Section 1: Formation
1. Forming Christian Disciples: Mission
2. Forming Christian Disciples: Worship
3. Forming Christian Disciples: Community
4. Forming Christian Disciples: Christian Education
Reflections and Questions on Section 1
Section 2: Small Groups and Discipleship Formation
5. The Value of Small Groups
6. Small Groups Explosion: Church Small Groups
7. Research on Church-related Small Groups
8. Small Groups and Discipleship Formation
9. Disciples Together: Small Groups in Theological Perspective
Roger L Walton was Director of the Wesley Study Centre, Durham, between 1999-2010 and William Leech Research Fellow at Durham University 2010-11. On 1 September 2011, he took up the post of Chair of the West Yorkshire Methodist District. He is the author of The Reflective Disciple (Epworth 2009, SCM 2012) and Learning for Ministry (Church House Publishing 2005) - a book jointly authored with Steve Croft.
This is theology earthed in the real experience of life and
ministry. Roger Walton’s masterful survey of small group
discipleship gives much needed and practical insights on how to
form disciples in today’s church.
*David Wilkinson*
Thoroughly researched and supported, yet accessible and applicable,
Disciples Together is a vital resource for a church that sees its
future in forming disciples through small groups. I’m excited about
how this book helps us to see a way forward that is not only driven
by necessity but by theology – recognising that in the decline and
exile of the church as it has been conceived there is a great
opportunity for imagining and resourcing church as it was perhaps
meant to be.
*Piers Lane*
This book should be read by all Christian leaders who work with
small groups. It is both inspiring and challenging and presents
thorough research in an accessible style that makes reading each
chapter a pleasure.
*Ruth Gee*
Having often lamented the small sizes of village congregations to
which I often preached, I remember the shock when I really came
home to me that there were no church buildings for about the first
two centuries of Christianity, and that the typical churches of the
New Testament period, like the dynamic(!) church in Corinth,
probably met in a house which could hold no more than a few (that
is, three or four) dozen. I recalled too that the most enriching
and deeply-engaging experiences of exploring the actual realities
of discipleship, of grappling with and growing in faith, have come
in small Bible-study and discussion groups, mostly in homes. Which
is why membership of a small group has always been integral to my
wife’s and my practice of discipleship. So I found Roger’s book a
breath of fresh air, so well informed on the reality of
Christianity’s beginnings and times of renewal, drawing on what we
might call lots of penetrating case studies, and drawing out the
value and power of small groups in making real the body of Christ
today. I wish I had been able to spend longer reflecting on what
Roger has written (it sparked off so much reflection), but I have
read enough and had time enough to know that this will be a
challenging and inspirational book for many who are looking for a
deeper depth of reality in their churchmanship and discipleship. I
commend it most warmly and look forward to hearing good stories of
its impact and benefit in ‘building up’ (1 Cor. 14.26).
*James D. G. Dunn*
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