Church of God, New World Ministries

Seven Proofs Of God’s Church - Part 7

God’s Church Has a Commission

Your body does not exist only for itself. That is, the sole purpose of your life is not just the serving, caring for, feeding, clothing and protection of your own body!

No matter what your job, occupation, hobbies, or calling – there is a purpose for you. Your whole life consists of goals, short – and long-range ones, which you constantly strive to achieve. You don’t eat just to “stay alive” – you are living for a purpose!

As we have seen so clearly, Jesus Christ Himself drew the analogy of a “body” when speaking of His own true Church, which He said He would build. He talked, too, of a “work” being accomplished on this earth – by that very body, the “body of Christ” which is His true Church.

Strangely, there are those who fail to grasp this vitally important truth – that Jesus Christ commissioned His disciples to carry out a great Work on this earth – that he promised to inspire, lead and guide them in the conduct of that Work. He promised He would be in their midst, overseeing directly, intervening when necessary!

Today, millions of hapless humans drift through life aimlessly with no real goals or purposes beyond just experiencing each day as it comes. Like directionless human beings, some organizations seem to flounder aimlessly – having no great, exciting, stimulating, challenging job to accomplish, no inspiring goal to reach! Such groups usually fragment, grow weaker and weaker, and finally die – for they lack purpose and positive direction!

Not so with the true Church of the living God which Jesus said He would build! He explained it is given a commission to fulfill!

A Selfish Salvation

But to some few, the fulfilling of a commission is totally unimportant. They prefer to think only in smallish, inward, selfish terms – concentrating on themselves and their personal problems rather than on the hugely challenging problems of all mankind. Such an attitude was illustrated by a man who said, “Ain’t no need to build no walkway – ain’t goin’ nowhere!” With this sarcastic retort, the farmer spat, hitched up his overalls and headed to his 1930s model car, skirting the muddy puddles in the churchyard of the tiny building just outside Eugene, Oregon’s city limits.

It was a Sabbath day in the early 1940s and the pastor, Mr. Herbert W. Armstrong, had just finished the sermon. In it he had mentioned the need for members to help build a walkway from the unpaved street to the front porch; perhaps by a combination of donated labor, and tithes and offerings for this simple project.

Many had complained of wet and muddy shoes while negotiating the rutted “yard” in Oregon’s drizzly weather. The building had been constructed by several members, Mr. Armstrong included, who had donated labor and materials. Now, the old walkway had rotted, broken up, and decayed. A few dozen boards were needed.

But all this “progress” was too much for one conservative member. “Why build a walkway?” was the question. Quite likely, his farmyard didn’t have any. He was completely comfortable with his mossy, rainslick boards and planks, and his mud puddles.

“Ain’t goin’ nowhere,” he said. And he was right. He wasn’t. But the Church was.

It was going to grow national in scope, then international, and then worldwide! Because it was the Work of God, and not of any man, it was destined to encircle the globe with the dynamic message about a Living Jesus Christ who is the soon-coming King.

    That little walkway only represented a “door” to the street, and easy access from a higher, drier roadway to a porch.

A Stifling Misconception

But the attitude of at least one local member represented a misconception that has influenced massive church bodies, decided various forms of church government, and stifled the true preaching of the gospel for centuries!

For that member life consisted of rejoicing in the truth he knew, going to services each Sabbath, and living quietly on his farm with his wife and children. Involvement in projects of growth, even so small as a board sidewalk, just seemed nonsensical to him.

It was hard enough, in those days of comparative poverty, warfare, and hand-to-mouth existence, to keep one’s own family fed and clothed, without all that “foolishness” of trying to worry about someone’s children sitting around the wood-burning stove drying their socks during services.

A quiet life on the farm?

Too bad we can’t all enjoy that; I wish I could. But if those who are called of God are called for a purpose, then that purpose transcends mere physical creature comforts. And as that great purpose is fulfilled – which is primary in the lives of members of God’s Church – it can result in their own personal eternal salvation!

Think! If the only reason God has called His people is to grant them personal salvation, then why do the calling now? Why call so many into God’s Church now in this age? Obviously, there is a great global purpose in the collective calling of those who have really repented and become members of Gods’ true Church. And that great purpose is directly related to the chaotic conditions extant on this earth today.

