Multiply Francis Chan Quotes

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we reduce discipleship to a canned program, and so many in the church end up sidelined in a spectator mentality that delegates disciple making to pastors and professionals, ministers and missionaries. But this is not the way it’s supposed to be.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Making disciples is all about seeing people transformed by the power of God’s Word. If you want to see that happen in others, you need to be experiencing such transformation yourself.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
If you are going to make disciples, you need to be putting your faith into practice so that the people around you can imitate your faith.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Being a disciple of Jesus means that we are being transformed into His image. God wants to change us so much that it intrigues others.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
We often forget what an honor it is that God would offer relationship. We can get so accustomed to people begging us to follow God that we forget what a miracle it is that we are invited.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
But making disciples is far more than a program. It is the mission of our lives. It defines us. A disciple is a disciple maker.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
None of us is beyond the task of missions...The question is not whether or not we will be working to spread the gospel around the world, but what role we will play in this.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
We are God's creations, living in God's earth, placed within God's plan of redemption.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Proclaiming the gospel to a lost world cannot be just another activity to add to the church’s crowded agenda. It must be central to who we are. It forms our identity.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
God specifically created us to be like Him. This is impossible to wrap our minds around, but God created us like Him in some respect and then set us in the midst of this world to represent Him!
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Are you willing to say to God that He can have whatever He wants? Do you believe that wholehearted commitment to Him is more important than any other thing or person in your life? Do you know that nothing you do in this life will ever matter, unless it is about loving God and loving the people He has made?
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
It’s impossible to be a disciple or a follower of someone and not end up like that person. Jesus said, “A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone when he is fully trained will be like his teacher” (Luke 6:40). That’s the whole point of being a disciple of Jesus: we imitate Him, carry on His ministry, and become like Him in the process.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Both worry and stress reek of arrogance. They declare our tendency to forget that we’ve been forgiven, that our lives here are brief, that we are headed to a place where we won’t be lonely, afraid, or hurt ever again, and that in the context of God’s strength, our problems are small, indeed.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
Your problems are not just your problems—ultimately, they belong to the church body that God has placed you in. You are called to encourage, challenge, and help the other Christians in your life, and they are called to do the same for you. If you wait until all of your own issues are gone before helping others, it will never happen. This is a trap that millions have fallen into, not realizing that our own sanctification happens as we minister to others.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Discipleship is all about living life together rather than just one structured meeting per week.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Our greatest fear as individuals and as a church should not be of failure but of succeeding at things in life that don’t really matter.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
even the most impressive and sacrificial actions are worthless if they are not empowered by love.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
The Bible compels us to join God in what He is doing in and around us. Studying the Bible is important, but the goal is never knowledge for the sake of knowledge.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Bearing one another’s burdens is not easy, but it is also not optional.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
we were made to be disciples who make disciples until the day when we see the face of the One we follow, and together with all nations we experience His satisfaction for all of eternity.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Yet somehow many have come to believe that a person can be a “Christian” without being like Christ. A “follower” who doesn’t follow. How does that make any sense? Many people in the church have decided to take on the name of Christ and nothing else. This would be like Jesus walking up to those first disciples and saying, “Hey, would you guys mind identifying yourselves with Me in some way? Don’t worry, I don’t actually care if you do anything I do or change your lifestyle at all. I’m just looking for people who are willing to say they believe in Me and call themselves Christians.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Even our church growth can happen without Him. Let’s be honest: If you combine a charismatic speaker, a talented worship band, and some hip, creative events, people will attend your church. Yet this does not mean that the Holy Spirit of God is actively working and moving in the lives of the people who are coming. It simply means that you have created a space that is appealing enough to draw people in for an hour or two on Sunday.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
The Christian life is a process of better understanding what Jesus taught, learning to apply that teaching in our everyday lives, and then teaching others - people directly around us and people on the other side of the globe - to do the same.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
We have to be clear about what it means to help the people God has placed in our lives. We gravitate toward solutions that are quick and easy. When it comes to helping people, we often address the surface level of the problem but never get down to the heart of the matter. When someone is grieving, we might hand him a book that helped us in a difficult moment. But how many of us would take the time to really invest in his life? Would we listen on a consistent basis and offer help whenever we find a need that we are able to meet?
