Churches in the United States---for better or worse---act as a model
for the local church in much of the rest of the world. Perhaps this
is because the United States at this time is the richest country in
the world and sends out the most missionaries. There are aspects of
the American or western model which are biblical and are good. But
there are also aspects of this model which are not scriptural. We want
to examine one such aspect which has hampered the fulfilling of the
last commandment Christ gave to His Church: the Great Commission.
The
following is traditionally what happens when someone repents of
their sin and follows Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.
They go to a class
for new believers. At some point they are baptized in water. They
may become members of the congregation. Then they and their children
go to church every Sunday to worship God. Pastors are generally
very happy
with members who faithfully come Sunday after Sunday to hear their
preaching and teaching. This “discipleship” process
is meant to go on for the life of the believer in the home church.
In missiological terms, such believers form the “modality” of
the church.
A small
minority of the church members, however, are “called” to
do more. For example, they may want to serve God full-time. They
might go to Seminary or Bible School to receive special training.
Some of
these after their studies become pastors of churches. Others become
evangelists and so forth. Still others are very special and are sent
out as
missionaries to foreign countries. According to the western model,
therefore,
not every believer is sent out as a missionary. Together
all of these full-time servants of God above are known to missiologists
as the “sodality” of
the church. In more common parlance, the sodality is equivalent
to those
who serve in the military, while the modality is equivalent to
the civilian population of a country which stays behind to support
the
military with their taxes.
This model sounds well and good, but is it scriptural? The following
study is certainly not meant to be exhaustive, but to provide some
food for thought. What did Jesus do with his disciples after they decided
to follow him? He taught them. How long did the teaching last, and
what did it consist of?
To answer the first question, we know that he taught and trained them
for a relatively brief three years. After that he left them and returned
to the Father. Before he left, he told them that it was for their good
that he was leaving them (John 16:7).
What
did the teaching consist of during those three short years besides
the disciples sitting at his feet and listening to his words about
seeking first his kingdom and his righteousness?
Luke 9:1 When Jesus had called the Twelve together, he gave them power
and authority to drive out all demons and to cure diseases, 2 and he
sent them out to preach the kingdom of God and to heal the sick.
This
teaching is not the typical kind that we get sitting in church
Sunday after
Sunday. The teaching included, among other important things,
training and equipping and impartation. He called the
twelve apostles and give them power and authority over demons and
diseases. The teaching
included sending them out to preach the kingdom of God
and to heal the sick.
Luke 9:6 So they set out and went from village to village, preaching
the gospel and healing people everywhere.
Their
short-term mission trip was very successful. Many miraculous healings
took place as these
disciples preached the gospel in the villages. But this powerful
training was not simply for the twelve vaunted apostles, it was
also for
other lesser
known disciples as well.
Luke 10:1 After this the Lord appointed seventy-two
others and sent them two by two ahead of him to every town and place
where he was about
to go. …9 Heal the sick who are there and tell them, ‘The
kingdom of God is near you.’ …17 The seventy-two returned
with joy and said, “Lord, even the demons submit to us in your
name.”
As he
had sent out the twelve, he also sent out the seventy-two. He gave
them power and authority over disease and demons
and then sent
them out commanding them to heal the sick and to proclaim the kingdom
of God. The training was successful; the disciples returned to
their Teacher with joy and praise reports. Such reports are reminiscent
of
those we receive from recently-trained believers who return from
their very first mission trip where they experienced many miracles.
(See
the report
by a teenage evangelist who returned from a short-term mission
trip to India.) Were these seventy-two disciples what we would
call “full-time” servants
of God? We do not know. What is clear is that they were sent
out to proclaim the kingdom of God just as were the twelve apostles.
By Acts 1 the disciples numbered not just twelve, not
seventy-two, but by then one hundred and twenty. Jesus said to them
in verse 8: “But
you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you
will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and
to
the ends of the earth.”
The
particular significance of this is that all 120 believers would
receive power and be sent out as witnesses of the
Lord Jesus Christ.
Some were to be sent out locally to Jerusalem; others regionally
to Judea and Samaria; still others, like Paul and Barnabas in Acts
13,
internationally. But all would be sent out somewhere as
his witnesses. The distinction between full-time and not full-time
did not appear
to be a deciding consideration. Clearly some would relocate to
a new area; those “sent"
to their own backyard of Jerusalem might not.
