5-6 The Great Commission In Matthew
The Great Commission: Closer Analysis
The records of the great preaching commission are each slightly
different, and each links with statements recorded earlier in the
same Gospel.
Matthew
“Go ye into all the world” evidently connects
with the Lord’s command in the parable: “Go ye” into the
highways and “gather together all”, as many as were found.
And this in turn is an extension of an earlier parable, where the
net of the Gospel is presented as gathering “every kind”-
every genos, every “kindred / nation / stock / generation”,
as the word is elsewhere translated (Mt. 28:19; 22:9,10; 13:47).
The work of the Gospel described in those earlier parables was now
specifically delegated to the Lord’s men. Through the work of the
Lord’s followers over the generations, there would in every nation
and generation be some who were gathered in, of as many social classes
as one finds walking along a street [highway / byway]. The net of
Gospel preaching is filled (pleroo), and then pulled to
shore for judgment. When the Gospel has been preached in all the
world (with response), then the end will come. Elsewhere Paul uses
the same word to describe how the Gospel is fulfilled by preaching
it (Rom. 15:19; Col. 1:25). To have the Gospel is to have an imperative
to preach it.
Matthew’s record of the great commission draws on earlier themes
and passages in his Gospel. The Lord told His men to go out and
make disciples of men (Mt. 28:19 RV). In the immediate context,
there are many references to the disciples (Mt. 27:64; 28:7,8,13,16).
And the term “disciples” occurs more often (73 times) in Matthew
than in any of the other Gospels (e.g. only 37 times in Luke). The
Lord is telling His men: ‘Go out and make men like you- disciples,
stumbling ‘learners’, not experts’. Thus they were to witness from
their own experience, to share this with others, to bring others
to share the type of relationship which they had with the Lord.
In this sense preaching is seen by Paul as a bringing forth of children
in our own image. John likewise was “the beloved disciple”, the
agapetos. And yet this is the very term which he uses in
his letters to describes his “beloved children” (1 Jn. 2:1; 4:11).
He saw them as sharing the same relationship to his Lord as he had.
The nature of our relationship with the Lord will be reflected in
that of our converts. He tells His men to go to the lost sheep,
and yet in that same context He calls them sheep, in the midst of
wolves (Mt. 10:6,16). They were sheep sent to rescue sheep- to plead
with men and women as men and women, to witness to humanity through
their own humanity. Likewise the Lord spoke of how the extraordinary
unity of His men would convince others that “thou didst send
me” (Jn. 17:23), having just commented how they had surely believed
“that thou didst send me” (:8).
The command to ‘make disciples’ of all men in Matthew is framed
in such a way as to make ‘...baptising them...’ a subordinate clause.
Baptism is only part of the work of making disciples. This is why
responsibility to those we may convert only begins at baptism; it’s
a beginning of a man or woman being fashioned into the image of
Christ, not the end. This is why Paul often uses the language of
preaching about his pastoral efforts with his brethren [e.g. his
desire to ‘preach the Gospel’ to the believers at Rome to whom he
was writing]. He sees himself as preaching Christ to them still,
in so doing warning them, “that we may present every man perfect”
(Col. 1:28). Thus Paul parallels being a minister of the world-wide
preaching of the Gospel, and being a minister of the church (Col.
1:23, 25). He saw his continued work amongst his baptized readership
as fully preaching the word of God (Col. 1:25 AVmg.). So
Paul said in Gal. 4:19 “I travail in birth again until Christ
be formed in you”. How do we see our responsibility to those to
whom we have preached the gospel? We should continue to nurture
and feed them well after the time of their baptism. It seems
that this is not a general responsibility which falls on the shoulders
of all of us. Rather we have a personal responsibility to
those we have begotten through the gospel (1Cor. 4:15). |