Apprentice: Walking the Way of Christ
By Steve Chalke and Joanna Wyld
()
About this ebook
The quest for meaning and purpose dwells within all of us. Jesus insisted that its fulfillment lay in a relationship with him. But what does that relationship look like—really? Apprentice calls spiritual pilgrims, both Christians and non-Christians, to exchange the shallow diversions of secular and religious culture for the pursuit of our true desires. In a book of refreshing honesty, great heart, and rich creativity, Steve Chalke guides us into an apprenticeship with the master teacher, Jesus. Embarking on a relational journey that engages us on every level, we walk with Jesus in an organic, whole-life learning experience, exploring ten areas foundational to the meaning and depth we crave. Apprentice encourages us to ask our most probing questions, embrace our doubts, and learn why we are driven to belong. Combining story and parable with thoughtful commentary, we discover the ancient art and discipline of apprenticeship— living lives stamped with the character, presence, and impact of Jesus.
Steve Chalke
Steve Chalke is an ordained minister and the founder of Oasis, which over the last 25 years has developed into a group of charities working to deliver education, training, youth work, health care and housing around the world. He is the senior minister of Church.co.uk, Waterloo and a UN Special Advisor working to combat people trafficking. In 2004 he was awarded an MBE by the Queen for his work in social inclusion.
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Reviews for Apprentice
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Book preview
Apprentice - Steve Chalke
When you hear Steve speak and you ask him questions and hear his response and then see with your eyes the kind of work Steve’s involved in, you can’t help but begin to think that the tomb may, in fact, be empty.
Rob Bell, Mars Hill Bible Church
Apprentice is a story-filled and helpful roadmap for the journey toward God.
John Ortberg, pastor and author, Menlo Park Presbyterian Church
A delectable read, like candy for the soul. Apprentice is winsome, poetic, intelligent and sassy. Steve Chalke reminds us that at the core of disciple is discipline, and that means training ourselves in the divine arts—love, forgiveness, peace, grace, justice.
Shane Claiborne, author,
Jesus for President
I’ve said this before, and perhaps I’ll say it again, but I think this is Steve Chalke’s best book ever.… Steve Chalke and Joanna Wyld have given us the best short introduction to life in the way of Jesus that I’ve ever come across: it’s simple yet deep, short yet comprehensive. And the mini-parables that fill the book will get stuck in your imagination in the best way possible.
Brian McLaren, author/networker,
brianmclaren.net
Steve amazes us with an array of wonderful stories and brilliant quotes that we shall long remember and often use. Imitating Jesus, he gives us parables that profoundly affect how we look at like and journey on life’s way.
Tony Campolo, Ph.D., Eastern University
In this highly accessible book Steve takes complex truths about discipleship and unpacks them in a way that is both ‘action’ provoking and inspiring. His honest rhetoric and anecdotal delivery makes this a must-read for those of us who are serious about living lives that reflect the essence of God.
Diane Louise Jordan
Also by Steve Chalke
Change Agents: 25 Hard-Learned Lessons
in the Art of Getting Things Done
Intelligent Church: A Journey Towards
Christ-Centred Community (with Anthony Watkis)
The Lost Message of Jesus (with Alan Mann)
ZONDERVAN
Apprentice
Copyright © 2009 by Steve Chalke
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of Zondervan.
ePub Edition August 2009 ISBN: 978-0-310-59049-1
Requests for information should be addressed to:
Zondervan, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49530
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Chalke, Steve.
Apprentice : walking the way of Christ / Steve Chalke, with Joanna Wyld.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 978-0-310-29154-1 (softcover)
1. Christian life. 2. Spiritual life--Christianity. 3. Spirituality. I. Wyld, Joanna. II. Title.
BV4501.3.C426 2009
248.4--dc22
Steve Chalke asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this book.
