Come and See: The Foundations of Discipleship

1. Jesus, the True Light for a Dark World

  • Jesus reveals our need—His light exposes the darkness in all of us (John 1:4–5, 9)
  • He offers light to everyone—no one is excluded
  • Discipleship starts with dependence, not self-effort
  • We’re not the light—we simply reflect His

2. Jesus, the Word Made Flesh

  • Jesus is God’s Word in person—truth embodied (John 1:1–3, 14)
  • He knows our full humanity and can be fully trusted
  • Discipleship means following a person, not just a teaching

3. The Humble Posture of a Disciple-Maker

  • John knew who he wasn’t—“not the light,” “not worthy” (John 1:20–27)
  • True leaders point others to Jesus, not to themselves
  • Humility protects disciple-makers from pride and pressure

4. Two Baptisms, One Savior

  • Water baptism shows repentance—Spirit baptism brings transformation (John 1:26–33)
  • We baptize with water; Jesus baptizes with the Spirit
  • Both are needed for full discipleship

5. Start Close. Stay Simple.

  • Andrew and Philip shared Jesus with those closest to them (John 1:40–46)
  • Their message was simple: “Come and see”
  • Discipleship grows through relationship, not just strategy

Application of John 1 in 3 Simple Steps

  • Invite Someone: Ask one person to read John with you or join a gathering. Keep it natural—just say, “Come and see.” (John 1:41–46)
  • Refocus on Jesus: Pray daily: “Jesus, You are my goal.” Let that truth guide how you live and lead. (John 1:1, 51)
  • Make Space for the Spirit: Ask Jesus to fill you afresh. Set aside 10 quiet minutes to listen and yield. (John 1:33)