Don’t Waste Your Time with 1-on-1 Discipleship. Start a D-Group to Maximize your Investment
Now that I have your attention, let me say that one-on-one discipleship is not a waste of time. However, there is a better way to invest your chronological clout.
Anyone in business will tell you that the secret to success is working smarter, not just harder – because investing your time and resources in the right areas will yield the biggest returns.
Solomon, King David’s son, was a financial genius: the Warren Buffett of his day. Twenty-five hundred years before Wall Street ever existed, he advocated the diversification of assets (Ecclesiastes 11:1-2).
Wise people do not invest all of their funds in one stock for fear of losing their entire life savings, should the company collapse. Instead, good stewards invest in a variety of stocks, bonds, and commodities.
The same can be said of your time. It’s precious. You only have so many hours each week to devote to discipleship, so invest in the right areas. After a decade of discipling, critiquing, evaluating, and implementing discipleship groups in various contexts and churches, I have identified 8 convincing reasons to start a D-group of 3 to 5 instead of one-on-one.
Discipleship is more than a weekly meeting, but never less. Believers grow spiritually outside of the group more so than during the time spent together each week. However, the weekly meeting is crucial for maturity. The gender-exclusive group meets weekly for a time of encouragement, edification, fellowship, accountability, and equipping.
Eight Reasons to Disciple in a D-Group of 3 to 5
Sadly, whenever I mention discipleship to some, they envision a one-on-one relationship. Many people have one category for discipleship—a group of 2. Times and seasons allow for meeting with someone in a one-on-one discipling relationship (counseling, marital issues, addictions, etc.); however, that number shouldn’t be the customary size.
While one-on-one discipling is valid and has it purposes, I want you to consider eight reasons to meet in a group of three to five instead of privately with one:

- Avoid the Ping-Pong Match
- One-on-one is difficult to reproduce
- Group of two tends to become a counseling session
- A group of three to five has built-in accountability
- A multiplication strategy is exponentially faster than an addition strategy

- A one-on-one group can be intimidating
- You grow as a group
- Jesus Discipled in Groups
I want to hear from you.
What do you think?
Do you agree that a Group of 3 to 5 is more effective than one-on-one?
If not, comment below.
Can you do me a Favor? If these ideas resonate with you, would you: • REACT. Do something. • RESPOND. Leave a comment on this post. • REPOST. Repost this link on Twitter, Facebook or your blog. [i] Babylonian Talmud, Taanit 7a Spangler, Ann; Lois Tverberg (2009-05-26). Sitting at the Feet of Rabbi Jesus: How the Jewishness of Jesus Can Transform Your Faith (Kindle Location 1148). Zondervan. Kindle Edition. [ii]Rosenberg and Koshy, 87-8.