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Times such as these provide an opportunity for celebration
but they offer a good incentive for reflection, for creative
dreaming as well, days that the church needs every so often if we
understand ourselves as people with a mission. To my mind, there
is no better passage of scripture than that which we just read
that better explains our task over the PAST 40 years and affirms
our calling for the NEXT 40 years: GO, MAKE DISCIPLES, BAPTIZE,
TEACH...our heavenly commander's marching orders (and make no
mistake, these are ORDERS, not suggestions) for soldiers of the
cross.
Now, I admit that our society does not like orders and that
folks will often do whatever is necessary to avoid obedience. I
recall reading of a water shortage a few years ago in Kodiac,
Alaska. An order came from the commanding general there that
passes and liberty would be cancelled until the water supply was
back to normal. All the armed forces complied except a small
outpost of Seabees, about 30 in number, under the command of a
rough-and-ready warrant officer. Saturday evening came and the
Seabees stormed the nearly abandoned city only to be rounded up
by the MP's and returned to their base.
The chief warrant officer was brought before the provost
marshall and asked if he had received the general's order. "Yes,
Sir."
"Then why didn't you comply?" roared the provost.
"Well, Sir, I didn't think it applied to us."
"And why not?"
"Because, Sir, when my men go to town, they don't drink no
water."(1)
Whatever it takes. Fortunately, those men who first heard
the Lord's orders did not look for ways to get around them but
did what they told.
There is comfort in that. After all, these disciples were
not super-human in their capacity for faithfulness. Just a few
days ago, when they had seen their master dragged before the
court of Pontius Pilate, condemned to death and crucified outside
the walls of Jerusalem on a hill overlooking the town dump, they
fell apart in their disappointment. Now, even though Jesus had
returned from the grave and they were seeing him in the flesh
once again, as the lesson says, "...but some doubted."
Why would that be a comfort? Good company, that is why.
Have you ever had doubts about your relationship to Jesus Christ?
I have. Have those doubts bothered you? They have bothered me.
Do those doubts at times make you feel unworthy? They do me.
But as I read these words, "...but some doubted," and realize
that the "some" are some of the APOSTLES, I find I am not the
only one. Even Jesus' most intimate friends had some doubts
about what was going on. What made them special was that they
did not let their doubts keep them from following orders. If we
can manage that, we are doing as we ought.
Think of the orders those Christian soldiers got that day in
Galilee. There was a preface that made plain the chain of
command..."All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to
me (Jesus)." It is good to know that if you are about to get
some orders to follow that they come from someone who has the
power to give them. Jesus made plain that there was no greater
power in the entire universe to give orders, reason enough in
itself to make sure the orders are followed to the letter.
Then he says, "Go therefore..." Anytime you see the word
"therefore" in scripture, ask yourself what it is "THERE FOR."
In this case, "therefore" gives the rationale for doing what
Jesus is about to say to do. BECAUSE I have all authority (or
all POWER, as the old King James Version has it), BECAUSE I have
overcome your most powerful enemies...sin and death..., BECAUSE I
am in TOTAL COMMAND, and BECAUSE that news needs to get out,
"THEREFORE..." here is the plan. There is good reason for the
orders he is about to give.
Have you ever been given orders for which you could get no
reason? I suspect so. Everyone of us, at some time were told by
Mom or Dad to DO something; we asked "Why?" and got the response,
"Because I SAID so, that's why." We followed those orders
because we had no choice in the matter - the one who gave them
had the power to back them up. But we probably did not carry
them out with as complete conviction as we might have had we
understood why they were being given. As we grew older, others
gave us orders...orders that were not to be questioned. "Ours is
not to reason why; ours is but to do and die." One fellow, on
getting out of the military, filled out an application for some
insurance. When he came to the question, "What did you do in the
service," he wrote in large letters, "AS TOLD!"(2) No doubt. But
again, what conviction might have been brought into the
completion of any task was diminished because the superior felt
no need to give any rationale for doing it. At least Jesus gave
his troops a reason before he told them what their orders were.
The first instruction he gave was to GO...not an unusual
order for soldiers. There is a war to be fought, a battle to be
joined, and victory is only possible if the troops will get
themselves to the front. Every army in history has heard the
same orders read to them. GET UP AND GO. It might only be down
the street, or it might be halfway round the world, but nothing
is accomplished by soldiers who are content to remain right where
they are.
Sad to say, the commitment to GO on the part of contemporary
Christian soldiers has flagged considerably in recent years.
There is far less desire for world mission than there once was.
There is less desire for mission down the street than there once
was. Evangelism is something that a few revival preachers do,
not the task of everyone of us. Is it because our orders have
been changed? Hardly! To put it into the military terms we have
been using, we have stopped following orders. And anyone who
knows anything about troops in combat knows that refusing to
follow orders is a capital offense. It is a good thing that
Christians have a merciful Commander.
The next thing Jesus said was to "make disciples of all
nations." In the King James Version of this passage with which
many of us grew up, the rendering is "TEACH all nations." A more
literal translation of the Greek would be "MAKE LEARNERS of all
nations." What is striking in looking at the verse in the
original language is that, of all the orders that are given, this
one...to MAKE LEARNERS...is the only main verb in the entire
series. What we have in English as GO, would be better
translated as GOING. The BAPTIZING and TEACHING obedience to the
commandments of Christ that we will come to in a moment are
rendered correctly as participles. Basic Greek grammar says that
main verbs are always more important than participles. And the
message in that little seminary lesson is simply that the MOST
IMPORTANT PART of this instruction involves helping the world to
LEARN...to LEARN about Jesus. GOING is assumed of a loyal
soldier. BAPTIZING AND TEACHING will be the result of the
LEARNING that Christ considers so critical.
