There are discipleship podcasts available on the MoreDisciples.com site. Additional episodes have been released this month. You can access them at https://moredisciples.com/blog/. We’ve had a great time capturing these podcasts with a passionate team of disciple-makers. What topics would you like for us to address?
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Doug, you have attempted to ask the following questions several times throughout the series of podcasts, but when it was asked, it seems to always be jumbled with other questions, so some of the other questions in the grouping get answered, but not this one. The question is this, “How are these laborers being funded to do this DMM work?” I’m sure each person is different so it would have been good to hear a broad overview of how this is being done rather than the question only being presented to one guest on a podcast, but hearing something along these lines would perhaps be better than nothing. Or perhaps a survey of a wider number of your guests could be taken and then the broader results could somehow be communicated to podcast listeners. I don’t know, but I thought that this would be one question that could be helpful to hear. Thanks.
Doug, I can think of another topic that could perhaps be helpful to folks and again it was eluded to in a couple podcasts but while answering other questions never got explained. It was along the line of failures. People indicated they at times tried to adapt and modify the elements of DMM and do things their own way but it ended up not working out. Failing forward can be a great opportunity and learning time; so what were those adaptations that increased the risk of failure? Can those things be unfolded, shared and explained so we could learn from them rather than leaving them as general statements in passing? This would expand the lessons we could learn from to include both successes and failures rather than just the one side of it. I know I have made enough mistakes in my own life that if I don’t try to learn from them I miss too much of what God is trying to teach me. Thanks so much.