As a new year begins, the pull to invent a shiny “vision” is real, but the way of Jesus is beautifully simple. He has already told us what matters: make disciples. This means more than attending or being nice; it’s walking with real people so they increasingly trust and obey Jesus in the everyday stuff of life. You don’t carry this alone, because he ties the command to his presence—I am with you always. Imagine a year shaped less by what is urgent and more by what is essential: helping someone follow Jesus. Let’s take Jesus seriously, not as a slogan but as a way of life. [01:07]
Matthew 28:18–20: The risen Jesus says all authority is his, so go into every people group and help others become learners of him—mark them with the life of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, teach them to live out everything he taught, and remember: he will be with you every step until the story reaches its end.
Reflection: Who is one person God has already placed in your life to invest in this year, and what simple first step will you take this week to move toward a discipling relationship?
The mission of Jesus is not powered by your willpower or personality; it is carried out in his presence. Before you pour out, you are invited to receive—strength in grace, not strength in striving. Starting from grace protects you from burnout on one side and pride on the other. As you consider investing in others, make it your first habit to come empty-handed to Jesus and let him fill you. Then give what you have received, not what you wish you had. [02:35]
2 Timothy 2:1–2: Be strengthened by the grace that is in Christ Jesus. What you’ve seen and heard, entrust to reliable people who can, in turn, pass it along to others as well.
Reflection: Where are you trying to serve from sheer effort rather than grace, and what specific daily practice this week will help you receive from Jesus before you give (for example, a set time of Scripture and unhurried prayer before your first task)?
No guilt, just a clear next step: pray, choose a name, and make a simple ask. You might say, “Would you meet for eight weeks to read the Bible and talk about following Jesus in the everyday stuff of life?” Keep it uncomplicated: set a weekly time, catch up briefly, read a passage, ask what it shows about God, consider how to live it, and pray. Faithful is often available, teachable, and reliable—not polished. And as it grows, ask one more question: “Who’s your one?” [03:37]
Isaiah 32:8: A noble person makes noble plans, and holds steady by carrying those noble plans through.
Reflection: What is the name of the person you will invite, what exactly will you say in your message or call, and when (day and time) will you reach out?
Wisdom builds with a plan, and humility prays with open hands. Followers of Jesus are both strategic and dependent: receive, rely, and then disciple. Sketch a simple plan for meeting with someone, but ask the Lord to order your steps and revise your plans as he leads. We plan like it matters, and we pray like we cannot do any of it without Jesus—because we can’t. This is how clarity grows and pressure lifts. [04:53]
Proverbs 16:9: We map out our way in our hearts, but the Lord is the one who directs where our feet actually go.
Reflection: What specific weekly rhythm (day, time, place, and length) will you adopt for discipling conversations, and what short prayer will you pray before each meeting to express your dependence on Jesus?
Time is real, and life moves faster than we expect; tomorrow isn’t guaranteed. Picture a highlight reel one year from now—what do you want to thank God for that isn’t just busy but truly meaningful? Let that vision nudge you toward faithful, present-tense obedience today. Like Paul, aim to finish the work Jesus gave you, carrying good news about the grace that changed you. Not perfection—just steady faithfulness, face by face, story by story. Start today, not someday. [05:42]
Acts 20:24: My life doesn’t hold its value in comfort or safety; it matters if I finish the task the Lord Jesus gave me—sharing the message of God’s astonishing grace with others.
Reflection: When you imagine looking back a year from now, whose face do you hope to name as part of your discipleship story, and what first step will you take today (text, calendar invite, or prayerful visit) to begin that story?
Starting a new year, the call is not to chase a clever vision but to take Jesus seriously. The clear priority is the Great Commission: make disciples. Not simply attending services, acquiring religious information, or being generally nice, but actually helping real people learn to trust, obey, and follow Jesus in everyday life. Jesus anchors this mission with his promise: “I am with you always.” The work is not powered by charisma or willpower but by his presence. With that in view, the year ahead is framed by a searching question: one year from now, what do you want to be able to thank God for? Psalm 90:12 urges a wise numbering of days; life drifts toward the urgent unless purposefully ordered around what matters most.
Two pitfalls get named and resisted. First, idealized dreams of church can harden into demands and then judgment—of each other and even of God. Bonhoeffer’s warning rebukes wishful dreaming that loves an imagined community more than the actual people in front of us. Second, attempts to “do discipleship” in our own strength end in burnout or pride. Paul’s counsel to Timothy sets the order: before giving, receive—“be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus.” From that grace flows a simple, multiplying pattern: pass on what you’ve received to faithful people who will teach others also.
A plain, compelling aim emerges: everyone discipling one. Make it normal in the church family to invest in another’s growth with Scripture open, grace as the source, and dependence as the posture. This requires both strategy and surrender—plan like it matters; pray like it can’t happen without Jesus. A “dependence triangle” keeps the rhythm clear: receive grace, rely on Jesus (prayer and fasting), and disciple others. To move from inspiration to action, three lanes are offered: if discipling no one, prayerfully choose one person and make a simple eight-week ask; if discipling someone loosely, add a gentle weekly structure with Scripture, reflection, obedience, and prayer; if discipling is going well, lean into multiplication and ask, “Who’s your one?” The urgency is real—life is a mist—so begin today. The hope for next year is not more activity but named stories and faces: ordinary people helping others follow Jesus, content to be dependent rather than impressive.
Jesus never meant for his mission to be powered listen. Jesus never meant for his mission to be powered by your personality or willpower. This is very important. In fact, he meant it to be carried out in his presence. That's what he meant it to be. Jesus never meant for his mission to be powered by your personality or willpower. It's this. He meant it to be carried out in his presence
[00:16:27]
(28 seconds)
#MissionInHisPresence
So here's the posture I want for this year. We're going to plan like it matters. We're gonna plan like it matters. And then we're gonna pray like we can't do it without Jesus. We wanna be a people that plan like it matters, but we wanna be the kind of people who pray. Pray as if though nothing can be accomplished without Jesus. Because by the way, listen, it can't.
[00:31:08]
(34 seconds)
#PlanPrayDepend
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