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved. Scripture quotations marked CEV are taken from the Contemporary English Version. Copyright © 1995 by American Bible Society. Used by permission. Scripture quotations marked The Message are taken from The Message. Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group. Scripture quotations marked NASB are taken from the New American Standard Bible. Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. Scripture quotations marked WE are taken from The Bible in Worldwide English (New Testament) published in 1996 by SOON Educational Publications.
Any Internet addresses (websites, blogs, etc.) and telephone numbers printed in this book are offered as a resource. They are not intended in any way to be or imply an endorsement by Zondervan, nor does Zondervan vouch for the content of these sites and numbers for the life of this book.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means – electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other – except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
Interior design by Ben Fetterley
CONTENTS
Title Page
Copyright Page
Acknowledgements
1 Journeying
2 Longing
3 Believing
4 Questioning
5 Belonging
6 Serving
7 Persevering
8 Forgiving
9 Listening
10 Engaging
Notes
About the Publisher
Share Your Thoughts
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Steve and Joanna would like to thank Sue Robbins, Judith Doel, Ro Leech, Jill Rowe, Joe Davis, Julian Mines, Daniel Castro, Matt Clayton, Kate, Colin, Richard and Andrew Wyld for their inspiration as we have written this book, but most of all Eva for making Joanna laugh.
Steve also wants to acknowledge his indebtedness to all those who have inspired and shaped his thinking as they have written or spoken of their journey with Christ. To borrow again, from Kenneth Schmitz, himself quoted by Stanley Hauerwas: I cannot make use of the simplest technique which did not have to be discovered and brought to excellence by nameless craftsmen; so that most of my benefactors remain unknown to me. Some of us can name a few generations of our ancestors, but before long the chain of those who have helped to give us life fades into obscurity.
¹
So, to those apprentices of Christ, both known and unknown, past and present, thank you.
1 JOURNEYING
A man once dreamt of leaving his home to go in search of the Golden City, which lay on the other side of a vast forest. His own life was tedious. He had grown tired of his surroundings, responsibilities and relationships. No one in his town had ever been to the Golden City, but the tales of its size and beauty had been told for generations.
Eventually, his desire to experience this wonderful place for himself became irresistible. So one morning, the man woke early and, after saying goodbye to his wife and young children, set out on his journey of discovery.
The man travelled for many hours, slowly making his way through the dense forest that separated his own town from the Golden City. He had no idea how long his journey would take nor what might await him at its end. But his determination to keep going was constantly fuelled by the inspirational stories he had heard of his intended destination. Eventually, despite his great enthusiasm, he became overwhelmed by exhaustion. So, finding a clearing, he settled down under a large tree to rest.
However, not wanting to awaken disoriented and so lose his direction, he took off his shoes and laid them side by side, pointing in the direction he was travelling. Assured that he would now avoid getting lost, he closed his eyes and fell into a deep sleep.
But while he slept, two young boys out playing in the forest entered the clearing and stumbled across him. Seeing the man asleep and his shoes lying neatly beside him, they decided to play a trick on him. Silently, they crept closer to him with the intent of hiding his shoes. But just as one of the boys picked them up and turned to retreat, he stepped on a dry twig which cracked beneath his foot. The man began to stir. Startled, the boy hurriedly dropped the shoes and, with his friend, fled. The man half woke, sat upright, and blearily looked around him, but, seeing nothing, soon went back to sleep.
Early the following morning, the man awoke and, carefully putting on his shoes so that they continued to point in what he thought was the same direction, he set off once more. He walked for the whole day until finally, as dusk fell, he came to the edge of the forest, and there, before his very eyes, at last, was the Golden City.
As he got closer, the man began to feel strangely at home. Things here were exactly as he had imagined. It wasn’t that the city was any bigger than his own, but he had a strong feeling of belonging – a sense of coming home. His eyes lit up as he walked past what felt like familiar shops and houses.
