February

04

2010

Mentoring: Intentionality vs. Formality

Jesus’ call to His disciples was, “Follow Me. Walk where I’m walking. Go where I’m going. And along the way, I’ve got some things to teach you.”


Jesus didn’t necessarily seek out a fig tree, a field, or a farmer. He was walking by those things, and He used those moments that naturally occurred to teach spiritual truth. But He had to be walking with people in order to have that opportunity.



When people from an older generation invite those younger than them into their lives, they have that chance. Whether eating a meal, going to the movies, or having a conversation, the natural circumstances emerge to see and seize teaching opportunities through sharing life together.



Though some specific direction can be emphasized in those relationships, the greatest learning moments will surface during everyday occurrences as they live life together—funerals, weddings, meals, baseball games, and family events. While mentoring does require time and vulnerability, the biggest key is intentionality. That’s what Jesus demonstrated as He walked side by side with others.



Sometimes we confuse intentionality with formality.  It's not about blocking extra hours (that you likely don't have) for "mentoring time."  Instead, it's about mentoring people within the existing hours that you do have.  Regimented weekly meetings are fine for some, but they'll never be as effective as simply bringing others into your everyday life.


What Others Think

Trevis
_at 11:38AM on 02.04.10

Fantastic thoughts. Thank you for shedding light on an all to often legalized subject. I agree that some specific direction can (and often should) be emphasized, but you are correct about the sweetest and purest moments blossoming out of non-formatted, spontaneous love relationships. Perfect message for me today. Thank you!



Ricky Bowen
_at 03:19PM on 02.04.10

Spot on with these thoughts. The biggest hurdle seems to be making an attempt to "schedule" discipleship. I often say that we want to "do church" and then go "back to our lives" and yet the NT teaches something opposite. It teaches that "our lives" are (should be) a constant motion of learning and giving away to others in any context, at any time, that we find ourselves. Thanks for the simple thoughts that just reinforce what God has been teaching me.



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