5-2 The Great Commission
The words of Mk. 16:15,16 are clear enough to the open, child-like
mind: " Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to
every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved"
. Commands to repent, all men, the Lord’s resurrection...these ideas
all recur in Acts 17:30; God now commands all men to repent, through
our words. These words clearly don't apply to the first century
only, for they are intended to be linked with Mt 24:14, which uses
the same language about the preaching work of the very last days
(even though the context may imply that as a community we will only
be obedient to this command once egged on by major persecution).
If we say that we are not commanded to obey the command
to go into all nations, then we must also conclude that we are not
commanded to baptize people. And if these words about baptism don't
apply to us today, then there is no command of the Lord Jesus to
be baptized. The connection between the command to preach and the
command to baptize is made clearer by the parallel record: "
Go ye therefore, and teach (make disciples of, AVmg.) all nations,
baptising them...and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end
of the world" (Mt. 28:19,20), i.e. Christ will be with us in
our preaching right to the ends of the world. The special closeness
of the Lord in preaching work has been widely commented upon by
preachers. The commission of Mt. 28:19,20 is alluded to in Acts
14:21 AVmg. concerning the work of Paul and Barnabas, neither of
whom were among the twelve: " And when they had preached the
Gospel to that city, and had made many disciples..." . This
in itself disproves the idea that the great commission was intended
only for the twelve. It is difficult to read 1 Thess. 1:6-8 in the
RSV without seeing an allusion to the great preaching commission:
as if Paul is saying: 'Well done for realising that the great commission
which some of us received specifically, does in fact apply to you
too!': " You became imitators of us...for not only
has the word of the Lord sounded forth from you in Macedonia
and Achaia, but your faith in God has gone forth everywhere"
. And he again seems to have the commission in mind, when he wrote
to the Corinthians that to all of us has been committed the ministry
of reconciliation [a reference to the great commission?], and in
discharging it we are ‘workers together’ with God (2 Cor. 6:1)-
the very same word used in Mk. 16:20 concerning how the Lord Jesus
‘worked with’ His men as they fulfilled the commission.
The great commission comes in the context of the Gospel records
labouring how the various believers all ‘went’ or were told to ‘go’
with the message to others. This ‘go-to-them’ spirit is what should
energize us; and yet in so many church discussions, preaching is
pictured as making the church attractive to the outsider, e.g. by
making the Sunday morning service more attractive. This ‘come-to-us’
mentality stands in stark contrast to the ‘go-to-them’ spirit of
the great commission and the early church.
“Go ye therefore…”
The Lord gave a reason for His command: " Go ye therefore
" . " Therefore " . Because of what?
Mt. 28:18 provides the answer: " All power is given unto me
in heaven and in earth. Go ye therefore " .
Because of this, we must spread the Gospel of Christ to the whole
planet, because His authority is over the whole earth. He has that
power just as much now as He did in the first century; and therefore
the command to spread the Gospel world-wide still stands today.
Indeed, His words here in Mt. 28 have evident reference to Dan.
7:14, where the Son of Man is given authority and power over all
so that people of all nations, races and languages should
serve Him. We must remind ourselves that out of the 5,000 or so
languages in the world, the vast majority have no true Christian
representatives; and only about half of them have the Bible in their
own language. And as of the year 2000, only 12% of the world have
English as a first or second language; yet the majority of those
holding true Bible teaching, so far as we know, are English speaking.
If, as indeed we believe, we alone preach the True Gospel...then
we have a long way to go in fulfilling this. Either that, or the
scope of God’s acceptance of men from all these languages and nations
over time and over space today is far wider than we as a community
have thought. Both of these possible conclusions arise from meditation
upon the fact that the authority of the Lord must be extended over
every nation and language group. Both of them are intensely challenging
to our community. Rev. 5:9 presents us with the picture of men and
women redeemed from every kindred [tribe / clan], tongue
[glossa- language], people [a group of people not necessarily
of the same ethnicity] and nation [ethnos- ethnic group,
lit. ‘those of the same customs’]. This means that not only redeemed
‘Yugoslavs’ will stand before the throne in the end; but Macedonians,
Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Montenegrans, Bosnians...every ethnic group,
with every custom, will have representatives who will have believed
the Truth and been saved. This idea is confirmed by considering
how 70 bullocks had to be sacrificed at the feast of ingathering
(Num. 29), prophetic as it was of the final ingathering of the redeemed.
But 70 is the number of all Gentile nations found in Gen. 10. And
it is written: “When he separated the sons of Adam, he set the bounds
of the people according to the number of the children of Israel”
(Dt. 32:8). A total of 70 went down with Jacob into Egypt; and thus
70 seems an appropriate number to connect with the entire Gentile
world. And representatives of all of them will be finally
ingathered.
It seems highly doubtful to me that over the past 2,000 years,
the Truth has been taken to every ethnos, tribe, clan,
custom and language, especially in Africa and Asia. So it follows
that only once we have done it in our generation will this
come true. The brethren in those parts especially have work to do
yet, it seems to me. And we should all support them as best we can.
