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No More Mr. Nice Group

Five practices that take small groups beyond polite sharing to the disciplines that change lives.

by John Ortberg  |  posted 8/21/2006

Topics:Accountability, Authenticity, Commitment, Confession, Encouragement, Guidance
Filters:Coach, Connect, Director, Leader, New leader
Purpose:Discipleship
References:Acts 13, Acts 15, James 5:16
Date Added:August 21, 2006

God has entrusted us with his most precious treasure—people. He asks us to shepherd and mold them into strong disciples, with brave faith, and good character. I would not give my life to any church that was not serious about this calling—the transformation of human beings. God has decided, for his own good reasons, that people are not transformed outside of community.

Years ago, while on vacation, I was going to fix something on the grill. I made a pile of charcoal, I poured a few gallons of lighter fluid over them, and I started the fire. My son was just fascinated by fire, as most young boys are. He asked what I was doing, and I told him.

"There's something about the way these little briquettes are constructed that when you put them together, the fire glows and they get real hot. And if you isolate one it cools off quickly. It loses the fire. But when they stick together, there's fire, because they feed off each other. God designed them to work that way."

This fits what Dallas Willard has said about the Christian life: "Personalities united can contain more of God and sustain the force of his greater presence better than scattered individuals." Think about that. Personalities united—people in community—contain more of God and his transforming power than isolated individuals. We should not be surprised that transformation requires community; it's how God designed us.

When we are alone, it's easy to think, incorrectly, that we are spiritually advanced. I can watch a Hallmark commercial alone and find myself moved to tears. I tell myself that I am a very compassionate person. But when I spend time in community with a person who annoys me, it's amazing how quickly I experience "compassion fatigue."

In community we discover who we really are and how much transformation we still require. This is why I am irrevocably committed to small groups. Through them we can accomplish our God-entrusted work to transform human beings.

However, experience tells us that simply meeting with a small group does not automatically result in spiritual growth. There are certain practices that must be present, spiritual disciplines that must occur, to facilitate the transforming work of Christ in us. The presence of these things is what makes the difference between all-too-typical small groups, and life-transforming communities of spiritual formation.

What are these practices? I asked Dallas Willard that question once because he's forgotten more about spiritual formation and church history than I will ever know. His answer surprised me. He said, "I don't know." Rather than being discouraged, I saw this as a rare opportunity to discover something Dallas Willard didn't know. I launched into a time of deeper reflection and study.

After months looking at Scripture, reading church history, talking with respected people, and meeting with leaders of small groups, I don't think I have the definitive answer, but I have observed five essential practices:

Confession: remove the masks

We all wear masks. We hide from each other. It's part of our fallenness. That is why one of the most formative practices in a small group is confession. Confession is the appropriate disclosure of my brokenness, temptations, sin, and victories for the purpose of healing, forgiveness, and spiritual growth. Without confession we are a community hiding from the truth.

I know what it's like to do church with people who wear masks. I've attended very nice churches where people smiled, talked about their jobs or the weather, but never really removed their masks and revealed themselves.


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Displaying 1–5 of 11 comments.

Brando

August 23, 2010  10:59pm

I thank God in showing me this site. This is a very spiritually informed article and people committed to improving their church or small group can benefit in applying the principles discussed here. Thank you John!

Renee

November 04, 2009  10:12am

I have been praying about starting a women's group as a subset of our house church so that these things can take place. I plan to use this article as a way of communicating what I have in mind. Even in a 10 person house church this level of sharing is difficult to achieve, especially with both men and women present. Thank you!

Kazzy

October 15, 2009  2:12am

Fantastic article. Thank you. I have started a small group with three other women based on the principles in this article and it has been an amazing journey so far. We have seen tremendous individual growth in our personal relationships with God as well as deeper relationships with one another.

Tara

September 15, 2009  6:10pm

As a co-leader with my husband of a small group, this commentary offers such rich insights and wisdom into how to go about creating an environment where real, authentic, transformational Christianity can occur. Thank you for searching out the answers to some very baffling questions (like "Why do small groups seem to get 'stuck' in the spiritual growth department?"), and giving practical ways to overcome these obstacles. THANK YOU!

jerry

August 11, 2009  5:34pm

thank you

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