Finally,
Jesus said to the remaining eleven disciples shortly before he
ascended to heaven:
Mark 16:15 He said to them, “Go
into all the world and preach
the good news to all creation. 16 Whoever believes and is baptized
will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned. 17 And
these signs will accompany those who believe: In my name they will
drive out demons; 18 …they will place their hands on sick people,
and they will get well.” …20 Then the disciples went out
and preached everywhere, and the Lord worked with them and confirmed
his word by the signs that accompanied it.
Certainly
Jesus was not only commanding the eleven disciples to go into all
the world. Taking into account all of the
Scriptural references
above, we can justifiably conclude that all believers and disciples
are witnesses and are sent out to proclaim the kingdom of
God somewhere on earth. The field of one’s calling ranges
from one’s
immediate neighborhood all the way to the overseas mission field.
This is irrespective of whether or not one has a “full-time” calling.
Thus
the American or western model of the local church involving modality
and sodality may not be scriptural. In some circles and churches
today, this distinction between lay people and professional clergy
is no longer
accepted in
theory.
There are leaders now who know that every believer is
a witness; every
believer is part of the army of God. Unfortunately this principle
is not yet reflected in practice but mostly rather in lip service.
Most
believers in the body of Christ still end up sitting in a church
listening to preaching and teaching Sunday after Sunday for
the
rest of their
lives. They are constantly being taught but not bearing the fruit
that they should. Jesus taught his disciples for only three
years and then left them.
His
immediate disciples attempted to carry on his work as we see recorded
in Acts.
There was initial success, but eventually the Church faltered.
After two thousand years, the Church has still not completed the
Great
Commission.
What happened?
Could
it be that the Church has adopted a model somehow borrowed from
pagan religions? In pagan religions there is a sharp distinction
between
those who are professional priests and those who are lay people.
Such was the case with the pre-Constantine idolatrous religion
of Rome. The lay people were taught to depend on the priests in
the
temple
for
all of their spiritual needs. For example, only priests could offer
sacrifices to Roman gods in behalf of the people. Then came the
Roman Catholic Church with its practice of christianizing
pagan practices. They leaned heavily on the pagan model of the
priesthood.
After
over a millennium of Roman Catholic domination came
Martin Luther, the father of the Protestant Reformation. Among
other things he protested the Roman Catholic model
of the professional priesthood. Based on Scripture, Luther rightly
proposed
the priesthood of all believers. But the Reformation in
this regard remains incomplete. Today one can still see in the
American or western model of the local church a familiar pattern.
Sunday after
Sunday
and
year after
year without end believers faithfully sit in a pew or classroom
to be ministered to by their pastor or taught by a leader.
Some eventually
get promoted to a position of ministry, but even these are mostly
encouraged to remain
and serve in the mother church. They are not released and sent
out as Jesus released his disciples after three years.
(It
may be that ancient pagans were influenced by
early worshipers of Jehovah. The Old Testament practice of offering
priestly
sacrifices dated back to the time of Abel, only
the second generation
of man on earth according to Genesis 4:4. And as we know, such
practices changed dramatically under the New Covenant through the
blood of
Jesus
Christ.)
Moreover, in Revelation 2 Jesus makes a cryptic reference to the Nicolaitans,
a little understood group.
Revelation 2:12 “To the angel of the church in Pergamum write:
These are the words of him who has the sharp, double-edged sword. 13
I know where you live—where Satan has his throne. Yet you remain
true to my name. You did not renounce your faith in me, even in the
days of Antipas, my faithful witness, who was put to death in your
city—where Satan lives.
14 Nevertheless, I have a few things against you: You have people there
who hold to the teaching of Balaam, who taught Balak to entice the
Israelites to sin by eating food sacrificed to idols and by committing
sexual immorality. 15 Likewise you also have those who hold to the
teaching of the Nicolaitans. 16 Repent therefore! Otherwise, I will
soon come to you and will fight against them with the sword of my mouth.
We know
that in return for money Balaam hoped to destroy the Israelites
by prophesying against them and misleading them. Today as well
there are those who serve
God for the sake of financial gain (1 Timothy 6:5). Eventually
Balaam succeeded in causing them to commit idolatry and sexual
immorality.
The practices of the Nicolaitans, however, are not so clearly understood.
According to one interpretation, the meaning of the original Greek
for this term is “rulers of the people.” The Nicolaitans
taught an unscriptural division between the priests and the laity.
If this interpretation is correct, Jesus was rebuking the church
for establishing a separate and professional priesthood who ruled
over
the people in an unbiblical way. He commanded the church to repent.
