Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Welcome to my blog!

            Yes, after all these years, I am finally going to do a blog! Until recently, I never saw the need for my blogging, and I never had anything worth blogging aboutBut that all began to change the day Joe Allison came to the School of Theology and spoke to the faculty about getting published.

            Joe is the Editorial Director at Warner Press (the publishing company of the Church of God, Anderson). He has invested a lifetime in publishing, and knows more about it than I ever will. One of many helpful things he said was about promoting and selling books on the Internet; a helpful (indispensable?) tool is -- you guessed it -- the Blog! That’s point number one.

            Number two is that I needed something worth blogging about. It had to be something that I know something about, and something worth writing about! I know a lot about a lot of things, but most of them aren’t worth taking up valuable bandwidth.

And so, for weeks and weeks, the idea of my blogging just sat on the shelf. Like George Will said on Fox News on April 21, “Don't speak unless you can improve the silence.” So I kept quiet in the Blogosphere.

But finally it came to me – 

I do have something worth saying about discipling in the 21st century! 

First this disclaimer: I am not an expert discipler, I have no track record of having discipled thousands, hundreds, or even a handful of people. In fact, as a professor if I were giving myself a grade in “Discipling,” it would be a D- or F. Yep, that bad.

But here’s the backstory:

1. I’ve been a professor of Christian education at Anderson University School of Theology since 1984.


2. When I interviewed for this job, Dr. Donald Courtney asked me – if I were given the opportunity to rename Christian education, what would I name it? After thinking for a few seconds, I said, “Discipleship.” Because that’s what I believe Christian education is about.


3. After teaching a required Christian education course for 27 years, I decided that my approach was faulty. It wasn’t getting the job done. I scrapped the course and during my Spring 2012 sabbatical I designed a brand new course to take its place, “Discipling in Christian Communities.”

4. This new course included new text books, new material, new approaches, and new ideas. Along with some repurposed ideas from my “old” course: ideas that were good then and are still good now.

5. The first time I taught the new course, it was an unmitigated disaster (BTW, I wonder what a
mitigated disaster might be?). My teaching plan didn’t work, a third of my students hated the course, one of them went to the dean to complain about me, the course, my chosen textbooks & etc., and my student evaluations were in the toilet. So I took their criticisms to heart, did some prolonged and deep reflection, and redesigned the course.


6. The second time I taught the course, it was a huge success. The students loved it, I loved it, we learned and grew together, and they wrote some excellent ministry plans for discipling. I am eagerly anticipating my third time to offer this course!


7. In this process, I have collected an enormous amount of discipling material and ideas. Some of the ideas are “my own,” some of them are from other leaders. And I now feel that I actually know something worth sharing with the world about discipling in the 21
st century.



So we’re off and running! Thanks for reading this blog. Look for regular posts.

11 comments:

  1. I'm looking forward to reading what you write here!

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  2. Congratulations, John! It takes courage to start and real discipline to continue. You have both in spades. I look forward to reading what you'll share about discipleship.

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  3. Hello Dr. Aukerman! I look forward to following the new blog! I am particularly interested in what kinds of changes you made to the course that made it so much more engaging (remember that I was one of those that enjoyed it though. Ha). Some future blog fodder, perhaps?

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  4. Do it! You are one of the most 'down to earth' teachers I remember. Seeing me here gives Joe's post punch ... courage John ... bring it on.

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  5. Thanks for this helpful new resource! I appreciate your research and insight.

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  6. Wonderful! Excited to learn more though this blog and the course!

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  7. An interesting and challenging course. This is much needed in the local churches. Will be exciting to learn how to teach this to others. Some I have talked to want me to open some dialog with them as I learn in this class.

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  8. I found that the first assigned reading in your book, "Discipleship That Transforms" and Steve Smith's book "T4T" revealed to me that what I know about discipleship is not dangerous enough to the enemy nor effective enough in the Kingdom. I am eagerly anticipating learning more so that I can one day wake up and hear the enemy say, "Great, she is up now."

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  9. I appreciate your honesty in this blog and I look forward to being more intentional about developing a discipleship plan with this class.

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  10. I've been involved with a small group for the last three years or so and we have put a lot of focus on being better disciplers. It seems what I've learned most through this experience is that making disciples is hard, but I truly feel like it doesn't have to be. It sounds like the evolution of this course has involved a lot of hard work as well as trial and error, but with good fruit being borne as a result. I'm hopeful that after completing the course I will be able to overcome some of the difficulties I've had in the past in obeying (or attempting to) the great commission.

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