   Even after subtracting deaths, every year there are more than 75 million more mouths to feed on this already overtaxed earth. At present rates. Demographers and population experts estimate that world population, already exceeding seven billion, will double in approximately 35 years and double again 35 years later! Obviously that can’t occur. Something has to give.

In order to feed all these people anywhere near an adequate diet, world food production will have to triple. Yet the present rate of increase renders this a highly unlikely possibility. In plain English – when population passes food production, then worldwide famine, starvation, disease epidemics and resultant food wars are inevitable!

Every single day – as totally unaware of it as we in the Western world seem to be – a “low” estimate of ten to twelve thousands people on this globe die of starvation!

Wars claim their toll too; the blood of humanity, spilled in warfare, stains the soil of India, Vietnam, Korea, Biafra, Bangladesh, Cambodia, the Middle East and even “Christian” Ireland.

Violence, political agitation, demonstrations, assassinations, kidnappings, and mass slayings in airport terminals etch deep and lasting scars on the face of tormented humanity.

    But how does all this worldwide misery tie into the great global purpose of preaching and publishing the true gospel of Jesus Christ? Is God unconcerned about all this massive suffering? Or is He truly the God of all mankind?

Jesus Had a World View

Jesus Christ of Nazareth set us an example of concern, compassion and emotion-charged empathy for the plight of a heedless humanity. He showed that God – the Father – the God of all mercy – is the God of all mankind.

When Jesus saw the pitiful spiritual conditions and even the illnesses of the people of His day, He was “moved with compassion” (Matt. 9:36; Mark 1:41). He yearned to help, to save mankind from the heartrending results of its own folly, Christ’s message – the good news of the Kingdom of God – was to the world and for the world. That gospel message was to be preached in “all nations” as a warning and a witness (Matt. 24:14).

Paul revealed the true God to the superstitious Athenians: “God that made the world and all things therein, seeing that he is the Lord of heaven and earth. And hath made of one blood all nations for men for to dwell on the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bound of their habitation” (Acts 17:24-26).

God is “not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance” (II Peter 3:9).God the Father did not send His Son Jesus Christ with a message of selfish, personal, ingathering, self-righteous salvation – but with a worldwide message for all mankind! “And so all Israel shall be saved . . . . .,” said the apostle Paul in Romans 11:26.

Jeremiah prophesied about many nations (Jere. 25:13-26). Isaiah prophesied concerning Assyria (chapter 10), Babylon (chapter 13), Moab (chapter 15), Syria (chapter 17), Egypt (chapter 19) and many other nations and family groups which have since spread to the four corners of the earth.

God is concerned with more than just a few “Bible-belt” religious hobbyists in the southeastern United States (though He is deeply concerned about them, just as He is about any human being who draws breath). He has an international message for all peoples and nations! It concerns the Kingdom of God and the salvation of the whole human family.

Notice the deeply moving words of Psalm 67:  “God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause his face to shine upon us; Selah. That thy way may be known upon earth, thy saving health among all nations. O let the nations be glad and sing for joy: for thou shalt judge the people righteously, and govern the nations upon earth. God shall bless us; and all the ends of the earth shall fear him” (vs. 1-2, 4, 7).

Is Your Religion Selfish?

Yet, in spite of the biblically revealed international thrust of a giving gospel, religion is still a very private and very selfish commodity to many harboring a spiritual ingrown toenail.

They want that “old-time religion” – a religion that’s part of one’s neat, orderly, settled and comfortable life; a religion that’s like a favorite pair of comfortable slippers, a spiritual tranquilizer, a good book and an easy chair by that old favorite lamp.

It is as familiar and comfortable as the rusting old automobile in the back farm lot that his father drove before him; and it is as much a part of his encrusted environment as that old oak tree out back, or that creaking step on the front porch.

Church attendance is also oftentimes for purely selfish reasons. “Attend the church of your choice,” advise the billboards. And that is exactly what most religious types do! They attend the church which most caters to their own personal, selfish needs, notions and desires.

Some attend church because they want a sense of “belonging”; others because of the convenience of the parking facilities; still others, because they enjoy the music – all for patently selfish reasons. The point is that a church exists to suit every type of personality and approach to religion. One can even find churches that openly worship Satan the devil if that happens to be a person’s particular “bag.”

Many denominations are in “cut-throat” competition with each other. Because of this peculiar “Christian” phenomenon, people who are next-door neighbors go to different churches – which are miles apart driving past each other with scarcely a glance.

