How God Shapes Disciples
Nine Classrooms of Revelation and Formation
(English & Español)
July 6, 2026
(English & Español)
July 6, 2026
Most Christians want to grow. We pray for it. We read books about it. We attend church, listen to sermons, and practice spiritual disciplines. Yet many believers still wonder, How does God actually transform a person? The answer is both simpler and richer than we often imagine.
God does not shape His children through a single approach to spiritual growth. Instead, He uses many "classrooms" throughout life to reveal Himself, train our perception, and gradually transform us into the likeness of Christ. This means discipleship is not confined to Sunday mornings, Bible studies, or quiet times. God is actively teaching us every day. Every circumstance, relationship, and trial can become part of His curriculum. Every opportunity can also become a place of formation when understood through the light of Scripture and centered on Christ.
This changes how we see the Christian life. Instead of asking only, What should I do to grow? we begin asking, Where is God teaching me today, and how can I faithfully respond?
One of the greatest misconceptions Christians can have is that God only speaks or works through extraordinary experiences. We wait for miraculous healings. We long for dramatic encounters. We hope to hear God's audible voice. God certainly can work in remarkable ways. But Scripture paints a much larger picture.
God is always at work. He is continually revealing Himself, patiently educating His children, and training them to see reality more truthfully. As Jesus said, "My Father is always at his work to this very day..." — John 5:17 NIV. The question is rarely whether God is working. The question is whether we have learned to recognize His activity.
God gives us truth not merely to inform us, but to transform the way we see, so that our lives may be conformed to the image of Christ. Sin has distorted our perception. We naturally misunderstand God, ourselves, other people, and the world around us. We often interpret life through fear, pride, shame, and wounds. We also filter reality through cultural assumptions or self-interest instead of through the wisdom of God.
This is why discipleship begins with restored vision. God reveals Himself not merely to inform us, but to retrain our perception so we can increasingly see Him, ourselves, others, and the world as He does. As our perception changes, everything else begins to change.
Our beliefs become truer.
Our loves become rightly ordered.
Our motives become purer.
Our actions increasingly reflect the life of Christ.
The Christian life is not merely learning more about God. It is progressively learning to see with God so we can behold Him as He truly is and become like Him.
God uses many classrooms of revelation and formation to accomplish this. Each one reveals something unique about Him and teaches us to interpret reality more faithfully.
Creation continually reveals God's wisdom, power, beauty, and goodness. As we observe the order, complexity, and beauty of the world He has made, we learn something about the Creator Himself. Creation teaches us wonder.
Scripture is God’s foundational classroom because it gives us His interpretation of reality. It reveals:
Who God is and who we are
How He designed life to work and what has gone wrong through sin
What He is restoring through Christ and who He is forming us to become
Because Scripture reveals reality as God sees it, it becomes both the foundation and the lens for every other classroom God uses. It is the foundation because it reveals truth. It is the lens because it teaches us how to interpret everything else. Without this foundation, we can easily misunderstand or misinterpret our experiences and emotions. We may also misread suffering, relationships, or even spiritual encounters. With Scripture, these classrooms become places where God applies His truth and trains us to live in harmony with His design.
The other classrooms do not replace Scripture. They help us experience, practice, and embody the reality Scripture reveals. Through the Holy Spirit, prayer, the Church, relationships, creation, suffering, providence, mission, and everyday life, God applies His Word to our lives, shaping us into the likeness of Jesus.
As disciples, we are not merely called to know the Bible. We are invited to see reality through God’s eyes and increasingly align every area of life with His wisdom.
God teaches us through the ordinary events of everyday life. He uses relationships, work, and successes to shape us. He also uses failures, answered prayers, and disappointments. Even consequences and personal testimonies can become part of His formation in our lives. This is God's providence at work in our daily lives. Nothing is wasted when we learn to ask, "Lord, what are You teaching me?"
God also teaches through the lives of those who have gone before us. History reveals His dealings with individuals, churches, societies, movements, and nations across generations. History also becomes one of God’s classrooms. Through biblical history, church history, and general history, we discover recurring patterns of God’s character and His ways. We also see the consequences of human choices.
History enlarges our perspective. It helps us see that God is always at work across generations, forming His people and revealing His wisdom.
God never intended us to grow alone. He teaches us through His people.
Encouragement
Correction
Accountability
Shared wisdom
Faithful examples
Together, the Church becomes a living classroom where we learn to love and forgive. We also learn to serve others and grow in Christlike maturity.
The Holy Spirit is our continual Teacher. He...
illumines Scripture
convicts us of sin
comforts us in weakness
guides us into truth
empowers obedience
Without the Holy Spirit, Christianity becomes mere self-improvement. With Him, it becomes living transformation.
Prayer is far more than presenting requests. It is learning to live in attentive fellowship with God. As we listen, worship, and confess, our hearts become increasingly aligned with His. As we lament, give thanks, and enjoy His presence, prayer teaches us dependence.
Few classrooms shape us more deeply than suffering. Trials expose what we trust. They deepen humility. They produce endurance. They teach compassion. They loosen our grip on temporary things and strengthen our hope in eternal realities. Although we rarely choose this classroom, God often uses it to accomplish some of His greatest work within us.
The Kingdom gives us our future perspective. As we remember Christ's return and God's promised renewal of all things, we learn to evaluate today's decisions in light of eternity. Hope changes how we live today. The Kingdom teaches us to invest our lives in what lasts forever.
These classrooms are not independent. One stands above them all. Scripture is God's authoritative lens.
Creation can be misunderstood.
Suffering can embitter us.
History can be misread.
Experience can deceive us.
Spiritual impressions require discernment.
Scripture continually interprets every other classroom and points us to their ultimate fulfillment in Christ. This is why Jesus remains at the center. Every classroom ultimately teaches us to know Him more deeply.
God graciously provides the classrooms. Our responsibility is to participate intentionally. Discipleship is not passive. Neither is it about trying harder. It is the faithful stewardship of God's self-revelation. Like apprentices learning from a wise Master, we enter these classrooms with humility, attentiveness, and expectancy.
We linger where God reveals Himself.
We reflect on what He is teaching.
We respond with obedience.
We seek to embody His truth.
We return again and again.
Over time, the Spirit uses this repeated process to heal our perception. Each new insight helps us see reality more clearly. Each clearer vision invites a deeper realignment under Christ's gracious leadership. Transformation rarely happens all at once. It unfolds through thousands of faithful responses to God's ongoing revelation.
This may be the most encouraging truth of all. We are not trying to manufacture spiritual growth or force ourselves to perceive reality correctly. We are responding to a God who is already everywhere, and always at work revealing Himself and patiently educating His children. Every day He is teaching, inviting and shaping. The disciple is simply the one who learns to recognize His classrooms, faithfully participate in them, and allow the Spirit to transform the way they see. As that happens, we increasingly behold Christ, see reality through His eyes, and joyfully realign every area of life under His gracious rule. That is how God shapes disciples.