The Faith Greenhouse Podcast - Episode 4
Most Christians know they're called to make disciples.
But when it comes time to actually start, many of us ask the same question:
"Where do I begin?"
Disciple-making can feel complicated, overwhelming, or like something reserved for pastors and ministry leaders. We know Jesus called us to make disciples, but fitting that into everyday life often feels out of reach.
What if the answer was much simpler than you think?
In this episode of the Faith Greenhouse Podcast, Pastor Matt Peeples sits down with disciple-making practitioner and movement leader David Putman to explore how a simple framework born during the uncertainty of 2020 has helped ordinary people make disciples in homes, workplaces, gyms, businesses, and communities around the world.
David shares the story of how God used a season of disruption to reveal a disciple-making approach so simple that it started with his own family—and eventually led to multiple generations of disciples making disciples. From restored marriages and transformed families to workplace baptisms and multiplying disciple-making movements, this conversation is a powerful reminder that God often does extraordinary things through ordinary people willing to take simple steps of obedience.
In This Episode You'll Discover:
✅ Why disciple-making often starts with your family
✅ The simple 5-3-2 framework that is helping believers live on mission every day
✅ How to create disciple-making rhythms in the spaces you're already living, working, learning, and playing
✅ Why simplicity—not complexity—is the key to multiplication
✅ How to make time for disciple-making without adding more programs to your schedule
✅ Stories of transformed families, restored relationships, workplace discipleship, and generations of disciples making disciples
Imagine This...
Imagine feeling confident sharing your faith naturally.
Imagine seeing spiritual conversations happen in everyday places.
Imagine your home becoming a place where disciples are formed.
Imagine helping someone follow Jesus—and then watching them help others do the same.
That's the vision behind disciple-making in everyday spaces.
And it might be far simpler than you think.
