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- Strategic Objectives for the Church:
- Evangelism (Witness) and Edification
- (Teach/Learn Bible Doctrine) in Balance
-
- A Summary of Matthew 28.19-20
-
- 1. God has given man (men and women) a primary objective to
- accomplish while he lives on earth. Man is to represent God (act as
- God's visible stand-in) through rulership and reflection. Rulership
- means God has chosen man to be His agent and authority on earth.
- Reflection means that man should be a mirror so that creation can see
- God. Therefore man should demonstrate and mirror by his thoughts, by
- his priorities, and by his actions God's character (what God is
- like-divine attributes), God's greatness (positive superiority), and
- God's authority (kingship and ownership) to angelic and human creation
- (Gen 1.26-28; Job 1.6-2.10; Ps 8.3-6; Rom 11.36; 1 Cor 8.6; Eph 3.10;
- Col 1.16; 1 Pet 4.11).
-
- 2. Matthew 28.19-20 is the record of a command briefing that Christ
- gave His disciples (soon to become apostles to the church). It took
- place on a mountain in Galilee. The purpose was to instruct them about
- the strategic objectives of ministry for the entire interadvent
- period. Believers carry out the strategic objectives in order to
- accomplish God's primary objective for man on earth. This instruction
- applied to their ministry and to the ministry of all those down
- through the years that would follow them.
-
- 3. By the time that Christ gave this mandate to His disciples God
- had already postponed the kingdom that He had promised to Israel
- because Israel had rejected the King and His message (Matt 21.43-46).
-
- 4. When Christ gave this mandate He was anticipating the historical
- period that would fall between His ascension and the beginning of the
- earthly millennial kingdom in the future. He had planned that the
- church age would take up most of this coming historical interlude.
-
- 5. The disciples were told to go from this briefing out into the
- world of man.
-
- 6. The strategic objectives of those disciples listening to Christ
- and of those that would follow were make disciples by witnessing and
- teaching/learning.
-
- 6.1. Make disciples is the main verb (a word that indicates action
- or being) of verses 19 and 20. The verb indicates that this is a
- command from Christ to His disciples and that they are to take an
- active part in making disciples. Therefore, Christ is giving a
- commission or mandate to His staff. This commission calls for action
- in response to Him.
-
- 6.2. A disciple is a believer, a learning pupil, and a faithful
- follower of Christ (Matt 10.24-25; Lk 14.27; Jn 8.31; 15.8; Acts
- 11.26; 19.8-10). Make disciples begins with the witnessing process,
- moves to the initial faith in Christ for salvation, and continues with
- progressive growth in learning and commitment to Christ.
-
- 7. The recipient or target of this ministry is all the nations,
- which refers to all ethnic, national, and racial groups.
-
- 8. The command to disciple all the nations requires believers to do
- two things. The first is evangelism (witness). The second is
- edification or teach/learn doctrine (from the perspective of those
- that do not have communicating spiritual gifts, which is most
- believers, this means learn Bible doctrine).
-
- 8.1. Baptizing and teaching are both used in this context to
- support the main verb make disciples. They explain the method or means
- or way to make disciples of all nations. God works through baptizing
- and teaching to make disciples.
-
- 8.2. Baptizing in this context means the identification with Christ
- in death and resurrection to new life by ritual immersion in water.
- The word baptizing is used here instead of evangelizing or witnessing
- because in the public ministry of John (Matthew 3.1-7; 11.16; Acts
- 13.24; 18.25), of Jesus (Matthew 3.13-17), and the life of the first
- century church (Acts 2.38, 41; 8.12,13,16,36,38; 16.15,33; 1
- Corinthians 1.13-17), baptism was linked with a faith response to the
- message. It was a clear indication of this fact of witness and faith
- acceptance of that message.
-
- Therefore, baptizing refers to witnessing followed by faith response
- to Christ and water baptism (the ritual indicates the new relationship
- with Christ).
-
- 8.3. Teaching refers to the communication of content from one who
- knows to one who listens in order to learn. The Biblical meaning is
- that the person who knows (the teacher) communicates the Word of God
- to other people who have placed themselves under the teacher's
- authority in order to listen and to learn the Word of God (Bible
- doctrine). Teaching results in an agreeable understanding or true
- knowledge of the Word of God by the learner. The function of teaching
- is carried out by gifted communicators, pastor/teacher and teacher
- (Ephesians 4.11-16; 1 Corinthians 12.28-31; 1 Timothy 4.11; 2 Timothy
- 2.2; 4.2; Romans 12.7), but all believers are to communicate doctrine
- to other believers with whom they come into contact (Hebrews 5.11-14).
-
- 9. Christ promises that He will be with them (and all believers that
- accept His mandate). This refers to His personal presence, support,
- and authority as detailed in John 13-17.
-
- 10. Until the end of the age indicates that this ministry is to
- continue from the time Christ gave the mandate until He returns to
- establish the promised millennial kingdom on earth for Israel. This
- period of time includes the present church age.
-
- 11. The commission was not fulfilled, nor could it have been finally
- accomplished by the eleven disciples. Christ was speaking to the
- eleven disciples and to all believers that would follow throughout the
- interadvent period.
-
- 12. Therefore, God's ministry for the church is to make disciples
- (learning, growing, obedient, committed believers) through a strong,
- aggressive, intensive ministry on two fronts. These two fronts are
- evangelism or witnessing for Christ (from an individual local church's
- point of view this is the direction of the external ministry which
- goes to the unbeliever) and edification or learning Bible doctrine
- (the internal ministry of an individual local church and the external
- ministry to other believers).
-
- 13. The epistles recognize and expand the doctrine of witnessing and
- teaching/learning doctrine. They stress witnessing as the normal and
- expected life of believers that are being taught (Rom 1.14-17;
- 10.13-17; 1 Cor 4.14-17; 5.14-21; Eph 4.11; 6.15,19; Phil 1.12-18; 1
- Thes 1.8 1 Pet 1.23; 3.15; Jude 3).
-
- The epistles also emphasize teach/learn Bible doctrine or
- edification as the only way to gain knowledge of the Word of God
- (spiritual food so necessary for spiritual health, growth, and living)
- (Rom 1.8-12; 12.1-2; 1 Cor 2.10-16; 12-14; Eph 1.16-19; 2.19-22;
- 4.11-16; Phil 1.9-11; Col 1.9-11; 2.1-7; 1 Tim 1.3-5; 4.13-16; 2 Tim
- 2.2; 3.14-17; 4.2-5; Heb 5.11-14; 6.1; James 1.21-25; 1 Pet 2.2; 2 Pet
- 3.18; 2 Jn 1-6; 3 Jn 3-4).
-
- 14. In order to rightly fulfill God's command and God-given
- potential for evangelism (witness) and edification (teach/learn),
- believers need to actively live the Plan of God. (The Plan of God has
- three parts; Eternal Plan of God with emphasis on eternity past and
- future; Historical Plan of God with emphasis on the angelic conflict,
- the theocratic kingdom, and dispensations; and the Daily Plan of God
- which has mission/ministry, preparation, practice, and environment.)
- See the doctrine of The Plan of God.
-
-
- Copyright 1989 by Tod M. Kennedy
- You are allowed to reproduce this article only in its entirety and
- without additions or deletions.
-
-