YWAM Tyler has an international mission to reach, train, and equip individuals to strengthen their societal structures: family, church, education…
Christian ministries dedicated to the slow, relational work of helping people follow Jesus — through one-on-one mentoring, small group community, campus outreach, and the patient formation that turns new believers into mature disciples who make more disciples.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
YWAM Tyler has an international mission to reach, train, and equip individuals to strengthen their societal structures: family, church, education…
721 nonprofits
Discipleship takes many forms — from college students meeting weekly with a mentor to international movements of disciples multiplying disciples. The best work is patient, relational, and oriented toward the long arc of a life being formed in Christ.
Structured pairings of mature believers with newer Christians for ongoing, life-on-life discipleship — meeting weekly or monthly across months and years to walk through Scripture, life, and the practical realities of following Jesus.
Discipling college students during the formative years away from home — through campus chapters, weekly Bible studies, mission trips, retreats, and the one-on-one work that has shaped generations of pastors, missionaries, and lay leaders.
Curriculum, training, and infrastructure for the small groups where most ordinary discipleship happens — equipping local churches with the tools, leaders, and materials that turn weekly gatherings into genuine spiritual formation.
Foundational discipleship for people in the early stages of faith — basic Christianity classes, integration into church life, foundational Bible teaching, and the patient relationships that help new believers grow real roots.
Gender-specific and vocation-specific discipleship programs — small groups, retreats, and one-on-one work shaped around the particular realities of men, women, and Christians navigating faith in their work and professional lives.
Models designed to multiply rather than just add — equipping disciples to make more disciples who go on to make more disciples — often connected to indigenous church planting movements producing rapid spiritual growth in places far beyond traditional missions.
Jesus's final command to his disciples was not to write a book, build an institution, or plant a flag. It was to make more disciples — to do for others what he had done for them, across nations and generations until he returns. This single command, found in Matthew 28, has shaped the church's deepest work for two thousand years. Every Christian who can name a faith of their own can usually also name someone who patiently helped them learn it.
Discipleship ministries exist to do that work intentionally. Some operate through colleges, walking with students through the most formative years of their lives. Some operate through churches, training the small group leaders and lay mentors who carry the bulk of ordinary discipleship. Some operate through workplace and vocational settings, helping Christians integrate faith with the daily realities of their work. Some operate internationally, supporting indigenous discipleship movements that have grown the global church faster than missionary efforts alone could.
What unites this category is the recognition that Christianity is not transferred through information alone. People do not become disciples by reading more books, attending more services, or watching more videos. They become disciples by walking alongside other disciples — by being known, taught, corrected, loved, and over time shaped into something they could not have become on their own. Discipleship is slow, relational, and largely invisible to the broader church. But its fruit lasts longer than almost anything else ministry does.
The mature movement has also learned important lessons. Intense discipleship environments can tip into unhealthy patterns when they lose connection to local churches, isolate participants, or substitute one person's spiritual authority for biblical formation. The best discipleship ministries today partner with churches rather than competing with them, build appropriate safeguards into mentoring relationships, and treat the people being discipled as adults capable of discernment — not subjects to be molded.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to discipleship ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
Discipleship done apart from the local church can create competing loyalties and isolated communities. Excellent parachurch discipleship ministries explicitly partner with local churches — connecting disciples to congregations, working alongside pastors, and treating the church as the primary context of Christian life. Beware of ministries that effectively substitute for church involvement rather than supporting it.
Intensive one-on-one discipleship requires real safeguards — clear boundaries in cross-gender mentoring, accountability structures for mentors, abuse prevention training, transparent reporting protocols, and protections against spiritual authority abuse. Excellent ministries take these issues seriously rather than assuming they don't apply because the work is "spiritual."
The most lasting discipleship work produces disciples who go on to disciple others — 2 Timothy 2:2 in practice. Excellent ministries measure their work not just by how many people they directly disciple, but by how many of those people are then making disciples themselves. Look for ministries with clear multiplication frameworks rather than only direct-service metrics.
American discipleship models have sometimes been exported globally without sufficient cultural adaptation — assuming Western approaches will translate directly. Excellent international ministries empower indigenous leaders, adapt their methods to local contexts, and recognize that the receiving culture often has discipleship wisdom worth learning from, not just receiving.
Discipleship is inherently theological — it teaches people what they should believe about God, themselves, and the world. Excellent ministries are transparent about their doctrinal commitments, ground their work in serious biblical study, and avoid vague spirituality that could mean anything. Look for ministries with clear statements of faith and serious theological depth.
It's easy to count attendees, Bible studies completed, or events held. It's harder to measure whether lives are actually being formed in Christ. Excellent ministries try to measure real formation — relational depth, character development, multiplication of disciples, long-term faithfulness — not just program participation. Beware of ministries whose impact claims rest entirely on attendance and event counts.
Explore verified discipleship ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.