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Introduction
We birthed this
10-week adventure into the heart of Jesus out of passion and
desperation. At the time, we had no thoughts of anyone other than
us leading people on this pursuit. After years of going to church
classes and small groups that tried to focus on Jesus and the great
truths of Scripture, we felt unsatisfied with our experiences. In
those learning environments, we often felt like we'd been invited
to a feast at a friend's house, but when we showed up, we found
crackers and cheese as the main course. Sure, we ate something, but
it was no feast.
We were hungry for more. More of Jesus.
In fact, we
had to have more of Jesus. We needed him like two thirsty
survivors crawling toward a well in the desert. So we decided to
create the kind of study we wished we could go to. We came up with
10 "snapshots" of Jesus that seemed worth pursuing. Then we plunged
ourselves into each one with a determination not just to get at the
truth of Jesus, but to do so in an engaging, experiential, and
interactive way that also honored what participants in the class
would bring to the table.
We set before
ourselves and the "family" that ended up attending this class the
overarching question that Jesus asked his disciples after the
feeding of the 5,000 (Luke 9:12-20): "Who do you say I am?" Our
simple mission: Spend 10 weeks exploring our answer to that
question. Further, we wanted to go beyond answering that question
only with our heads; we very much wanted to respond to the question
with our hearts.
You can understand
the truth about Jesus in a lot of different ways-just as you can
understand the truth about your spouse or best friend in different
ways. Not all of these ways have to do with hard facts; many have
to do more with your "heart knowledge" of the person. The reason
you marry someone or hang out with someone has as much to do with
your emotional experience (your heart knowledge) as your "factual"
assessment of who someone is.
So we decided not to "market" the class to our church in the
typical way, with announcements from the pulpit and a pleading
sales pitch in the bulletin. Instead, we placed the following
notice in the bulletin-the only place we publicized the
class:
In Pursuit
of Jesus
A new class just for the summer. No tips and techniques. No life
application. No homework. No acronyms. Just Jesus. All ages
welcome! Taught by Rick and Bev Lawrence. |
When only five people
showed up for our first class, Bev was sure I'd made an arrogant,
boneheaded mistake (by the way, whenever you read "I" in these
introductory pages, it's Rick talking unless we tell you
otherwise). Still, something within me simply wanted to cast a net
for people who were desperate enough for Jesus to be intrigued by
our terse bulletin announcement.
Somewhere along the way,
we collected about 30 regulars who journeyed with us through the
class. At the end of our time together, we asked people to write
about how the experience affected them. The depth and breadth of
the transformation they reported astonished us. Here are a few
samples:
• "The teaching was both
profound and easy to understand. I have a better, deeper love for
Jesus because of better knowledge and understanding of him."
• "I loved digging deeper and thinking. I was welcomed. I had a
voice. Thank you."
• "The class really helped me get to know Jesus and helped me to
be a follower of Jesus…You don't have any idea how much this class
has done for me. Thank you so much!"
• "I now feel more intimate in my relationship with Jesus. I liked
the deep exploration in the class. It left me wanting more of the
class-and him!"
• "No acronyms, no applications, no techniques! I loved the way
you used music, film, discussion-all different aspects."
• "Excellent subjects, teaching, and facilitating! Also loved the
fellowships and varied activities. The preparation, teaching,
subjects, discussion, activities, fellowship, and new friends all
made a big impact on my life."
• "I can grow when the ground is plowed deeper. I liked the
questions that made me look at truths in a new light."
• "I felt as though I was on holy ground. I felt challenged and
encouraged."
Class or
Small Group?
While we've taught this material as a Sunday school class, it
works equally well as a study in a small-group setting. |
After the pursuit was
over and we had a chance to catch our breath, we realized we'd been
a part of something powerful. When we saw people who'd attended the
class in the hallways at church-a wide spectrum of participants
from teenagers to senior adults-they stopped us with a kind of a
hunger in their eyes to ask when we planned to offer the class
again. Many expressed that for the first time, their insights and
input were passionately valued in the study. We not only gave
participants the opportunity to think more critically and make
their own discoveries about Jesus, we kind of forced them to do it.
And they loved it because they "owned" it! They loved the
atmosphere of participation, dignity, and respect that grew up
around our joint pursuit.
Why This Class
Works
I think the best metaphor for a typical class or small-group study
is a jet-one pilot controls pretty much everything about the
craft's navigation, and a lot of passengers just go along for the
ride.
The metaphor that best
describes this series is a viking ship-the ship has a captain (you,
the leader), but everyone rows. Each individual helps
determine how far, how fast, and what direction the ship heads. The
captain provides strong leadership, overarching direction, expert
navigational insight, and prods the rowers to row. And when you get
to your destination in a viking ship, everyone feels the
satisfaction of playing a key role in the journey. Of course,
that's not the case with passengers on a jet.
We first led this class
in the summer of 2006. That fall, Joani Schultz (the Chief Creative
Officer at Group Publishing, where I've worked for 20 years), asked
about the best part of my summer. I could barely wait to answer,
and blurted out, "The 'In Pursuit of Jesus' class Bev and I
taught!" Joani listened to me excitedly describe the impact of the
class, then-with her characteristic enthusiasm-said, "We've got to
get this published so others can do it!"
You now hold the result
of that conversation in your hands.
Bev and I believe that
true transformation comes when you get closer to Jesus. We feel so
strongly about this, I'm tempted to just write that sentence
again:
We believe that true
transformation comes when you get closer to Jesus.
The aim of this pursuit isn't just to get closer to Jesus, but to
get infected by him. To move him from the fringes of everyday life
to the bull's-eye of everyday life.
As you prepare to launch
into this adventure, know that we're with you. We couldn't be more
excited about the journey you're about to take!
-Rick and Bev Lawrence
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