Discipleship
The One Next Step That Keeps People From Slipping Out Your Back Door
100 Strong · July 4, 2026
Photo by Maksim Shutov on Unsplash
You work so hard to get people in the front door. You pray for the guest who finally shows up, you shake the hand of the young couple who slipped in late, you rejoice over the person who prayed to receive Christ last month. And then, quietly, some of them drift away. Not because you did anything wrong at the front door, but because there was nothing clear waiting for them once they walked in.
Here is the tension almost every under-100 pastor feels: we are great at welcoming and terrible at what comes next. When there is no named next step, the back door wins. But when there is a clear pathway, everything changes. Churches with clear discipleship pathways saw nearly twice the salvations of those without. A path is not just organizational tidiness. It is how you stop leaking the very people your front door works so hard to bring in.
Start by defining your target disciple
Before you build any pathway, answer one question: what are we aiming at? If you cannot describe the finished person, every ministry will pull in a slightly different direction.
Write it in one sentence the whole church can repeat. Something like: a disciple is someone who attends worship, studies the Bible, serves, gives, and shows the fruit of the Spirit. That single sentence becomes your compass. Every class, group, and role should point toward it.
Diagnose where each person actually is
People do not all need the same lesson. They need the same direction but a different next step. One helpful diagnostic is the 5 Stages of Spiritual Growth: Dead, Infant, Child, Young Adult, and Parent. Each stage even comes with sample phrases you might hear. An Infant might say, "I'm too busy for a small group." A Parent is already coaching other disciples.
Use this pastorally, not as a label to slap on someone. It simply helps you see: this person needs to belong, that person is ready to serve, this one is ready to reproduce. The goal is a self-feeder, someone discipled in a small community of three or four who eventually makes disciples, not a dependent attender.
Publish one simple ladder and protect it
Many good pathways exist, and it is easy to overcomplicate this. For an under-100 church, keep it to four memorable steps:
Belong → Grow → Serve → Reach
- Belong: attend, get into a group, take the welcome or new-member class.
- Grow: daily Bible and prayer, baptism, become a self-feeder.
- Serve: discover your gifts, take a role that fits.
- Reach: share your story, invite others, begin reproducing.
The power here is in "the power of one next step." You do not ask people to jump to the finish line. You ask for the next single move. Then you preach it, teach it, expect it, celebrate it, model it, measure it, and protect it. That last word matters most. An under-100 church will quietly accumulate off-path programs unless someone guards the pathway and lovingly says no to good things that sit off the road.
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Create my free accountOnboard with a class
This is one of the highest-leverage moves you can make. Run a Welcome or Pastor's class of four to eight weeks for newcomers. It sounds almost too simple, but this single practice drives self-sufficiency. New churches that hold a new-member class were 71% self-sufficient within three years. Pathway discipline pays off fast.
Disciple new believers one-on-one
For a new believer, nothing beats personal time. Walk with them one-on-one for about twelve weeks. A helpful rhythm is Heart, Head, and Hands: roughly fifteen minutes on the heart, forty on the Word, ten on application.
Use the H.E.A.R. method: Highlight, Explain, Apply, Respond. And here is a key insight: the most immediate challenges new believers face are usually not doctrinal but daily. So lead with living, and add doctrine as they grow. Teach obedience, not just information. Close every study with two questions: what will you obey this week, and who will you tell? After the twelve weeks, graduate them into a group of three or four and a serving role.
Place people by gift, not by gap
When you get to Serve, resist the urge to plug warm bodies into empty slots. Use a gifts and DISC assessment so people serve where they fit. This is how serving becomes sustainable rather than something people quietly quit. A gifts inventory can move someone from guessing to knowing their top few gifts.
Pace it like a slow cooker
Finally, do not mistake activity for maturity. Growth is a slow cooker, not a microwave. Measure it over years. Celebrate the doorpost markers along the way: a baptism, a first serving role, a first person someone leads to Christ. Track whether people are In the Word, In the Family, In the Trenches, and In the Field, not just whether they showed up on Sunday.
What to do next
Do not try to launch all of this at once. If you are heading toward 25, define your target disciple and start one-on-one discipleship with your newest believer. Heading toward 50? Stand up your welcome class and publish the Belong → Grow → Serve → Reach ladder. Toward 75, add gifts placement. At 100, run the whole ladder as your operating system. You can see where your church sits and what to build next at /milestones, and grab a pathway tracker at /tools.
Your challenge this week
Write your target disciple in one sentence, then write your four-step pathway using Belong → Grow → Serve → Reach. Put both on a single page and share it with one leader this week. That one page is the beginning of a pathway that stops the leak.
