We do not have a word for it in the English language. Understanding the difference between how we use “disciple” today and what Jesus meant by talmid reframes the entire purpose of the Church.
A student acquires knowledge about what the rabbi taught. The goal is accurate recall, intellectual comprehension, and theological understanding. Knowledge about Jesus.
A talmid desires to become just like their rabbi — not just knowing what he knew or doing what he did, but reflecting who he was. Heart, character, mind, attitude.
An apprentice takes actions based on what the teacher demonstrated. The goal is practical application of learned skills. Doing what Jesus did — service, prayer, compassion.
Unlike the words disciple, student, or apprentice — which suggest a learning and doing process — the word talmid is a Hebrew term that describes a becoming process.
Talmidim desire to become just like their rabbi. It is more than the practical application of the knowledge we gain. It is more than taking actions based upon our understanding of his teachings.
A talmid of Rabbi Jesus will have a heart after the Father, be growing to reflect the very character of Jesus, and will be gaining the mind and attitudes of Christ.
“Becoming all he would have us be requires that we trust the teachings of Jesus, the Father in us doing his works, and the power of the Holy Spirit in us to will and to do it — for the benefit of all of us.”— Ricky Kroeger, Gravitas
This becoming process is what Jesus modeled — not a lecture, but a conversation. Not a curriculum, but a way of life shared in community. Not information, but transformation.
Passive content consumption from a stage. The congregation receives information but transformation of character rarely follows.
Relational, dialogical, life-on-life. Teaching happened in the midst of doing, in small groups, in the marketplace, at the table.
The evidence of talmidim — fruit of the Spirit as lived evidence. Not religious performance, but genuine transformation of character.
The beatitudes are Jesus’ attitudes — a roadmap to the character transformation every talmid is meant to undergo.
Talmidim scattered across their community, each grain reflecting the light of God’s love — communities are restored.
Jesus didn’t primarily teach from stages. His discipleship happened in conversation, at meals, on the road, in small groups. The Gravitas book explores how to restore this model in a local church context.
The goal of biblical discipleship is not to produce people who know more theology — it is to produce people who are becoming more like Jesus in their heart, character, and attitudes toward others.
When talmidim are scattered like salt across their communities — each grain reflecting the light of God’s love — people are led into lifesaving relationship and communities are restored.
The crisis of 8 churches closing per day isn’t solved by better programs or bigger stages. It’s solved by returning to Jesus’ model: relational, transformational, becoming-focused community.