Priorities
The Great Commission which
Jesus gave to His disciples (Matthew 28:19-20) has rightly been a motivating
force and rallying cry for churches and other Christian organizations. In it we
find expressed God's heart for His Children and His desire for us to be His
faithful instruments in carrying the message of the gospel to them. The
Commission also instructs us in the full-orbed ministry of disciple-making,
which involves not only evangelism but also the teaching and mentoring of
converts into lives of obedience, maturity, and finally disciple-making
themselves.
As such, the Great
Commission is a tremendous exhortation to followers of Jesus Christ and one
which is well worth our attention and humble submission. However, many churches,
missions organizations, and parachurch groups write the Great Commission into
their philosophies and purpose statements as if it were a statement of the
ultimate goal for Christians. That is unfortunate because, as important as the
Commission's focus is, it is not the ultimate expression of why God has
made us and saved us and called us to serve Him.
The Great Commission is not
the cornerstone of our Christian walk and service; it is not the bottom
line. The Great Commandment is. Jesus explained in Matthew 22:37 that the
"great commandment in the law" is to "love the Lord your God
with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind."
Through a life and lifestyle of worship we are to be filled with adoration of
and love for God and to give it expression from the heart. The New Testament, as
well as the Old Testament is clear that true worship begins on the inside
(Romans 12:1; Hebrews 13:15; Philippians 3:3; I Samuel 15:22) and that outward
expressions are only acceptable as they reflect an inner reality. The scribe
whom Jesus said was "not far from the kingdom of God" recognized
that observing the Great Commandment is "much more than all burnt offerings
and sacrifices" (Mark 12:32-33).
While the Great Commission
seeks to promote the glory of God through the believer by enlisting him in the
task of bringing others to faith and lives of obedience; yet the primary
way a Christian glorifies God is in the response of his own heart and life and
walk, not in what he does for others. As a matter of fact, spiritual service to
others is the essence of the second greatest commandment, which Jesus
identifies in Matthew 22:39 as "You shall love your neighbor as
yourself." Ideed, the Great Commission is a natural outgrowth and
expression of both of these greatest commandments - if we truly love God
and our neighbors, we will seek to win and equip those neighbors for the glory
of God.
Even the context of the
Great Commission suggests the secondary nature of the Commission: when the
disciples saw Jesus, "they worshipped Him" (Matthew 28:17); and
Jesus bases His Commission on the fact that "all authority has been
given to Me in heaven and on earth" (28:18) The utter God-centeredness
of these statements reflect that of the Great Commandment, and is consistent
with the observation that the more man-focused nature of the Great Commission is
dependent on and subordinate to the focus of the Great Commandment.
Let us first and foremost
seek to love God with our entire being (heart, soul, mind, strength) and to be
"filled with all the fulness of God" (Ephesians 3:19), that our
lives of worship might then overflow with a grateful aspiration to "make
disciples of all the nations" -- that they too might worship Him and love
Him and serve Him -- that in all things God might be glorified.