This is one of the reasons you always hear Presbyterians put
such an emphasis upon the educational ministry of the church.
Yes, we are a worshiping community, but we can only worship
properly when we learn WHO this commanding general of the
universe is and WHAT it is he would have us do. Making LEARNERS
takes more than one hour a week on Sunday morning.
What about this phrase, "all nations?" For modern
Christians, we have no problem understanding that; it means
missionaries are to be sent around the world. Yes it does, but
it means something even more striking than that when we consider
those men of Galilee who were the first to hear these words. To
those men, all Jews, it meant that there were some people whom
they would never have CONSIDERED as likely recipients of the good
news of Jesus Christ. They were UNCLEAN: they did not keep the
sabbath; they obeyed no dietary laws; they worshiped other gods.
In the eyes of a good Jew, those other people were SCUM. And
everybody knows that good people do not associate with SCUM, much
less try to teach them anything. But now Jesus has said, "TEACH
THE SCUM. My Gospel is not limited to just the people who are
just like you. I recognize no barriers. The good news of
victory and liberation is for ALL."
Fortunately, those men of the first century followed the
orders. They DID take the message to ALL, and it is a good thing
for us, because we were some of that SCUM they would have avoided
at all costs unless they had been instructed otherwise. The
message to modern Christians is clear: Yes, send missionaries all
around the world, but do not forget the ones we might think of as
SCUM right in our own backyard. Jesus died for them as well as
for you and me.
The next instruction...BAPTIZING. Did that mean Jesus
wanted his troops to make sure to wage all their battles near
some water so these new learners could undergo some magical rite
as the climax of their training? Did he mean that learning would
not be sufficient without this ritual? Not at all. If baptism
is rightly understood, it is seen as a ceremony of initiation
into Christ's church. It is symbolic of the beginning of a new
relationship that finds its fullest expression in the life of the
fellowship.
Why would Jesus include this as a part of the marching
orders for his troops? Simply because all the learning in the
world about what God has done for us in Jesus Christ and what God
continues to do through the Holy Spirit only really makes an
impact on us within community. Without the support of other
believers, without someone around to help fan the flame that is
within us, we soon die down to nothing more than Christian
"embers"...not much good for anything unless we are pressed. How
often has it happened that someone has made a profession of
faith, become active in the work of the church, lived a life of
positive witness to the power of the Gospel and then, for some
reason, ceased to give any evidence of their faith at all. It
happens...and it happens when people begin to think that they no
longer need the church. If you take a coal from a furnace, it
will remain hot and glowing for awhile, but eventually it will
die out. The same thing happens to Christian disciples who are
removed from the fellowship of the church. No wonder Jesus gave
this instruction: Baptize...get them into the church...or they
will not be much good as my troops for very long.
What about this final instruction, "teaching them to observe
all that I have commanded you?" There are standards. Being a
follower of Christ should make a difference in the way we live.
After all, the same Bible that says BELIEVE also says BEHAVE!
There ARE standards that we are called to uphold...not to earn
our salvation because that would be impossible. No, we live
lives that are pleasing to our heavenly commander in gratitude
for his rich grace.
Notice something here: the instruction concerning teaching
obedience comes AFTER people have been made disciples, AFTER they
have made a commitment of faith, AFTER they have become a part of
Christ's church. The way Jesus describes it, obedience is a
response to something that has already taken place. Soldiers are
expected to maintain certain standards, certain DISCIPLINE.
CHRISTIAN soldiers do it out of love, but they need to be taught
what that discipline involves to manage it effectively, and that
is why the Lord included it as a part of his orders to the
troops.
Will it require any sacrifice to follow the orders properly?
Of course it will. Any soldier knows going into battle that the
price for following orders can be terribly high. Just being in
the battle ZONE is dangerous. Countless thousands have found out
how high the price could be. Tradition tells us that of those
eleven who gathered there on that Galilean hillside, only one
ever died a natural death; all the rest were martyred in the
course of their following orders. For us in 20th century
America, the sacrifice is rarely that dramatic. It might involve
some ridicule or some abuse; it might require the expenditure of
time or effort or money...rarely much more than that. But if we
realize that of the almost one billion people in the world who
call themselves "Christian," TWO-THIRDS of them live in nations
where Christianity is a persecuted faith, we know that sacrifice
is still the order of the day.
Fortunately, Christian soldiers have one tremendous piece of
assurance about our task. We have a promise from the commander,
"...and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age," the
abiding presence of a commander-in-chief who has promised he will
never leave us nor forsake us. Because of that, we can follow
his marching orders with the full confidence of every bit of
support we need.
Yes, these are special days at St. Paul as we recall our
first forty years of history. They are also good days to recall
our marching orders: GO, MAKE LEARNERS or DISCIPLES, BRING PEOPLE
INTO THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE CHURCH, TEACH THE STANDARDS OF
DISCIPLINED CHRISTIAN LIVING. And all the while, realize that we
are not alone as we carry those orders out.
1. Robert L. Jamison, "Humor in Uniform," Laughter, the Best Medicine, (New York, Berkley
Books, 1981), p. 29 2. Carol Henry, Laughter, the Best Medicine, p. 148 3. Isaac Watts, 1774
A follower of the Lamb?
And shall I fear to own His cause
Or blush to speak His name?(3)
Amen!

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