Come to See / Come to Die
A common debate among ministry leaders is whether to use an attractional or missional approach to evangelism.
- Those who advocate for an attractional approach argue that churches should invest heavily in encouraging non-Christians to attend worship services.
- Those who argue for a missional approach say that worship services are for believers and evangelism should happen as believers are sent out into the community.
In many ways, both sides are right. Jesus’ discipleship plan included both “come to me” and “go and tell.” To the unbeliever, Jesus says, “Come.” To the believer, Jesus says, “Go.” Missional evangelism and attractional evangelism don’t contradict each other. They work in tandem.
Jesus’ discipleship process helped people move from “come and see” to “go and tell.”
Every movement of the Spirit of God has created new terminology to explain what that movement is all about.
Jesus introduced two ideas, “come and see” and “come and die,” to describe Jesus’ systematic and sequential discipleship method.
- It explains what Jesus did in the three and a half years he trained his disciples.
– Start with Come and See
Many people think Jesus’ first words of his public ministry were, “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men” (Matthew 4:19). They aren’t. The day after Jesus was baptized, Andrew and John asked him where he was staying. Jesus responds with his first three words: “Come and see” (John 1:39).
That’s as simple as it gets. John and Andrew don’t need to die for him (yet).
- He’s not urging the two to trust or believe in him.
- He’s just asking them to take a step on their journey with him.
- Jesus always started where people were, not where he wanted them to be.
It’s about the lowest level of commitment you can ask of someone. Jesus always met people where they were.
Jesus loves you enough to start where you are, but he loves you too much to let you stay there. That’s why, over the next three and a half years of his ministry, Jesus turned up the heat.
Jesus never did anything by accident.
- He was intentional,
- Perfect,
- Focused on the mission.
Because Jesus starts his ministry with the lowest level of commitment, we can trust the process he models.
– Move to Come and Die
While the starting point of your ministry should have a very low entry barrier, Jesus doesn’t want you to stop there. In the next three and a half years, Jesus adds new levels of commitment to his relationships with those he is discipling.
He tells his followers to “love one another.” He adds a requirement beyond “come and see.”
- Then, he turns up the heat a bit more by adding: “To be my disciple, you need to continue in my Word because then you’ll know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (John 8:31-32).
- More than a dozen times in three and a half years, Jesus redefines what it means to be a disciple.
- Each time, it’s a little bit more intense.
At one point, Jesus stands up, and a big crowd follows him. He turns toward the disciples and says, if you want to follow me, you need to eat my flesh and drink my blood.”
- Imagine how that sounded at the time.
- They had yet to learn what it meant.
- They hadn’t participated in the Lord’s Supper yet.
There’s a big difference between “come and see” and “eat my flesh, drink my blood.”
Jesus had turned up the heat once again.
- Many people stopped following him when he made that statement.
- He was calling people to a higher commitment than they wanted to make.
When you turn up the heat for some people in the church, they won’t stick around.
- If they stick around, they may not take the steps you’re asking them to take.
As Jesus gets closer and closer to the cross, he makes the ultimate request of his followers.
Matthew 16:24
“Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me”
We often don’t understand the full impact of that statement.
- Today a cross is a symbol of hope.
- In Jesus’ time, the cross was a symbol of death.
- Even worse, it symbolized a criminal’s death, where the person would agonizingly suffer in the process.
When Jesus tells his followers to “take up their cross,” he’s saying, “Come and die.”
- The entire process of discipleship is about following Jesus’ process of moving people from “come and see” to “come and die.”
If you study Jesus’ methods in the Gospels, you will see that he tells us what to say and shows us how to build disciples systematically over time.
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