I have a real belief that given the current rate of progress in
preaching, the current generation could witness literally
world-wide representation by those who understand true Christian
doctrine- if we all do our bit. It is very difficult
for me to reproduce in writing the kind of picture I have in my
mind. But it is a thrilling and all consuming, all-demanding vision.
The same connection between the universal authority of the Lord
and the need to preach it is made in Jn. 17:2,3: “Thou hast given
him power over all flesh, that he should give eternal life
to [men]...and this is life eternal, that they might know thee the
only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent”. The great
commission says that because He has power over all flesh, therefore
we must preach Him. Jn. 17:2 says that because He has this power,
He can give men eternal life through the knowledge of Him. The extent
of our obedience to the preaching commission- and who can argue
that we don’t have freewill as to the extent to which we fulfil
any command- this is the extent to which eternal life is given to
men. Their eternal destiny is placed in our hands. The authority
to save all men and women has been given to the Lord, but the extent
to which this becomes reality depends upon our preaching it [this
is further developed in Christians Unlimited].
There has always been opposition to spreading the Gospel outside
our own environment. Jonah was unwilling to take it to Nineveh,
Israel failed miserably in their intended role as a missionary nation,
and the apostles showed remarkable reluctance to obey the command
to take Christ into all the world in the first century. The women
were told to go tell the disciples of the resurrection, but they
went away and told nobody, Mark records (Mk. 16:7,8). The other
records say that they did tell the disciples. There is no contradiction
here; Mark’s point is surely that they were reluctant to obey the
great commission initially.
It seems that once human beings enter into covenant relationship
with God, they are tempted to become spiritually selfish; to forget
that they only have that relationship with God because someone
else spread it to them. We must be careful not to justify our own
weakness in this area by saying that actually it is supported by
Scripture. It seems that the early brethren chose to understand
the Lord’s universal commission as meaning going out to preach to
Jews of all nations, and they saw the response of Acts 2 as proof
of this. And yet “all nations” is used about the Gentiles in all
its other occurrences in Matthew (4:15; 6:32; 10:5,18; 12:18,21;
20:19,25). Such intellectual failure had a moral basis- they subconsciously
couldn’t hack the idea of converting Gentiles into the Hope of Israel.
They allowed themselves to assume they understood what the Lord
meant, to assume they had their interpretation confirmed by the
events of Acts 2…instead of baring themselves to the immense and
personal import of the Lord’s commission to take Him to literally
all.
" How shall they hear...?"
It is sometimes implied by those who oppose world-wide preaching
that people will find the true Gospel anyway if they have
access to a Bible. Taken to its logical conclusion, this argument
would mean that we should not preach at all. Yet, as any fresh
convert will testify, " how then shall they call on him
in whom they have not believed? and how shall they believe
in him of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear
without a preacher?" (Rom. 10:14). This clearly states
that (as a general rule) it is impossible to believe in Christ
without a preacher. The Ethiopian eunuch was the classic case
of this. Bible in hand, his exasperation boiled over: "
How can I (understand), except some man shall
guide me?" (Acts 8:31). It is perfectly possible that
Rom. 10:4 alludes to this, implying that this man's case was
typical [and notice the connections between Acts 8:37 and
Rom. 10:9]. Likewise the Lord Jesus spoke of " them also
which shall believe on me through their (the
preachers') word" (Jn. 17:20)- not through their unguided
Bible reading. If all we had been given was a Bible, most
of us would simply not be where we are today, spiritually.
If I had started reading from Genesis, I don't think I'd have
got much beyond Leviticus before giving up on the Bible. Yet
there are some who have made it through, from Genesis to Revelation.
And their testimony is even more emphatic: " Without
doubt I needed someone to guide me, I was just crying out
for all the pieces to be put into place" , in the words
of one such recent convert.
Paul continues his theme of preaching in Rom. 10. Having spoken
of the vital need for preachers, he quotes Old Testament prophecies
concerning the preaching of the Gospel: " Have they not heard?
Yes verily, their sound went into all the earth, and their words
unto the ends of the world" (Rom. 10:18). Paul is doubtless
alluding to the great commission here. But he says that it is fulfilled
by the preachers spoken of in Ps. 19:1-4, which he quotes. This
speaks of the " heavens" declaring God's gospel world-wide.
In the same way as the sun 'goes forth' all over the world, so will
the " heavens" go forth to declare the Gospel. The 'heavens'
do not just refer to the twelve in the first century; the New Testament
says that all in Christ are the " heavenlies" ; we are
all part of the " sun of righteousness" . The arising
of Christ as the sun at His second coming (Mal. 4:2) will be heralded
by the church witnessing the Gospel of His coming beforehand. The
enthusiast will note a number of other preaching allusions in Ps.
19: " The firmament sheweth his handiwork"
(v.1) uses a word (in the Septuagint) which occurs in Lk. 9:60 concerning
the publishing of the Gospel. " Their line is
gone out through all the earth" (v.4) is picked up by Paul
in describing his preaching (2 Cor. 10:13-16 AVmg.). The idea of
'going out' throughout the earth was clearly at the root of Christ's
great commission (Mk. 16:15). Yet, as we have said, the " heavens"
to which this refers in Ps. 19 are interpreted by the New Testament
as referring to all believers in Christ. |