7 Tips for Starting a Discipleship Relationship

Are you looking to begin a discipleship relationship, but arenโ€™t sure how? Here are seven tips to help you establish this intentional relationship, including conversation starters to explain the whats and whys of a discipleship relationship.

Youโ€™re ready to begin a discipleship relationship and have settled on someone you believe God would like you to disciple. Now what?

Here are seven tips for starting a discipleship relationship that will help you take your next steps.

1.  Begin by sharing the โ€œwhatsโ€ of a discipleship relationship.

What do you want to accomplish in your relationship? Try to avoid any Christianese terms that a young believer or non-Christian may be unfamiliar with, but lay out specifically what you would like to do with them.

โ€œIโ€™d like to read the Bible with you sometime.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d like to share some things that have been helpful for me in my walk with God.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d love to share what I have been learning about prayer lately.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d like to help you grow in your relationship with God.โ€

Sharing the specifics brings clarity to a potentially intimidating conversation, and, in a way, itโ€™s a good reminder that disciplemaking isnโ€™t as complicated, mysterious, or daunting as it can seem.

2. Explain the โ€œwhyโ€ of a discipleship relationship.

Share some of what youโ€™ve observed about this person and why you want to disciple them.

โ€œIโ€™ve appreciated the questions youโ€™ve asked about Christianity and God over the past few months.โ€

โ€œWhen I was a younger Christian, I found it so helpful when someone mentored me in how to walk with God. Iโ€™d love to do the same with you.โ€

โ€œReading the Bible has been so helpful and comforting for me when Iโ€™ve gone through hardship. I wonder if it might be helpful for you with what youโ€™re going through right now.โ€

Iโ€™ve found that people are more likely to respond positively if you are specific about the why of discipleship and communicate with intentionality. When people sense your genuine care, concern, and appreciation for them, they know they arenโ€™t just a project to you.

3. Name the time, place, and frequency for discipleship.

The more ambiguous a commitment seems to be, the more fearful people are of entering into it, and the more likely they are to say no. How long are you proposing to meet each week? How many times a week? When? Where? Being clear is helpful.

โ€œWe could read the Bible together once a week over our lunch break. How does that sound?โ€

โ€œCould I share some practices that have been helpful to me in my walk with God while our kids play during our weekly playdates?โ€

Naming a specific time, place, and frequency can help you get something on the schedule. In disciplemaking, try not to go more than two weeks without meeting.

4. Start with a trial period for discipleship.

Proposing a trial period will give both of you an out if the relationship isnโ€™t the best fit or the timing doesnโ€™t seem right.

โ€œWould you like to meet up to pray together once a week after work for the next month?โ€

โ€œDid you want to go on a hike together every Saturday morning for the next month and chat about your questions about Jesus?โ€

5. After the trial period, evaluate whether to continue the discipleship relationship.

Sometimes I find myself wondering whether the other person feels our times together and what Iโ€™m passing on are helpful. Then as I debrief with them, I find out theyโ€™re not only taking what Iโ€™ve shared to heart and putting new tools into practice, but theyโ€™re hungry for more! At other times, I have no such doubts, since itโ€™s clear that both of us are energized and sharpened by the intentional time together.

In either case, I may propose continuing the relationship: โ€œYou know, Iโ€™ve really enjoyed meeting together to talk about spiritual things these past few weeks. Would you want to continue meeting in this way?โ€ Then weโ€™ll set another timeframe after which weโ€™ll reevaluate whether to continue.

If you sense at the end of the trial period that the relationship may not be the best fit or the timing isnโ€™t right to continue discipling the other person, thank them for setting aside the time to meet and debrief on what theyโ€™ve learned.

Of course, ending a discipleship relationship doesnโ€™t mean that the relationship itself needs to end or that youโ€™ll never share any spiritual truths with that person in the future. It simply means that your capacity is freed up to intentionally invest in someone else.

6. Donโ€™t let the fear of vulnerability hold you back from initiating a discipleship relationship.

More times than not, I find that fear of vulnerability holds me back from disciplemaking more than another personโ€™s lack of interest in being discipled. Iโ€™ve yet to ask someone about being discipled who hasnโ€™t responded with interest.

7. Understand your limits for discipleship.

Maybe youโ€™re thinking, I really donโ€™t have a lot of time, but there are two people Iโ€™m interested in discipling together. Can I disciple more than one person at a time?

Of course! I do it all the time, and so did Jesus. We can observe from the four Gospels that while Jesus often engaged with the masses, He spent more in-depth time with His 12 disciples, and even more in-depth time with His inner circle, Peter, James, and John (Matthew 17:1-13).

I would caution against discipling too many people at one time if you want to do it well and adequately meet the individual needs of each person in the group. If Jesus limited himself to an inner circle of three really deep discipleship relationships, thatโ€™s probably a good limit to set for yourself.


Share this Navigators Discipleship Tool

Download a print friendly PDF of the 7 Tips for Starting a Discipleship Relationship resource to pass along. Navigators Discipleship Tools are designed for sharing with your Bible study, church groups, and those you are discipling.



Adapted from โ€œ8 Tips for Starting a Disciplemaking Relationshipโ€ by Alice Matagora.

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Comments:

    1. I’m blessed by the example of Our Lord Jesus in Matthew17:1-13. I need to live this expรฉrience :mass,small
      group,three , four ,in my discipleship.

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