Those who prate about “my own salvation” have lost sight of the really big goal in human life, having forgotten that the true gospel has to do with giving salvation to as many other people as possible.

 Jesus likened the Kingdom of God to a “pearl of great price” and to the “treasure hid in a field” (Matt. 13:44-46). The gospel message is an all-important, futuristic announcement of how that Kingdom is going to rule this earth and how those who hear the message may have a vital part in that ruling Kingdom! That message is a saving, giving message – not a selfish “get’ gospel.

John’s Disciples Misunderstood

John the Baptist’s ministry was one of frugality and hardship. He apparently ate a stringent, limited diet – mainly subsisting on locusts and wild honey. He lived a very austere life-style, so much so that contemporaries observing his unconventional behavior mistakenly accused him of being demon possessed.

When John heard of the works of Christ, he sent two of his disciples to try to substantiate who Jesus really was (Matt. 11:2). (John was in prison, but he was aware that somewhere, somehow, the Messiah had to appear at that time.) When the two disciples came to Jesus they asked: “Art thou he that should come, or do we look for another” (v. 2).

Jesus answered: “Go and show John again those things which you do hear and see” (v. 4). He then (v. 5) pointed to the miracles which were a vital part of His messiahship. Jesus pointed to the fruits – to the work being done.

Then Jesus added: “. . . . .  And the poor have the gospel preached to them” (v. 5). He pointed out that he was in the business of giving that gospel message – and this was one of His most important works. Then Jesus said a seemingly strange thing: “And blessed is he, whosoever shall not be offended in me” (v. 6).

What did Christ mean by this enigmatic saying? Does this veiled warning and blessing really fit in this context? Yes, it does! Let’s understand.

After a brief description about John’s commission and character (vs. 7-15), Jesus began to explain the meaning by comparing the two ministries, “John came neither eating nor drinking, and they say, he hath a devil (demon). The Son of man came eating and drinking, and they say, behold a man gluttonous, and a winebidder, a friend of publicans and sinners. But wisdom is justified of her children” (vs. 18-19).

In other words, the incongruity of the two situations showed that no matter what we in God’s Work do, we will be criticized for doing it “all wrong”!

Jesus was wrongly accused and criticized because of His “hobnobbing” with the leaders of the Sanhedrin, sitting with the Pharisees at a large banquet table, and going to the marriage feast at Cana in Galilee.

Yet Jesus preached to large crowds of people – thousands at a time (Matt. 8:1; 13:2; 23:1). He preached the true gospel to them – the gospel of the Kingdom of God (Mark 1:14).

The fact that Jesus said, “And blessed is he, whosoever shall not be offended in me,” strongly indicates that the disciples of John didn’t observe what they had expected to see in Christ. They probably expected to find someone whose life-style was similar to John’s – one of frugality and self-denial. Even John himself may have misunderstood! That’s probably why they asked, perhaps preprogrammed by John to do so in a dubious, quizzical tone: “Well, are you he that should come, or should we look for another?” They expected the Messiah to be living quite differently.

It is obvious that they were thinking: “You couldn’t be the one – or you wouldn’t be here in the midst of all this . . . . .”

Christ’s Commission to the Disciples

Jesus commissioned His disciples in much the same way a person was commissioned at one time in the military service.  A “commissioned officer” originally could have been an ordinary private citizen, or even a wealthy or titled person, who was given a directive to carry out a certain mission. The word “commission” means “with a mission”; that is, with a purpose or an objective.

Jesus sent out the twelve with a specific charge or purpose: “These twelve Jesus sent forth, and commanded them saying. Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter ye not: But go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. And as ye go, preach, saying, the Kingdom of heaven is at hand” (Matt. 10:5-7).

The disciples were not sent to the Church – they were sent to preach to the world: “As thou hast sent me into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world” (John 17:18).

The main commission was to the world. In turn, the body of believers that resulted from their preaching of the gospel to the world became the “Church.” But the Church was the by-product of the preaching of the gospel!

If the gospel were not first preached to the world, there would be no Church!

After the gospel is preached and the Church is formed as a result, those who are the called members of God’s Church make it possible – by their prayers as well as by their continual physical and financial support – for more people to hear the message of the gospel. And that body of Church members also provides more minister by which the gospel is preached to more and more people.

