dermdoc said:
Jabin said:
TheGreatEscape said:
I believe we tend to see the great commission as individualistic. It is. But it is also cooperate. We are to disciple the nations.
Matthew 28-18-20 (NIV)
18 Then Jesus came to them and said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.
Sorry for the derail, but I've always wondered why we call that statement by Christ, to his disciples, the "Great Commission". It only began to be called that late in the 19th century and then gained wide-spread use in the late 20th century with the advent of the evangelical para-church groups such as Campus Crusade.
It was never repeated in the Bible.
The apostles never commanded or even encouraged other Christians to be missionaries or to evangelize.
It would seem that the duty to evangelize does flow naturally from the 2nd Commandment, i.e., to love your neighbor as yourself. But setting up Christ's command, which was given to his disciples only, as a "Great Commission" elevates that duty and prioritizes it over other Christian duties and callings.
I have always wondered about that also.
It is pretty obvious Scripturally that only certain people were called to be evangelists and missionaries.
To run with the tangent, I think a lot of it is the Once Saved Always Saved theology that is prominent in a lot of Protestant groups coupled with the principle of a Salvific Prayer. When you put those together, basically all you need to do is get someone to say a certain prayer and your entire job as a Christian is done. That person is saved from hell and you can move on to the next group of damned sinners. Fellowship, brotherhood, spiritual growth, good living, community, and continued faith all become secondary to that single heartfelt prayer that does all the work in an instant. Under this thought, we should all be out there trying to get people to say the Lord's Prayer non-stop. I've been to a lot of churches that are this way. Their only focus is on the moment of conversion and everything else is an afterthought. Well, everything except the tithe, but that's an entirely different discussion.
Since growing up, I've spent a lot of time around people of different faiths in places that weren't majority Christian or at least not by much. For a Jew or Muslim to convert to Christianity is an utterly life changing experience. They might lose their family, their spouse, their friends, and their job. They could become entirely untethered and alone in the world except for the people converting them. As Christians, I think it is our duty to make the people we convert into our family. If you're not willing to take someone into your home, help them find a job, have them over every weekend, etc, then you shouldn't be trying to convince them to upend their entire lives. That's where the iterant evangelist model rubs me the wrong way. It can't be all about the conversion. You have to actually care about people current lives as well as their souls.
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