What threatens the long-term growth of disciple-making movements?
In this episode, Steve Adams unpacks a critical challenge facing global ministry efforts: sustainability .
Across regions like Indonesia, Africa, and Central Asia, leaders are faithfully planting churches, discipling believers, and seeing multi-generational growth. But when new believers lose jobs, face social and family ostracism, or move into rural areas with little to no job opportunities, movements begin to strain.
When people can barely meet their own needs, they enter survival mode. And survival mode makes it difficult to give yourself away in disciple making.
Steve explains how IBAM partners with established disciple-making organizations to address this challenge through a believer-empowerment approach. By training existing business owners to become trainers, forming loan committees, implementing structured evaluation processes, and coaching local leadership teams, IBAM strengthens sustainability from within.
The goal is not dependency—but empowerment. Over time, generations of students become trainers themselves, multiplying impact.
The results? A shift from roughly a 40% success rate to approximately 90% of businesses thriving and supporting disciple-making movements .
This episode is a clear look at why sustainability matters—and how strengthening the economic foundation can accelerate Kingdom growth for the long term.
5 Key Takeaways
1. Disciple-making movements are multi-generational by design.
They grow as believers disciple others who then disciple the next generation .
2. Lack of sustainable income works against movement growth.
When believers enter survival mode, ministry involvement often decreases .
3. New believers often face economic hardship.
Job loss, social ostracism, and limited employment opportunities create real pressure on movements .
4. IBAM equips local leaders through structured business training.
Training trainers, forming loan committees, and coaching leadership builds long-term sustainability .
5. Improving the process improves the outcome.
Success rates increased from about 40% to approximately 90% as the model matured .
Watch full episode on YT - https://youtu.be/KyvY17yVkVA
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