5-1 " Into all the world"
The great commission was radical stuff to its initial hearers.
Instruction about religious matters in those days was usually restricted
to a privileged group of initiates. But the Lord Jesus invited His
followers to proactively take the message to absolutely everybody.
And the essentially radical nature of that request echoes down to
our days too. If we are only to preach to our own local community,
there is no way the Gospel would have been spread to the many nations
to which it has gone in the last few years. It would have remained
in the white skinned, English speaking world. Or to throw the question
a stage further back, it would never have gone outside the Middle
Eastern, Jewish world of the first century. As all involved frequently
testify, God's blessing has powerfully rested on those who have
sought to spread the Gospel world-wide. Ways have been opened, resources
provided, which would have been humanly impossible. God does not
seem to have been watching the Gospel extension activities of recent
years with indifference, feeling that we've got the wrong end of
the stick in our efforts to fulfil the command to " go into
all the world" .
Even if some preaching work appears not to bear fruit, this shouldn't
discourage us from the essentially outgoing spirit we should have
in spreading the word far and wide. Many of the parables have an
element of unreality about them, designed to focus our attention
on a vital aspect of teaching. The sower parable has 75% of the
seed sowed on bad ground, due to the almost fanatic way the sower
throws the seed so far and wide, evidently without too much attention
to whether it lands on responsive soil or not. His emphasis was
clearly on broadcasting the seed far and wide. We should desire
to see the spread of God’s ways, His Truth, His will, the knowledge
of the real Christ, to as many as possible. The Kingdom of God refers
to that over which God reigns. We are “a colony of Heaven” in our
response to His principles (Phil. 3:20 Moffat). We are to pray for
His Kingdom to come, so that His will may be done on earth (Mt.
6:10). The Kingdom and the doing of His will are therefore paralleled.
His Kingdom reigns over all in Heaven, for there, all the Angels
are obedient to Him (Ps. 103:19-21). By praying for the Kingdom
to come on earth we are not only praying for the Lord’s second coming,
but for the progress of the Gospel world-wide right now. Not only
that more men and women will hear it and respond, but that those
who have accepted it might work God’s will rather than their own
to an ever greater extent. Whether or not we can physically spread
the Gospel is in this sense irrelevant; our prayer should be, first
and foremost if the pattern of the Lord’s prayer is to be taken
exactly, for the triumph of the Gospel world-wide.
There’s a growing
idea in many churches that you can only preach if you are ‘authorized’
to do so by some committee or group of elders. The personal relevance
and reference of the great commission means we can rightly ignore
this. In fact, such an attitude is really a preservation of Roman
Catholicism. In 1184 at the Council of Verona, Pope Lucius III declared
that the list of heretics should be extended to include those who
“preach without permission”. And the same is being said today in
essence; ironically, by those who are the most condemnatory of the
Catholic church. |