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Choose the Life: Exploring a Faith that Embraces Discipleship

Choose the Life: Exploring a Faith that Embraces Discipleship
By Bill Hull, Dallas Willard

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Many churches harbor harried congregations merely going through the motions--sleepwalking saints who fail to experience transformed living. Many are unable and unwilling to share the gospel, convinced that it's not their "gift." True disciples do more than the minimum, explains Hull. They choose the life and commit to bringing Jesus to the lost. They live out their beliefs and walk the walk. Submission shows the doubting world that Christ is embedded in their character. Choose the Life is a practical tool as accessible to laypeople as ministry leaders. Any church seeking life-changing significance will be challenged by this cutting-edge resource. No hand-holding here, Choose the Life shows church members how to take individual responsibility for both being discipled and discipling others.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #265460 in Books
  • Published on: 2004-05-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages

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Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover
"Christianity without discipleship is always Christianity without Christ."--Deitrich Bonhoeffer Get ready to explore a faith that does not separate salvation from discipleship, but embraces the seamless journey from conversion to transformation. In Choose the Life, discipleship expert Bill Hull breaks new ground, challenging what we've made of the gospel. He believes that the Great Commission has more to do with spiritual depth than strategies and structures. Jesus is calling us to choose the life of thinking as he thought, living as he lived, loving as he loved, ministering as he ministered, and leading as he led. Anything less is Christ-less Christianity. "This book is worth the price simply for Bill's elegant, comprehensive, penetrating five-fold definition of what a disciple is."--Brian McLaren, author of A New Kind of Christian "Bill Hull reminds us that being a Christian and being Christlike are synonymous. Choose the Life pinpoints the missing pieces of contemporary discipleship and delivers a compelling call to become a community of obedient, transparent disciples."--Judith Hougen, assistant professor of English, Northwestern College "Bill takes seriously the challenge to believe, live, love, serve, and lead like Jesus."--Alan Andrews, U. S. director, The Navigators "Through the experiences of his own journey Bill Hull challenges and, I believe, effectively guides us to see our lives formed through obediently following Jesus as opposed to a myriad of hollow options."--Bill Thrall, founding partner, Leadership Catalyst, Inc.

About the Author
Bill Hull is a writer and discipleship evangelist, as well as the founder of T-Net International, a ministry devoted to transforming churches into disciple-making churches. He has spent twenty years as a pastor and is the author of ten books, including Jesus Christ: Disciplemaker, The Disciple-Making Pastor and The Disciple-Making Church. He and his wife, Jane, live in Long Beach, California.


Customer Reviews

Character based discipleship5
"Choose the Life" addresses fundamental reasons why many discipleship programs fail to work. Bill Hull's thesis is as follows, "A transformed life is needed, a life of depth of true disciples who have chosen to follow the life that Jesus lived. The reason the mission languishes is the acceptance of a nondiscipleship Christianity that creates shallow believers with hollow lives who don't affect those around them. This has led to the marginalization of the gospel and has retarded its spread because of its lack of authenticity and power" (215).

I have been a long-time fan of Bill Hull's writings and his passion for disciplemaking. With stark vulnerability, Hull reveals his own weaknesses and reasons why disciplemaking wasn't working as he desired at his Church. Hull asserts that character is formed in community and the New Testament model of discipleship should have the following characteristics:

1. A disciple submits to a teacher who teaches him or her how to follow Jesus.
2. A disciple learns Jesus' words.
3. A disciple learns Jesus' way of ministry.
4. A disciple imitates Jesus' life and character.
5. A disciple finds and teaches other disciples for Jesus.

Hull states, "The reason characteristics 2 through 4 are most common is that they are the least challenging of the five. Frankly, people can do these without having to change. It goes back to the indictment that we have found ways to be Christian without becoming Christlike. Items 1 and 5 make it all work" (37).

"Choose the Life" goes far beyond methodology to the underlying principles of how discipleship can be effective to transform others. Throughout the book, Hull emphasizes the necessity of relationships of trust in an environment of grace. Hull emphasizes that "people only accept truth they trust" (130). Hull candidly reveals his own spiritual journey how he, as a successful pastor, author, and discipleship leader, experienced brokenness before God resulting in a new perspective on ministry. "The key to developing character is brokenness before God. This brokenness is a product of humility and submission. These are the very qualities that Jesus modeled as his core" (194). God led him to an entirely new understanding of humility and submission to God, "I had so romanticized the concept of brokenness that I saw it as an event with a beginning and an end rather than a process - a state of being" (197). This is a significant concept for a proper understanding of brokenness.

I would be remiss if I did not reveal the source of the ideas which led to Bill Hull's spiritual revelation from success to significance. Hull clearly credits Bill Thrall and Bruce McNichol from Leadership Catalyst and their seminal book on character based leadership, "The Ascent of a Leader." Hull has masterfully applied the principles from the Leadership Catalyst workshop " Forming the High Trust Culture" to the disciplemaking context. I recommend that anyone who is serious about discipleship, attend the "Forming the High Trust Culture" workshop from Leadership Catalyst to learn the biblical principles which enables truth to transform others - I have witnessed firsthand its amazing effectiveness in transforming others into the likeness of Jesus Christ. "Choose the Life" emphasizes the necessity for a disciplemaker to develop the inner life because ministry flows from being. This will be one of the primary textbooks for my students in discipleship.

Character in Community5
Bill Hull has made an important contribution to twenty-first-century disciple-making. Whereas much twentieth-century writing on discipleship focused on the product and the purpose, "Choose the Life" rightly moves us back to the process and the people.

Hull returns us to the ancient paths reminding us that God's way focuses upon character developed in community based upon content that leads to competence. In other words, we start with the heart (character) developed in the home (community) based upon the head (biblical content) resulting in hands (competence to do the work of the ministry).

"Choose the Life" provides the biblical and psychological (in the biblical sense of that word) foundation necessary for effective discipleship. It is a refreshing return to Jesus' model of ministry. Though not "programmatic," it is still practical for real world ministry.

Reviewer: Bob Kellemen, Ph.D., is the author of "Beyond the Suffering: Embracing the Legacy of African American Soul Care and Spiritual Direction," "Soul Physicians," "Spiritual Friends," and the forthcoming "Sacred Friendships: Listening to the Voices of Women Soul Care-Givers and Spiritual Directors."

Great Work on Discipleship5
I think what I liked best about this book is that is far from a "how to" manual on discipleship or church leadership full of "tips and tricks" on how to implement programs or get people to do things. Hull is honest about his own journey, and is compelling when he encourages the reader to choose a life of genuine discipleship. Hull identifies one of the primary problems in our churches as a lack of genuine discipleship, or Christ-likeness in the lives of average believers. The solution, he argues, is to become "intolerant of fringe Christianity." He then uses a five-fold rubric to structure his vision of discipleship: transformed mind, character, relationships, service, and influence.

One of Hull's more gripping arguments is that evangelism begins with a deepening church. Disciples given over to Christ and who have a God-like love for the world will make the best evangelists. In order to extend the branches of the church, it first must strengthen its roots. In addition, Hull argues, evangelism must be a call to a whole life. We should no longer get away with momentary decisions. We must model, encourage, and produce a structure where believers at all maturity levels can find their lives aimed toward Christ.

I am convinced of Hull's basic argument that the Church needs to recapture a robust notion of discipleship. His argument that, "discipleship...is the primary and exclusive work of the church" is right on the money (pg. 29). If you want to be motivated to find out what that means as an individual or even as a leader, this is a tremendous work.