Growth Groups: How to Lead Disciple-Making Small Groups by Colin Marshall - Pitfalls for Growth Groups
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Description
Marshall examines small group ministries, analyzing concerning trends that may undermine the aspect of the gospel. He accentuates a testimonial from a small group member who felt God's presence through communal support, contradicting the intimate environment of small groups with the more formal church services. This sense of community and mission within small groups often seems appealing. However, Marshall assesses the use of buzzwords like ‘community,’ ‘experience,’ and ‘mission,’ suggesting that while they appear aligned with Christian values, they may carry additional connotations requiring scrutiny. He warns that these groups might inadvertently create a parallel structure that dilutes the gospel’s message. Additionally, Marshall surveys the Christian concept of community, implanted in God’s relational nature. Humans, created for relationships, echo this divine plan disrupted by the Fall. The gospel aims to restore communion between God and humanity through Christ's sacrifice. Christians, unified in a new society featured by love and unity, should prioritize spiritual expansion over hardly cherishing human relationships. JI Packer supports this, noting that small groups often prioritize Christian friendships over seeking God, potentially diminishing their spiritual distinctiveness. Marshall stresses that Christian groups must be grounded in the gospel, focusing on spiritual growth and helping members view their situations through a faith-centered lens. Also, Marshall comments the hyperbole on ‘experience’ within small groups. He warns against creating a “small group god,” where God’s character is shaped by group dynamics, potentially leading to a distorted intuitiveness of God. Emotional uplift within the group should not be mistaken for genuine spiritual experiences, as this can mislead individuals about true spiritual intimacy with God. Lastly, Marshall describes concerns such as Anti-preaching, Anti-minister, and Anti-church. He warns that small groups might devalue preaching, compete with pastoral leadership, and reduce responsibility to the comprehensive church, resulting in brokenness and diminished unity. Marshall underlines that small groups should complement, not compete with, church structures, ensuring the proclamation of the word, pastoral authority, and church unity remain intact. This summary is made by Eleven Labs AI audio generated platform: elevenlabs.io/?from=partnerhall9106 Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian If you want to support this podcast's operational cost, you can do so here: venmo.com/u/edisonwu --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/edison-wu/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/edison-wu/support
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