Dr. Jack L. Arnold
Lesson 16
A LEADER HAS
A PLAN FOR DEVELOPING LEADERS
I.
Training
A.
Why Train? All Christians need to be
discipled, but all disciples are not leaders. Yet, there can be no spiritual, effective leaders without those
who are disciplined followers of Christ.
Even Jesus trained men before He expected them to lead.
B.
Reciprocal. Training is a
relationship between two or three people—leader and followers.
C.
Object of Training. Jesus trained men to
help him in ministry and who would carry on after He was gone. The goal of training is to win another
person to Christ and then take that person from the time of conversion into spiritual
maturity—solid, dedicated, committed, fruitful disciples who can repeat
the process in others. The
ultimate purpose is to equip the trainee to accomplish the Great Commission
through multiplication of leaders who know the discipleship process.
D.
Confidence. For a trainee to want to
be trained, he must have confidence in character, knowledge, philosophy and
convictions of the trainer. It is
all based on respect.
E.
Requirements for a Trainer. He
must know God, have been discipled, know the discipleship
methods, etc. He must know where
he wants to take his trainees and what kind of people they should be in terms
of Christian character. He must
also have a clear, workable plan to disciple the trainee.
F.
Content for a Life of Leadership
1.
Heart. The person has a leaderŐs heart which
comes from the Holy
Spirit and from his mentorŐs heart. There is a singlemindedness and that is all he wants to
be. Leading becomes natural and
not drudgery. There is joy in
leading. There is a growing heart
for the lost world because that is where GodŐs heart beats. Without this heart for world evangelism
the leader and the led grow spiritually cold—no feeling, no power, no
drive.
2.
Vision. A leader has a vision (at least a
glimpse) for the whole world. He
longs to multiply self (Christ life) in others. Without this vision the leader and led will flounder without
purpose or direction.
3.
Knowledge. A leader has a knowledge of and develops methods for life and
ministry. It all centers on GodŐs
Word and the application of that Word.
Without the Word, the leader does not know how to accomplish a vision.
G.
Methods. Leadership training is
primarily one on one. Although it
can be done in small groups of three or four. Jesus only took on the training of twelve and He was the Master
Trainer. NOTE: Discipleship training does not take the
place of large group preaching and teaching (existing forms and structures) but
uses them and builds upon them and trains to reproduce leaders in them.
II.
Training in Context
A.
Atmosphere. Free and flexible,
loving and serving, positive and accepting, moving and productive. The atmosphere will allow for anyone to
be trained who wants to be trained.
B.
Environment. A training program may
be structured or unstructured based on the needs of the trainee. Depending on the trainee, you may start
at different levels due to spiritual maturity and age. As the trainee goes on, raise the
standards and the responsibilities.
If the situation is not an official training program, then use the
structures and programs that are already there. Use personal relationships. Create your own training environment.
III.
Procedure for Training
A.
Preach the gospel and the Holy Spirit produces a convert to Christ.
B.
Begin an immediate follow-up program to teach the basics of Christianity—faith,
prayer, confession, the Word, fellowship, etc. The ŇTen Basic Steps to Christian MaturityÓ is a good place
to start.
C.
Make sure the trainee knows why he is to believe or do something, so as
to establish personal convictions.
D.
Equip the trainee not only with knowledge but help him discover his
spiritual gifts and teach him how to do ministry with others. The process for training is:
1.
Tell the trainee how to do something.
2.
Show the trainee how to do it.
3.
Go with the trainee and let him see the trainer doing it.
4.
The trainee does it with the supervision of the trainer.
5.
The trainee does it by himself.
E.
Sharpen the trainee by being a co-laborer with him—deepens
convictions on his calling and gifts and assures that he will multiply
disciple-makers.
F.
A flow-chart may be used to record the traineeŐs progress. This is done through evaluation, using
constructive criticism and lots of praise and encouragement.