However, one still can read them and see how it helped shaped his thoughts as he focused and developed his thinking into his later books, The Spirit of the Disciplines, The Divine Conspiracy, and The Renovation of the Heart. While his earlier emphasis is on discipleship, one can discern the change as he recognise the deeper and wider implications of spiritual formation.
The central theme of this book is to answer the question, "Can you be a Christian without being a disciple of Christ?"
Obviously, in our evangelical theology the answer is yes! In our emphasis on justification by faith, we often forgot the part about sanctification. Hence, yes, it is possible to be a Christian without being a disciple. Willard used this to show "an obvious Great Disparity between, on the one hand, the hope for life expressed in Jesus - found real in the Bible and in many shining examples from among his followers - and, on the other hand, the actual day-to-day behavior, inner life, and social presence of most of those who now profess adherence to him." (p.x)
According to Willard, the Great Commission is the mandate for us to go forth and make disciples. The Great Omission occurs when we have changed the “making disciples” part into “go forth and make converts and baptize them into church members.” Our emphasis is focused on making converts rather than making disciples. What we have effectively done is that we have a church full of converts but no disciples. Evangelism and seek-friendliness is our first priority rather than disciple making. It is this failure of Christians becoming disciples of Christ first that led us to the present state of the church today.
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