Matthew 28:11-20 – The Great Commission Church

Matthew 28:11-20 – The Great Commission Church December 4, 2016

Gloria's BaptismMatthew 28:11-20

Matthew 28:18-20 has rightly been called the Great Commission, for great it is.

“Go, therefore, and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo I am with you always even to the end of the age.”

Why is the Great Commission so great?  Because in the Great Commission we see how great the salvation and kingdom of our God truly is.  In the Great Commission we witness – indeed, are made participants in – God’s redemption of the cosmos.  In the Great Commission we see that the New Covenant which came by the life, death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus Christ is now perpetuated through us, as God with man labors to redeem man.

Here is the greatness of the Great Commission: that God, who created man out of the dust of the earth, now takes fallen man, who deserved nothing but to be returned to dust, and makes His home with him.

Here is the greatness of the Great Commission: that God, who created men out of the dust of the earth by breathing His Spirit into them and making them living beings, now takes lifeless, cowardly, doubting, and betraying bodies, breathes His Spirit into them, and makes them a living being called the Body of Jesus Christ.  And it is this mystical Body of Jesus Christ that He will use to disciple the nations, to bring in His Kingdom, and to redeem the cosmos.  Surely, He could have chosen to do it without us: but He chose to use us, His betrayers and those who nailed Him to the Cross.

But as great as the Great Commission is, I find that we often minimize it, finding ways, as we do, to escape the greatness of the commission of our Lord.  We minimize the Great Commission by reducing it to “evangelism.”

Well, I’ve got news for you: I don’t believe in evangelism.

There, I’ve said it.  Bring on the ecclesiastical tribunals and stop reading Give Us This Day in protest: but I don’t believe in evangelism.

I don’t believe in evangelism because I believe in discipleship instead.  Of course I believe in what we call “evangelism,” but not in the way it is often portrayed.  I’m not even sure that “evangelize” is ever used as a verb in the Bible.  Yes, there are evangelists, and there is a sacred and essential task of introducing people to Jesus Christ.  But I’ve heard many well-intentioned Christians and churches proclaim that “evangelism is the number one priority of the Church” or “evangelism is the most important task of the Church.”

Where do we get such an idea from?  Where in the Bible are the proof texts for such theology?  Often Matthew 28, the Great Commission, is cited, but as we know, the Great Commission is all about discipleship.  One of the primary ways in which we minimize the Great Commission, therefore, is by shrinking its scope to the task of “evangelism.”  But what Jesus didn’t say in the Great Commission was: “Make a few quick converts and then move on to the next victim.”  What He said was: “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you.”

I view evangelism as being an essential and important component of discipleship, which is the larger task to which we are called.  We are called to be disciples and to make disciples: that is the primary task of the Church.  If I never “lead” someone to Christ but lead a faithful life of being a disciple of Jesus Christ for decades, have I somehow failed in life?  Maybe I’ve planted countless seeds or watered or fertilized but have never been lucky enough to be the one who comes just at the right time to observe the first push of the new life through the soil.  And maybe I’ve spent my life doing the backbreaking work of discipling those who others have first “led” to Christ.

I find the whole notion of evangelizing and “leading” people to conversion to Christ very vague and unhelpful at times.  At what moment does the task of evangelism end?  When someone says the Sinner’s Prayer?  When they have an emotional experience of God for the first time?  At what point do we abandon one who has just been “evangelized” and then go on to evangelize someone else because it’s the most important task, leaving the work of discipleship undone?

As I’ve said, I think it’s more useful to think of evangelism as being only the first phase of the biblical process of discipleship, which is a lifelong endeavor and which is not a solo flight into spirituality.

Another reason the Great Commission is so great is because it is the fulfillment of the first commandment God gave man.  What was that first commandment?  Even before the commandment not to eat of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil (it would be hard to build a life around not doing something!), God commanded Adam to be fruitful and multiply.  So important is this sacred task that when God saved mankind through the ark of salvation, He repeated it to Noah twice.

But simply having children isn’t enough any longer.  Now that our children are all born in sin, it is not enough to populate the earth with Adolf Hitlers and Saddam Husseins, or even Mother Teresas without the grace of discipleship in her life.  To be fruitful and multiply now requires that we have children and disciple them.  This is why the task of bearing children and keeping them in the covenant is so crucial and always has been.  It’s why every threat to the family as God ordained it, such as abortion or homosexuality or divorce or unwed mothers, is so destructive to human life and well-being.

I’ve come across some eye-opening research that suggests the importance of bearing children and keeping them in the faith.  There are six billion people in the world, about two billion of whom are Christian.  How many new Christians do you think are made each year?  Go ahead – guess.

The truth is that there are about 23 million new Christians every year (based on an average of the years 1990-2000.)  Now: how many of those 23 million new Christians made each year came from conversion from some other religion or no religion at all?  The answer is about 1.8 million, which means that 21.3 million are born into Christian families.  In other words, about 12 times as many Christians are made each year by Christians having children as are made by all of the churches’ and Christians’ efforts to “evangelize.”

Now the really interesting part of discipleship is that sociologists of religion have shown that the primary way that people become Christians is based on the density of the social networks they have.  In other words, if someone is an atheist at a university, and all of his friends and colleagues are committed atheists, we should pity the poor Christian student who thought it was his duty to “convert” the professor.  I’m not at all saying that we shouldn’t do such bold things: God performs miracles.  But I am saying that it would be a miracle because it is not the normal way that God works.

Now where is it that we have the greatest density of social networks?  It would have to be a social situation where you had the most time possible for the disciple of Jesus Christ to disciple someone.  It would have to be the social situation where the discipler is as highly motivated as possible to persevere in the laborious, often dull, exhausting work of making a disciple of Jesus Christ.  And it would have to be the social situation where the person to be discipled is at the most impressionable time in his life.

Now let me see . . . where in the world could we ever find a social situation that meets all these criteria?  In the Christian family!  It’s no surprise, then, that God’s primary means of fulfilling the Great Commission has always been through the covenant He establishes with families.  If you don’t believe me, then go back and read the whole Old Testament.

I’m working even now on an idea for a book based on this concept, which I call The Great Commission Family.  If you want to find a way to enter fully into the glory of the New Covenant; if you want to be an active part of the Great Commission: then I submit that you should look no further than doing everything you can to have children and disciple them.  If your circumstances do not permit this for whatever reason, then find any of the multiple ways you can assist and support Christian families in this sacred, most-important task of discipleship.  There are many Christian families failing at this task, and they need your help.

But lest we’re tempted to think it’s all about the family, Jesus puts the task of discipleship squarely in the context of the Church.  It is the Church as a whole to whom Christ promised His presence and Spirit.  The task of discipleship is given to the entire Church, and only a Church has all of the gifts and talents necessary to equip us for this work.

Hillary Clinton was wrong.  It doesn’t take a village: it takes the Church.

Prayer:  Oh my lord, I know that you are always with me.  Help me to obey your commandments, and lead me to share my faith with others, so that they may know you and love you as well.  Amen. 

Points for Meditation: 

  1. What opportunities do you have every day to share Jesus Christ with people? This sharing of Christ may take many forms.
  2. If you spend time with children, meditate on how your interaction with them may more profitably be seen as a means of fulfilling the Great Commission.

Resolution:  I resolve to meditate further on the meaning of the Great Commission and take some time today to see if I have been considering it the wrong way.


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