"You Teach Him!"
Posted in discipleship, Patty's Posts 0 comments
I remember years ago reading The Navigator, a biography of Dawson Trotman. I read it because at the time my husband and I were involved in a two-year-long discipleship training program published by The Navigators ministry. After we completed the course, we taught it for four more years. The course grounded us in our faith more than anything else we had experienced.
If you're not familiar with Dawson Trotman, he founded The Navigators in the 1930s. After seeing the benefits of discipleship in his own life, Trotman became passionate about teaching others, inspired by 2 Timothy 2:2: "And the things you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses entrust to reliable men who will also be qualified to teach others."
Converted at 20, Trotman spent 30 years pouring his life into discipling others, beginning with high school students and Sunday school classes. In 1933, Trotman and his friends expanded their ministry to sailors in the U.S. Navy. Les Spencer, one of those sailors, was transformed by discipleship -- so much so that a fellow sailor asked Spencer to share the secret of his changed life. Spencer brought the sailor to Trotman, and said, "Teach him what you taught me." Trotman's response, "You teach him!" has become a classic reminder of what discipleship is all about. Once we have been discipled, we are to disciple others. That's how multiplication works.
Spencer did teach the sailor, and soon the two men were meeting with others. Eventually 125 men on their ship were growing in Christ and actively sharing their faith. Billy Graham, then an up-and-coming evangelist, was so impressed with Trotman's method that he enlisted him to help disciple new converts who committed their lives to Christ at Graham's crusades.
Trotman wanted to challenge people to stay on task with sharing their faith, and always be in the business of discipleship. A burning question was perpetually on his lips: "Men, where is your man? Women, where is your woman? Where is the one whom you led to Christ and who is now going on with Him?"
What challenged me the most about how Trotman lived his life is that he never allowed himself sleep at night until he had told at least one person about Jesus. One night after falling into bed exhausted, he realized he had not told anyone about the Lord that day. He told God he would witness to two people the next day to make up for it, but was not able to rest. He got up and began to drive around, asking God for an opportunity to share the gospel. He picked up a commuter who was walking to his car, and proceeded to share his faith, and the man accepted Christ.
John 15:13 says there is no greater love than to lay down your own life for another. That's how Trotman lost his life at age 50. Ten people attending a Christian conference were in a speed boat, when suddenly a big wave hit. Trotman and a young girl were thrown overboard. He held her head above water until the boat circled back to them. As the girl was lifted to safety, Trotman sank beneath the water and disappeared from sight.
I am woefully and sinfully inadequate when it comes to evangelism. I am praying for God to open my eyes so that I see others as He sees them, and am asking Him to break my heart for the lost.
Why are we so reticent to share the greatest news anyone could ever hear? Are we just so busy with our own lives that we can't be bothered about where other people might spend eternity?
I am grateful for those who prayed me into the kingdom -- for the ones who sowed the seed, the ones who watered and cultivated. Let's be grateful enough to God that we truly want to see His kingdom come and His will to be done. Begin your day asking God for opportunities to share the love of Jesus, and then walk through the doors that He opens for you.
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