The body of Christ – the Church – is therefore constituted to do the work of preaching the gospel.

Jesus Set a Precedent

Jesus of Nazareth came to this earth to deliver the gospel of the Kingdom to that local area (Galilee, Judaea, and their environs) at that time – to set a precedent for succeeding generations of the Church. He came to teach and train His own disciples through those experiences.

He then sent them out and told them to do as he had done – in fact, they were told they would do even greater works than Jesus!

The commission to preach the gospel is a collective charge to all Christians at all times!

New Testament history is a chronicle of the fact that the early disciples fulfilled their commission. They preached the gospel with great zeal throughout the known world.

The apostle Paul, called later than the original apostles – as “one out of due season” – also carried on the commission of preaching the gospel. He was so filled with the sense of a great mission that he said – undoubtedly with deep feeling: “For though I preach the gospel, I have nothing to glory of: for necessity is laid upon me: yea woe is unto me if I preach not the gospel” (I Cor. 9:16)

At the conclusion of the book of Acts, Paul is busy on the job in Rome in his own hired house, preaching that same gospel to all who would hear. “And Paul dwelt two whole years in his own hired house, and received all that came in unto him, preaching the kingdom of God, and teaching those things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ, with all confidence, no man forbidding him” (Acts 28:30-31).

Paul realized that his whole reason for being called was to preach the gospel: “Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel of God” (Rom. 1:1).

Jesus Christ suffered more than anyone for the sake of the gospel; and His disciples ultimately followed in His footsteps. Suffering went hand in glove with the preaching of the gospel in the first century. And their suffering is also an example of what today’s true Christians can expect for putting the work of the gospel first. “For even hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow his steps” (I Peter 2:21).

Most of the early apostles were martyred for the sake of the gospel. Paul actually left a record of some of his sufferings in II Corinthians 11. He said he had been imprisoned, beaten, shipwrecked, near death on a number of occasions, stoned, nearly drowned, threatened, and in every conceivable kind of danger. But nothing would make him stop preaching the gospel!

Not a Christian Retirement Plan

Jesus did not come to set up some kind of a self-perpetuating Christian retirement plan. He did not come to bring about a peaceful, blissful, utopian, comfortable, “dropped-out,” esoteric society.

He came to preach the gospel – a gospel that would bring about intense personal suffering for those who would dare to proclaim it. It is a gospel that, by the very essence of its message, incites persecution. He commissioned His Church to preach that message fearlessly and boldly. His disciples were ordained and commissioned to preach that same gospel. They did so at great personal sacrifice - and ultimately even martyrdom.

Paul’s own desire was so outside of himself that he said he could wish himself accursed for his kinsmen (Rom. 9:3). He would have accepted the loss of his personal salvation if that’s what it would have taken to get all his fellow brethren into the Kingdom of God. His main desire was for others to get into the Kingdom of God.

There would be no salvation apart from the preaching of the gospel!

The reason a local congregation gathers at the feet of the minister – to be taught and fed spiritually – is so that it can go out and do the Work; so that it can be a more effective part of that commission to preach and proclaim the gospel to all the world before the end of this age!

Anyone who is really a part of the body of Christ can see that Jesus Christ of Nazareth organized the Church for the purposes of fulfilling and supporting the attainment of that number one purpose. Those who are not doing that job are not truly a part of the Church, not part of the vine; and they will simply wither up – and die!

The Signs of God’s Church

“You shall know them by their fruit,” said Jesus! What is the “fruit” borne by self-serving? What great harvest is gathered for Christ? You need to prove to yourself where the Church of which Jesus Christ Himself is the living, vital, active Head is working today!

In these articles, we have seen that God’s true Church is given only one “official name.” That name is repeated far more often than any other “descriptive” term which may have included the city in which a local congregation was located. We have seen the great “sign” God gave between Himself and His people, that of the weekly Sabbath (not Sunday), and God’s annual Holy Days! We have seen how God’s true Church would have the overview of world events; would understand the truth about pagan doctrines; would be organized as Christ Himself originally established; and very importantly, would be doing the work of God on this earth of fulfilling that great commission!

Jesus said, “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mark 16:15). To do just that, God’s Church is striving with all that is in it, humanly, calling on God’s own divine power to make up for that human lack. Those privileged to have a part in that great humanitarian effort never cease to thank God for the opportunity!

 
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