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What Its Mission Is Not
The
mission of the church is not to be a political
institution. It was never the mission of the
church to try to direct and control the affairs
of state. Jesus taught that there is to be a
separation of church and state. He said, "Render
therefore unto Caesar the things which are
Caesar's; and unto God the things that are
God's" (Matthew
22:21).
There is no justification for the church or any
other religious organization seizing the reins
of government and attempting to exercise control
over men in government.
The mission of the church is not to become a
social institution. There are some who evidently
feel that the mission of the church is to
entertain people and please men. This has led
some churches to build mammoth recreational
programs, complete with kitchens and fellowship
halls. Some have built gymnasiums and athletic
facilities in the hope of luring people to
become interested in Christianity. One church
that I know about has a place of worship, which
will seat about 400 and a fellowship hall, which
will seat 3500. Are we able to see where the
emphasis is being placed?
One preacher said it was getting so that when he
heard the word "fellowship" he could smell the
coffee! Well, if you use the word "fellowship"
in a biblical sense, you will "smell no coffee."
The recreation business should have no
connection with the church. It may be the
business of parents, mothers and fathers, to
provide recreation, but it is not the duty or
the mission of the church. When people feel they
must provide recreation halls, kitchens,
fellowship halls, gymnasiums, athletic
facilities and what have you to induce people to
come to church, they are telling the world that
they do not believe that Christianity has the
merit to attract the attention of serious-minded
people. All of these circus-like attractions
which are used to woo large numbers of people is
only bribery. It is not a cut above the
denominational group which recently initiated
the practice of giving "trading stamps" to those
who could secure the most new members for the
congregation. Such is bribery! Such is not the
mission of the church! What is the mission of
the church?
The primary mission of the church is to preach
the gospel. This is our paramount objective.
Sometimes people say: "What about the poor and
the unfortunate? Doesn't the church have an
obligation to them?" Yes, it is necessary to do
good and relieve the afflicted, the needy and
poor, but that is not the primary mission of the
church.
Perhaps you remember that one of the first
problems that the church faced in the first
century was the complaint that the Grecian
widows were being neglected, and that they were
not being fed. What did the apostles do? Did
they give up the preaching of the gospel and
say, "Our first duty is to take care of these
poor folks and feed them?" They did not. They
told the disciples to choose seven men to be
appointed over the business of caring for the
poor. They continued with their primary mission
- preaching the gospel. They said, "It is not
reason that we should leave the word of God, and
serve tables" (Acts
6:2).
It is a worthy thing to give a poor beggar a
bath and a new suit of clothes, but how much
more important that he receive the bath of
regeneration and put on Christ. After all, what
profit is it if you are able to relieve a man's
physical needs momentarily at the expense of
letting him die without having heard and obeyed
the gospel, and letting him go to an endless and
Christless eternity? How much better to preach
the gospel to him, and fit him and prepare him
to live forever with Christ and all the
redeemed.
To Preach The Gospel
Preaching the gospel is the primary mission of
the church because the church is God's agency to
evangelize the world. Jesus compared the church
to a householder who went out into the
marketplace to hire laborers into his vineyard,
Matthew
20:1-16.
Jesus also compared the nature of the kingdom of
heaven to a sower who went forth to sow. The
seed the sower was sowing was the word of God,
Matthew 13:3-23.
In early days, the church was God's agency to
send preachers out to preach the word and do the
work of God. The Bible says of the church at
Antioch, "And when they had fasted and prayed
and laid their hands on them, they sent them
away" (Acts
13:1-3).
The apostle Paul said in I Timothy 3:15 that the
church is the pillar and ground of the truth. A
pillar is a large stone colonnade or column,
which supports the roof of a porch or a
building, thus the church supports and upholds
the truth of God. That is the mission of the
church - to support and uphold the truth.
The apostle Paul also identified the church as
the institution, which is to make known the
wisdom of God. Ephesians 3: 10, "To the intent
that now unto the principalities and powers in
heavenly places might be known by the church the
manifold wisdom of God." I understand therefore
that the church is to be employed in the
dissemination of the wisdom of God.
Paul said further: "Unto him be glory in the
church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages,
world without end" (Ephesians
3:21).