But best of all, he came across a very familiar street where he found a familiar house. He knocked on a familiar door and was greeted by a familiar-looking family. He smiled a deep smile because he felt at peace. And he thanked God that after his long and difficult journey, he had finally reached his destination.¹
Life is a journey.
But is this journey just an aimless meandering, or is it something more? Are we merely drifting through each year as it passes, or dare we hope that life is a journey with purpose and a destination?
For much of our lives, we repress such difficult questions. Instead, we fill our time with frenetic distractions and diverting amusements.
However, every now and then – perhaps over a meal or a drink with a friend of many years; or disturbed by a long, sleepless night; or faced with a personal difficulty or family tragedy; or gazing up at the moon and countless stars on a clear summer’s night – the questions find a way of breaking through. One way or another, life’s awkward questions have a habit of catching up with us.
Much of life’s journey, it turns out, is a quest to find ourselves and our place in the world. The journey of life is a process of self-discovery.
Each one of us needs a convincing story which tells us who we are, an overarching narrative with structure, purpose and direction. For, without a story – a sense of who we are and how we fit in – we are lost. At best we survive, but we will never thrive.
Many choose to fill the void left by the absence of a story with the pursuit of money, sex or power. Yet it is still apparent that the real search, even then, is for the deeper treasures of security, love and a sense of significance.
Furthermore, when we are ensnared by the dizzying dance of life, blinded in its glittering glare, our sense of being lost is magnified. Yet this sense of ‘lostness’ should never be despised. It can be a wonderful gift. The realisation that we are lost brims with hope and opportunity. For this very sense of being lost, when embraced rather than ignored, can become the impetus that spurs us on to take the next step forward on our journey.
THE QUEST FOR MEANING
In the movie The Motorcycle Diaries, the young Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara and his friend Alberto Granado embark on an epic journey across South America. They begin in high spirits, but their travels bring into focus disturbing questions about life. At one point, Guevara sums up the nature of journeying in this way: ‘Each moment seems split in two: melancholy for what is left behind and the excitement of entering a new land.’²
The two men encounter extremes of weather and constant danger; their motorbike fails; they fall ill and struggle to find shelter and food. But they also discover new priorities through encountering communities stricken by poverty, prejudice and gross social injustice – experiences that form the social idealism for which they would eventually become famous. As Guevara observes: ‘We could feel the world changing . . . or was it us?’³
A journey of any length will take in many landscapes, not all of which will be beautiful and awe-inspiring. But, though life is often tedious or even treacherous, each experience remains an integral part of the journey.
If a journey implies a destination, then a destination implies a direction, and a direction implies decisions. But every decision we make entails the limiting of options. To choose one road, we must reject another. As Thomas Aquinas observed, ‘Every choice is a renunciation.’ Which means that to move forward with a genuine sense of purpose and direction, we must make sacrifices.
Perhaps that is why ambling through life, ignoring these questions, appears, to so many, to be the easiest option.
While we are more than happy to accept the joys and the highs, the successes and the good times of life, we constantly question the pain, the sorrow and the suffering. Yet these too have important lessons to teach us. And because life is a journey rather than a guided tour, we have to be alert to any clues we might find along our path, even when they come to us through the medium of pain and disappointment. Ignoring these clues will leave us impoverished.
Only by learning to negotiate life’s peaks and troughs can we progress on our journey. It is as we wrestle with the never-ending questions that we move forward, and only through searching can we find our way.
To get through the hardest journey we need take only one step at a time, but we must keep on stepping.
CHINESE PROVERB
As we search, we find that some questions trouble us more persistently than others. Above all, there’s that big, disturbing question that keeps resurfacing. It’s the question encapsulated in the lyrics of countless songs, the lines of poems and the scripts of new movies each year. It’s found on the lips and in the thoughts of millions of people around the world, even as you are reading these words:
Why?
Homo sapiens are, by nature, meaning-seeking creatures. And, of all the questions we ever ask, the most important has to be:
Why am I here? The advances of science have done