Preface
This book did not come from any plan or desire to write a book for the sake of writing a book. Rather, it grew out of an effort to address certain situations in our churches. In our churches we had non-Christians who were contemplating baptism and wanted to know how to live the Christian life. But we also had Christians who, despite having been baptized, did not know what it means to be a Christian in the biblical sense. They were living in spiritual defeat and making no headway in their “Christian” walk because they did not know what it means to follow the Lord Jesus.
These Christians come from all walks of life and every type of religious upbringing but there is a common denominator to their spiritual malaise: a lack of commitment to God. A Christian who is not committed to God is like a soldier who is not loyal to his own country or a family member who doesn’t care about the welfare of his own family. Without commitment to God, the Christian life simply does not work.
To help this situation, we set up a Bible training called Commitment Training (CT) which is still ongoing in our churches (Christian Disciples Church). The present book, which is based on the CT material and edited for a wider audience, can be used beneficially by all churches because it deals with universal issues that confront many in the body of Christ.
CT has since been given to over a thousand people, many of whom were non-Christians seeking to be baptized. Thankfully, most of them have gone on to committing themselves to God. A minority, however, felt that the cost of discipleship is too high, and deferred making the commitment of faith.
The first CT was given in English in Hong Kong, a city in which English is not the mother tongue of most people. Hence we used a simple style of English to conduct the training. This was for clarity but also for facilitating translation, including the translation later used in the CTs given in Thailand, India, Nepal, Myanmar, and Indonesia. But even among the translators, the level of English is not necessarily high. And as for the trainees, some are not well educated even in their own languages. Here is where simplicity of language is useful, and where we see God’s wisdom in having the New Testament composed in the Koine Greek of the common people as distinct from the literary Greek of the educated.
The 15 chapters in this book correspond to the 15 CT sessions, each originally an hour long. Most people can, however, read through a chapter of this book in far less time.
The thought of publishing the CT sessions was not originally in our minds. But by God’s grace, many have found them helpful over the years, so the question was repeatedly asked as to why they should not be published.
The first edition of this book was published in 2001. This 2015 revised edition improves the flow of writing (e.g., by removing the repetition which is natural and effective in speech but is not needed in writing) and adds supplementary paragraphs here and there (e.g., to explain commitment in the light of biblical monotheism).
We hope that all who read this book will be inspired to commit to the one true God as we follow in the steps of His Son Jesus Christ, who lived in obedience and total commitment to his God and Father.
Eric Chang
Montreal, July 1, 2000
Bentley Chan
Montreal, October 13, 2015 (and December 20, 2020)
(c) 2021 Christian Disciples Church