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
The irony is that while God doesn’t need us but still wants us, we desperately need God but don’t really want Him most of the time. He treasures us and anticipates our departure from this earth to be with Him—and we wonder, indifferently, how much we have to do for Him to get by.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
God wants you to view the other Christians in your life as partners in ministry. God has not called you to make disciples in isolation; He has placed you in the context of a church body so that you can be encouraged and challenged by the people around you. And you are called to encourage and challenge them in return.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
If anyone comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
And like our Savior, who poured out His life and blood so we have reason to rejoice, we were made to lay down our lives and give until it hurts. We are most alive when we are loving and actively giving of ourselves because we were made to do these things. It is when we live like this that the Spirit of God moves and acts in and through us in ways that on our own we are not capable of. This is our purpose for living. This is our hope.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
Paul writes that even if “I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give away all I have, and if I deliver up my body to be burned, but have not love, I gain nothing” (1 Cor. 13:2–3 ESV). Wow. Those are strong and unmistakable words. According to God, we are here to love. Not much else really matters. So God assesses our lives based on how we love. But the word love is so overused and worn out. What does God mean by love? He tells us, Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.… faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love. —1 Corinthians 13:4–8, 13 ESV
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
The wildest part is that Jesus doesn’t have to love us. His being is utterly complete and perfect, apart from humanity. He doesn’t need me or you. Yet He wants us, chooses us, even considers us His inheritance (Eph. 1:18). The greatest knowledge we can ever have is knowing God treasures us.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
Through this experience, I came to understand that my desire for my children is only a faint echo of God’s great love for me and for every person He made. I am just an earthly, sinful father, and I love my kids so much it hurts. How could I not trust a heavenly, perfect Father who loves me infinitely more than I will ever love my kids? If you, then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him! —Matthew 7:11
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
Have you ever thought about what that word Lord means? We sometimes think of it as another name for God, but it’s actually a title. It refers to a master, owner, or a person who is in a position of authority.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
The problem is, many in the church want to “confess that Jesus is Lord,” yet they don’t believe that He is their master.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
The call to be a disciple of Jesus Christ is open to everyone, but we don’t get to write our own job description. If Jesus is Lord, then He sets the agenda. If Jesus Christ is Lord, then your life belongs to Him. He has a plan, agenda, and calling for you. You don’t get to tell Him what you’ll be doing today or for the rest of your life.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Following Jesus is not about diligently keeping a set of rules or conjuring up the moral fortitude to lead good lives. It’s about loving God and enjoying Him.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
God wants us to pursue certain actions, but as we put God’s commands into action, our motivation makes all the difference.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Fulfilling Jesus’s command to make disciples is about more than having the right theology or well-developed teaching points. Remember that if you “understand all mysteries and all knowledge” yet don’t have love, you are nothing.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
One of the worst things you can do is teach truths that you are not applying. We call this hypocrisy, and it’s the most common criticism of Christians in America.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
We have moved so far away from Jesus’s command that many Christians don’t have a frame of reference for what disciple making looks like.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
But lest we think that we can love God and live any way we want to, Jesus told us very clearly, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments” (John 14:15).
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
When will we simply respond to the truth we have heard and then work through our questions from there?
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
It’s impossible to be a disciple or a follower of someone and not end up like that person. Jesus said, “A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone when he is fully trained will be like his teacher” (Luke 6:40). That’s the whole point of being a
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
LUKEWARM PEOPLE do not live by faith; their lives are structured so they never have to. They don’t have to trust God if something unexpected happens—they have their savings account. They don’t need God to help them—they have their retirement plan in place. They don’t genuinely seek out what life God would have them live—they have life figured and mapped out. They don’t depend on God on a daily basis—their refrigerators are full and, for the most part, they are in good health. The truth is, their lives wouldn’t look much different if they suddenly stopped believing in God.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
There is much more to God and following in the Way of Jesus than getting a bunch of talented people together to hold a church service.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
God is holy. In heaven exists a Being who decides whether or not I take another breath. This holy God deserves excellence, the very best I have.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
But when I am living in a way that requires me to depend on the Holy Spirit, people respond by praising my Father in heaven.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
The Holy Spirit will not—cannot—lead you into sin. If the Holy Spirit is in you, as a believer, then when you sin you are not listening to the Spirit’s leading.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
But the intent and purpose of feelings came from God. Since He created emotions, why is it difficult to believe that He Himself has emotions?
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
God never excuses sin. And He is always consistent with that ethic. Whenever we start to question whether God really hates sin, we have only to think of the cross, where His Son was tortured, mocked, and beaten because of sin. Our sin.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
As I see it, a lukewarm Christian is an oxymoron; there’s no such thing. To put it plainly, churchgoers who are “lukewarm” are not Christians. We will not see them in heaven.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
Share life, not just information. The Multiply process is meant to be highly relational. True discipleship involves deep relationships. Jesus didn’t simply lead a weekly Bible study. He lived life with His disciples and taught through actions as well as words. While this requires a much deeper commitment, it is the only way to truly make disciples.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Do not assume you are good soil. Has your relationship with God actually changed the way you live? Do you see evidence of God’s kingdom in your life? Or are you choking it out slowly by spending too much time, energy, money, and thought on the things of this world? Are you satisfied being “godly enough” to get yourself to heaven, or to look good in comparison to others? Or can you say with Paul that you “want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death” (Phil. 3:10)?
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth. (2 Tim. 2:15) God calls you to “do your best.” Laziness is inexcusable. We are studying the very words that God chose to communicate to us, so in addition to studying prayerfully and obediently, we must study diligently. God calls us to love Him with our minds (Matt. 22:37),
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
It is a remarkable cycle: Our prayers for more love result in love, which naturally causes us to pray more, which results in more love….