It is God's will that glory to himself shall be
in the church by Christ Jesus. Men who do not
consent to this are not in harmony with God's
will.
Let me also point out that local congregations
of the church were the medium through which this
mission of the church was to be accomplished. It
was never God's plan to have some organization
bigger than the church, the local congregation
to preach the gospel. It was never God's plan to
have a missionary society as an adjunct to the
church in this respect.
God never intended for us to have some human
society for the purpose of having rummage sales,
garage sales, pie suppers, bingo games, and cake
walks for the purpose of preaching the gospel.
God intended for the church to do this work.
Members of the church are to give their money on
the first day of the week, and these funds are
to be used for the mission of the church. What
is the primary mission of the church? Its
primary mission and central obligation is to
preach the gospel.
It is said that if you go to Palestine, the Holy
Land, as it is called, and visit the Church of
the Holy Sepulcher, the guide will take you to a
red stone beneath the great dome of the church
and state: "Now right here is the center of the
world, because this is where Jesus stood when he
gave the great commission and said to the
disciples: 'Go ye into all the world, and preach
the gospel to every creature. He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved; but he that
believeth not shall be damned' (Mark 16:15,16)."
No doubt Jesus stood somewhere when he said
that, but it seems unlikely that Jesus stood on
that little red stone. We can't say for sure,
but I am certain of one thing. The great
commission is the center of the church's
obligation even if that place is not the center
of the world. Matthew stressed that same
obligation but he worded it just a little
differently. He recorded Jesus as saying: "All
power is given unto me in heaven and in earth.
Go ye therefore, and teach all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: Teaching them to
observe all things whatsoever I have commanded
you: and, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the
end of the world" (Matthew 28:18-20)
To Teach The Saved
But you will notice another mission of the
church in the last part of that great
commission, as stated by Matthew. He said,
"Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever
I have commanded you." Jesus said, "Teaching
them." Who? Teaching those who are baptized,
teaching the saved, teaching them to observe all
things the Saviour commanded. Thus, Jesus named
another mission of the church. When the church
has made disciples, then it is the mission of
the church to teach them what Jesus wants them
to know. It is not enough to teach them the
first principles and then leave them to their
own devices - they must be taught to observe all
things that Jesus commanded. Therefore, teaching
the saved is necessary.
When sinners hear the call of the gospel and
become Christians, they have faith, but there is
something else to be added. Peter said, "And
beside this, add to your faith virtue; and to
virtue knowledge; And to knowledge temperance;
and to temperance patience; and to patience
godliness; And to godliness brotherly kindness;
and to brotherly kindness charity" (II Peter
1:5-7).
One of the principal things to be added to the
life of a Christian is knowledge. That was
essentially what the apostle Paul was talking
about when he spoke of "putting on the whole
armor of God." He said: "Stand therefore, having
your loins girt about with truth, and having on
the breastplate of righteousness: And your feet
shod with the preparation of the gospel of
peace; Above all, taking the shield of faith,
wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the
fiery darts of the wicked. And take the helmet
of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which
is the word of God: Praying always with all
prayer and supplication in the Spirit"
(Ephesians 6:14-18). All of these things are
simply metaphorical references to the word of
God. Many Christians are bareheaded and
barefooted, so to speak, facing the enemy
without defenses because they have no knowledge
of the word of God.
How can the church bring about this knowledge of
the word of God? First, it is the duty of
preachers, teachers, and elders of the church to
teach the word of God, and feed the flock. In
Acts 20:28, the Ephesian elders were told: "Take
heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the
flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made
you overseers, to feed the church of God, which
he hath purchased with his own blood." The
elders are to feed the flock.
In 2 Timothy 2:2, Paul told the young preacher,
Timothy: "And the things that thou hast heard of
me among many witnesses, the same commit thou to
faithful men, who shall be able to teach others
also." In other words, the preacher was to teach
"faithful men" and these faithful men would
likewise teach others. In
Titus 2:1-8,
Paul charged the preacher Titus to teach aged
men, aged women, young women and young men"
their duties in the church.