The
Roman Catholic Church fell into this error. Perhaps the mention
of the Nicolaitans in Revelation was a veiled prophetic reference
to the Roman Catholic Church to appear a few centuries later. Has
the modern Protestant Church, the offspring and beneficiary of
the great Reformation half a millennium ago, finally free from
the
error
of the
Nicolaitans? No, it's clear that we are not. We must repent as
Jesus commanded the Church in Pergamum.
Jesus
taught his disciples for three years and then released them when
he ascended to heaven. We are certainly not saying that discipleship
and sanctification are not a lifelong process and that there is
no authority in the Church. However, how many years of teaching
are
enough before disciples of Jesus Christ can be released and sent
out to heal the sick, proclaim the kingdom of God and to make disciples
in their Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, or to the ends of the earth?
Many
sincere disciples of Jesus Christ are getting tired of being preached
at and taught week after week by the clergy without being
sent out and commissioned to do the works that Jesus commanded
his disciples to do. People who are fed much nourishing food but
given little opportunity for physical movement or exercise are
not happy and healthy.
(They almost remind us of animals penned up in a slaughterhouse.)
And so we understand one reason why some sincere believers get
restless
and
move from church to church.
This
unscriptural model has resulted in a Church that is weak and no
longer taken seriously by mainstream society in the west. And this
is the same model that has been imported by western missionaries
to
the
Church in foreign lands. The Church must now revisit this model.
Let
us complete the Reformation. Let’s train the
disciples of Christ in three years or less and then send them out
to serve the Kingdom of God according to their gifts and calling
as witnesses of Jesus Christ. But first let’s
look at the possible consequences of not doing this.
In Acts 8 a great persecution broke out against the church at Jerusalem
following the martyrdom of Stephen:
1 And Saul was there, giving approval to his death.
On that day a great persecution broke out against the church at Jerusalem,
and all
except the apostles were scattered throughout Judea and Samaria. 2
Godly men buried Stephen and mourned deeply for him. …4 Those
who had been scattered preached the word wherever they went. 5 Philip
went down to a city in Samaria and proclaimed the Christ there.
Some
scholars have taught that God purposely allowed this persecution
to scatter the believers and drive them out of Jerusalem.
Why? The
Lord Jesus had clearly commanded them to preach the gospel not
only in Jerusalem, but also in Judea and Samaria and to the ends
of the
earth. But instead they remained in the familiar confines of Jerusalem,
perhaps in the comfort and security of the big mother church.
The leaders did not train and send them out. Therefore God used
the persecution to scatter them forcibly so that the gospel would
be
taken to Samaria,
Judea, and beyond. We
note in passing that not everything done by the disciples as recorded
in
Acts was in obedience to the Lord. Therefore some care should be
taken whenever using Acts as a manual for the practices of the
Church today.
One should ask, “did the disciples in a particular matter
actually obey what Jesus commanded them?”
What
the Lord did in Acts 8, He may be doing to the Church today. He
scatters us. Many pastors today would like
every new believer
if possible to stay in the church so that it can grow big and
prosperous. (See “The
Headlong Rush for Size and Crowds” and “Is
Having a Large Church Always the Evidence of God’s Blessing?”)
But if we train them as Jesus trained his disciples, they will
not all stay
forever. Instead many will want to be sent out to do the works
that Jesus did. We will "lose" them. Because of that,
a pastor might rather
keep the sheep dependent on him so they will remain in his flock.
But a
pastor
who thinks like that is not a servant of God; he is a hireling.
Remember the prophet Balaam. What the Lord did to the Jerusalem
church in Acts 8 He does today. As an example, how many church
splits---resulting in more opportunities for growth and for evangelism
on both sides---have
been allowed by the Lord because we are not willing to equip and
send
out workers
to His harvest
field? There are occasions on which a church breaks up due to
some issue or "moral failure" of the leadership and the flock scatters.
Is it possible that the Lord is behind some of these crises as
He
was
in Acts
8?
So
let us decide to obey Scripture. Let's train the disciples as
Jesus did and then selflessly release them to proclaim
the Kingdom
of God. Not all will end up with a huge church of thousands
with the accompanying earthly satisfaction and benefits. But
we will
be obeying
the Great Commission. We will be teaching Christ’s disciples
to do everything he commanded us (Matthew 28:20). And, let me
say that it can be done. After believing in Christ for two years,
I
left the
United States with my wife and lived in untouched jungles of
Indonesia as a missionary to proclaim the kingdom of God fruitfully
among idol-worshipers
and Musl__ms. I know personally that with the Lord and by the
power of the Holy Spirit it can be done. (See our missionary
autobiography “Dancing
on the Edge of the Earth.”)