Wednesday, 18 March 2026

 



                                                  



                                                                               


BEWARE OF BEING CLONED: FOLLOW CHRIST, NOT MEN

In Christianity, cloning is a figurative term that describes the intentional, systematic process by which a student (mentee) replicates the character, habits, and mindset of a teacher (mentor). It happens between the congregation and the pulpit, but also between junior and senior ministers. This spiritual or leadership cloning focuses on the transmission of intangible DNA, including values, speech patterns, mannerisms, decision-making processes, and internal convictions.

​When a mentee desires to be "cloned" by a spiritual father or mentor, the process usually involves three distinct stages. First is the observation or blueprint, when the mentee moves beyond just listening to instructions. They study the mentor’s life "in all facets," noticing how they handle pressure, how they treat others, and how they manage their private discipline.

​Secondly, there is the replication, which is the active "cloning" phase. The mentee adopts the mentor’s methods and rhythms. In many traditions, this is referred to as mimesis, where the goal is to produce a result identical to the original through disciplined mimicry.

​Thirdly is assimilation or integration, when eventually, the mentor's external behaviors become the mentee's internal nature. The "clone" no longer has to "try" to act like the mentor; they naturally respond to life situations using the same spiritual and intellectual framework.

There is a dangerous subtlety in discipleship when mentorship shifts from impartation to imitation, and from guidance to cloning. God never designed the Church to produce replicas of men, but reflections of Christ.

Paul said clearly: “Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ.” 1 Cor. 11:1

This is the boundary. Follow men only to the extent that they follow Christ. The moment imitation of a leader replaces transformation into Christ, error has begun.

Many believers today are being unconsciously cloned, not just spiritually, but in speech, dress, gestures, tone, emphasis, and even personal convictions.

While impartation is scriptural (Gal. 4:19), cloning is not. Paul travailed “…until Christ be formed in you.” Gal. 4:19

The goal is Christ formed in you, not your leader reproduced in you.


THE DANGER OF CLONING

Cloning produces:

Dependence on personality instead of Christ

Loss of spiritual originality and identity in God

Transmission of both strengths and hidden weaknesses

Blind loyalty that ignores truth and Scripture

Even the apostles refused this pattern. When men saw Peter and John:

“…they took knowledge of them, that they had been with Jesus.” Acts 4:13

Not that they had been with a man, but with Jesus. That is the mark of true discipleship.

 

THE TRUE PATTERN: CONFORMITY TO CHRIST

God’s eternal agenda is clear:

“…to be conformed to the image of his Son…” Romans 8:29

Not conformed to a denomination, a prophet, a pastor, or a movement, but Christ.

And how does this happen?

“…we all…beholding…are changed into the same image…” 2 Cor. 3:18

Transformation comes by beholding Christ, not by copying men.

Peter reinforces it:

“Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps.” 1 Peter 2:21

Christ is not just a Savior. He is the pattern.

 

FOLLOWERSHIP WITH DISCERNMENT

Ephesians gives us the final authority:

“Be ye therefore followers of God… and walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us…” Eph. 5:1–2

Not followers of men, followers of God.

So, follow your leader’s faith, not their personality

Follow their obedience to Christ, not their preferences

Receive grace and impartation, but guard your identity in Christ

BE WARNED!

If you are not careful, you may:

Speak like your leader but lack Christ’s nature

Act like your leader but lack Christ’s Spirit

Represent a ministry but misrepresent Christ

Such may unknowingly inculcate their leaders' bad character or even be demonically ensnared through the transfer of demons residing in their leaders. Common ones are love of money, opulence and affluence affinity, sexual immorality, and anger.

God is not raising copies of men. He is raising sons in the image of His Son.

Honor spiritual leaders. Learn from them. Receive from them. But never replace Christ with them.

The ultimate testimony of your life should not be: “I look like my leader,” but “I have become like Christ.”

Because in the end, true maturity is not measured by resemblance to a man, but by conformity to Christ.

In addition, follow your leaders, mentors, and fathers with your eyes open and your discernment sharpened. Refuse to be a clone of any man, no matter how strong their personality, knowledge, grace, and gifts are.

You can imbibe their Christ-like qualities, but be careful not to acquire their vices and pattern of life that are alien to Christ. Samuel was a true and successful prophet from the Lord who failed in family life. The children of Israel requested a king because the sons of Samuel were sons of Belial, just like the sons of Eli were.

There is the possibility that Samuel acquired a dysfunctional family life from Eli, his mentor and spiritual father. Nothing is wrong with mentoring and spiritual fathering. Still, everything is wrong with mimicking the questionable character of some mentors or following a mentor or spiritual father who is not following Christ. When you embrace cloning and not true discipleship, you become an embodiment of both their virtues and vices.

The truth is that the Bible does not promote “cloning” in the sense of copying personality, mannerisms, or identity. What it presents is the impartation of spirit, doctrine, and pattern in God, not personal duplication.