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
It is also important to notice that Satan enters the biblical scene as part of God’s creation. This means that he is not all powerful. He is only alive because God gives him life. He is a deadly deceiver, but his power is infinitely less than God’s power. So we shouldn’t be terrified of Satan’s power, but we do need to be wary of his lies and manipulation.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
The first sin was rebellion, idolatry, treason, and pride, all rolled into a single bite. Both Adam and Eve made a conscious choice to rebel against their Creator and live on their own terms. And we imitate their decision every time we choose our desires over God’s.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Don’t kid yourself—true religion is not about what you know, it’s about putting what you know about God and His Word into practice.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
Throughout the Bible, we see pictures of the global church (which includes all followers of Jesus in all locations) and the local church (which includes particular followers of Jesus in a particular location). Out of 114 times that the “church” is mentioned in the New Testament, at least ninety of them refer to specific local gatherings of believers who have banded together for fellowship and mission. God intends for every follower of Jesus to be a part of such a gathering under the servant leadership of pastors who shepherd the church for the glory of God.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Paul said that God gave pastors, teachers, and elders to the church so that they could teach the rest of us to minister. A pastor’s job is not to do all of the ministry in a church, but to “equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ” (Eph. 4:12). So the question becomes: Whom should you be ministering to and how? Don’t be overwhelmed by the task of ministering to others. It is just about faithfully serving the people God has placed in your life. Paul explained: Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness. Keep watch on yourself, lest you too be tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. (Gal. 6:1–2)
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Ministry sounds intimidating until you develop a realistic view of what ministry is really about. Maybe you’re not gifted to preach sermons, start a rehabilitation clinic, or lead a marriage retreat. But do you know people who struggle with sin? Do you know people who are carrying burdens? If so, then your first steps toward ministry are easy: help them.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Very often, we really do want to help the people around us however we can, but we get so focused on finding a quick solution to the external behavior that we overlook the real problem. Here’s an example. If a friend struggles with anger, we find out what makes him angry, and then keep him away from the things that provoke his anger (e.g., don’t drive during rush hour, interact with your boss as little as possible, avoid talking politics). But changing the external situation doesn’t change his heart. In reality, his anger is rooted in his heart, and that anger will find a way to express itself even if his circumstances change. When Jesus’s disciples started eating without going through the necessary cleansing rituals, the Pharisees accused them of defiling themselves. But Jesus’s response calls us to look beyond the external to what is going on in the heart: “Whatever goes into a person from outside cannot defile him, since it enters not his heart but his stomach, and is expelled?” (Thus he declared all foods clean.) And he said, “What comes out of a person is what defiles him. For from within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness, deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride, foolishness. All these evil things come from within, and they defile a person. (Mark 7:18–23) Every struggle with sin that we could possibly encounter in our own lives or in the lives of the people around us are represented in the list Jesus offered here: evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness, deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride, and foolishness. Jesus said that these things come from within. In other words, if we are trying to address these problems by regulating a person’s circumstances or behavior, then we are wasting our time. These things come “out of the heart of man.” Whatever help we can offer people who are struggling with sin has to be aimed at transforming hearts, not behavior. 5. Why do you think we tend to focus on the external circumstances and behavior when we try to help people change? 6. Using your own words, try to explain why it is essential to get to the heart of the problem rather than merely addressing the circumstances and behavior. Transformed by the Gospel So how do we change a person’s heart? It’s impossible. We might be able to restrain a person’s angry outbursts by tying him up and gagging him, but we are powerless to change a person’s heart. This is where God’s plan of redemption comes into play. The gospel is not merely about “getting us saved,” as if we simply pray a prayer and are immediately transported into heaven. God describes “salvation” and the transformation of the Christian life like this: I will give you a new heart, and a new spirit I will put within you. And I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes and be careful to obey my rules. (Ezek. 36:26–27)
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Perhaps it’s not theology we’re missing, but rather theological integrity. Many have the knowledge but lack the courage to admit the discrepancy between what we know and how we live.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
LUKEWARM PEOPLE gauge their morality or “goodness” by comparing themselves to the secular world. They feel satisfied that while they aren’t as hard-core for Jesus as so-and-so, they are nowhere as horrible as the guy down the street. “The Pharisee stood up and prayed about himself: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other men—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get’” (Luke 18:11–12).
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
It is impossible to make disciples aside from the church of Jesus Christ.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
Deep down in the heart of every person is a hidden desire to reinterpret Jesus in light of our own culture, political bent, or favorite theological belief.
Francis Chan (The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply)
While every individual needs to obey Jesus's call to follow, we cannot follow Jesus as individuals.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
If you wait until all of your own issues are gone before helping others, it will never happen. This is a trap that millions have fallen into, not realizing that our own sanctification happens as we minister to others.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)
If you are not connected with other Christians, serving and being served, challenging and being challenged, then you are not living as He desires, and the church is not functioning as He intended.
Francis Chan (Multiply: Disciples Making Disciples)