ones who are overflowing with life in the Holy Spirit”

“Oh, then it’s 100% eating together”

I looked back over my life through this lens, thinking through all the relationships I’ve had where people responded positively to Jesus:

  • Friends from school – oh, my mom would feed them and she actually led them to Christ
  • Guys I played sports with – oh, it was on the trips, when we ate together
  • Co-workers at my corporate job – oh, it was eating lunch together
  • People who lived in our basement suite – oh, they’d come up for dinner
  • My children – oh, we ate together (In fact, my eldest just told me last week that a big part of him following Jesus was listening to us debrief what God had spoken that morning and how it played out during the day, at the dinner table)

This is why The Alpha Course works, why Bible Studies with potluck dinners are more memorable, etc. But let’s be clear: it’s not about the meal, it’s about Jesus at the meal. The Passover had an empty chair for the Messiah, but in communion we eat Jesus’ flesh and drink his blood. It’s like communally getting filled with the Holy Spirit. Without God’s presence, it’s just food.

When I had an office job I used to schedule 4 breakfast meetings and 4 lunch meetings every week. We had young kids and I had a long commute, so this was the only way to fit in my discipleship meetings. This bore pretty close to zero fruit, because I wasn’t really with them to eat with them, it was just an efficient way to have meetings over my meal breaks.

Eating with people for real is connecting with them because you love them. Listening to their stories because you want to know them. Sharing things that aren’t planned just because you feel loved and want to be understood. This is where Jesus is at work, off the margins of our agendas.

This is a different way:

  • Just disciple the people you eat with (it scales up and down with how extraverted you are)
  • Invite people to remember Jesus is here. It looks like dinner with Jesus: talking with him, sharing words from him, reading scripture, listening to people’s stories
  • We’re proclaiming the kingdom, the banquet feast we’re going to
  • Church is fun: eat together, share your stories and get prayed for with Jesus’ power present to transform and heal
  • “Plant a church” by going to dinner somewhere and teaching them how to make it into the Lord’s Supper

Leave a comment