Also, the New Testament makes it clear that each
Christian has a responsibility to other
Christians. Hebrews 3:12,13 warns: "Take heed,
brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil
heart of unbelief, in departing from the living
God. But exhort one another daily, while it is
called Today; lest any of you be hardened
through the deceitfulness of sin." Therefore, it
is the mission of the church to teach its
members, and to cause them to be strong in the
Lord and in the power of his might.
To Provide A Spiritual Atmosphere
It is the mission of the church to provide the
kind of place where spiritual life can flourish.
The meetings of the church should be the kind of
meetings where the spiritual man, the inner man,
can be renewed. The services should be orderly
and worshipful. The meetings should not be held
and conducted with the end in view of simply
attracting a great crowd and catering to the
wishes and wants of worldly people. It is a
great mistake for people to feel that they must
put on a show to attract a crowd. Remember, the
apostle in speaking of conduct in meetings said:
"Let all things be done decently and in order"
(I Corinthians 14:40).
It is not necessary to have the most eloquent
speaker, or the most entertaining singing to
build up the spiritual man. What does matter is
to meet with a desire to worship and serve God
in spirit and in truth, as Jesus instructed in
John
4:23,24,
and to show genuine love and concern for each
other. Jesus said: "By this shall all men know
that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to
another" (John 13:35). Therefore, it should be
the duty and mission of every member of the
church to make it a place that is warm,
friendly, receptive, and encouraging, and to
show love for this world, even as Jesus loved
the world and gave his life that he might redeem
it from sin.
To Reproduce The Character Of
Christ
Another mission of the church is to provide in
its members the kind of person that Jesus wants
to see. The objective of every church is to
produce the likeness of Christ in the lives of
its members. Is the church doing that for you?
Do you have the humility that Jesus manifested
while on earth? Do you have the burning zeal and
love for men's souls that Jesus had? Can you
turn the other cheek and go the second mile as
Jesus did, and as Jesus taught that we should
do? Do we stand for the things that Jesus
taught? The apostle Paul commanded: "Let this
mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus"
(Philippians 2:5).
That is the purpose of all our worship and work
- to reproduce in our own lives the character of
Jesus Christ. I once read the story of a
preacher who went deep into the interior of
China, to a village so remote that they could
know very little about modern life. This
preacher began to tell the villagers the story
of Jesus - how he went about doing good, healing
the sick and feeding the hungry, how he lived
such an unselfish life in the interest of
others, and the people said: "We know that man!
He lived in our village." "Oh no," the preacher
said, "this man lived in Palestine, and died
hundreds of years ago." The people said, "No,
this man lived among us. Come, we will show you
his grave." With these words, they led the
preacher to the grave, and showed him the
remaining effects of an English medical doctor,
who had "thrown his life away" on this remote
village. This man had so exemplified the life of
the Christ that when the people heard the story
of Jesus, they immediately thought of the
doctor.
My friend, that is one of the purposes of the
church - to reproduce the character of Jesus in
its members. May it be said of every Christian,
as it was once said of the apostles long ago,
when they were brought in before the
authorities, that they "took knowledge of them
that they had been with Jesus." There is no
argument that can answer that kind of life. If
you and I live so that people can take knowledge
of us, that we have been with Jesus, that will
be the most powerful influence we can ever have
for the advancement of truth.
To Bring Joy To Mankind
Perhaps it could be said that the
all-encompassing mission and purpose of the
church is to bring joy and happiness to mankind.
Not as the world giveth, but as God giveth. Why
is it that people attend worship? It is not
because they are forced to attend. They go
because they love to go. David said, "I was glad
when they said unto me, Let us go into the house
of the Lord" (Psalm 122:1). The happiest people
I know anywhere are those who attend worship on
Sunday morning and are found in their places on
Sunday evening and Wednesday night, and at other
times. These people are truly happy. Their faces
radiate with the love of the Son of God. The
Bible records that after the Philippian jailor
had been baptized into Christ that he "rejoiced,
believing in God with all his house" (Acts 16:
34). When the Ethiopian nobleman was baptized,
"he went on his way rejoicing" (Acts 8:39). What
is the mission of the church?
Not politics, or social programs, but rather
preaching the gospel, teaching the saved,
providing a place where Christians can grow and
flourish, reproducing the character of Jesus,
and bringing true joy and happiness to mankind.
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