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Let's dig in!
Welcome to the Soil and Roots Podcast. In this first episode, Brian explores what Dallas Willard called "the Great Omission," the fact that the West routinely preaches and teaches disciple-making, yet struggles to actually make them. Many people feel a disconnection, a sense that there's more to the Christian life than what we often experience. Why? If discipleship is about becoming more like the person of Jesus, does that involve more than church attendance, Bible study, and prayer groups?
In fact, it does. The substance of genuine discipleship (often called spiritual formation) is the exploration of the heart of Jesus and our own hearts, into the realm of powerful and often unconscious experienced realities called "ideas."
Join Brian as he kicks off our journey into what he calls "deep discipleship," the path towards a deeper, richer, reconnected life with Jesus, others, and ourselves.
By Brian FisherLet's dig in!
Welcome to the Soil and Roots Podcast. In this first episode, Brian explores what Dallas Willard called "the Great Omission," the fact that the West routinely preaches and teaches disciple-making, yet struggles to actually make them. Many people feel a disconnection, a sense that there's more to the Christian life than what we often experience. Why? If discipleship is about becoming more like the person of Jesus, does that involve more than church attendance, Bible study, and prayer groups?
In fact, it does. The substance of genuine discipleship (often called spiritual formation) is the exploration of the heart of Jesus and our own hearts, into the realm of powerful and often unconscious experienced realities called "ideas."
Join Brian as he kicks off our journey into what he calls "deep discipleship," the path towards a deeper, richer, reconnected life with Jesus, others, and ourselves.