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Let's say that an evangelist came to your church and did the following things?
These resemble actions Jesus took. He did the unexpected. What you'll learn in this lesson will help to explain this unexpected behavior. It will reinforce what we learned in the first two lessons about God's plan. Also look for how the Jews misunderstood that plan. Learn how you can avoid the same mistake. JESUS FOR ALL PEOPLES! [adapted from an article by Ralph Winter] The Lord Jesus is central to our Christian faith and the mission of the Church. So the way He relates to the peoples of the world is vitally important in understanding God's purpose for the Church. One of the best ways to study the ministry of Jesus is from the writings of Luke. Luke, as a Gentile, was an outsider to Israel. He gives us a unique perspective of Jesus' involvement with Gentiles. Christ - the Seed of Abraham Four thousand years ago, God chose Abraham to begin His redemptive activity toward the nations. In Genesis 12 Abraham was promised that Christ would come. Jesus is the Seed, the unique descendant of Abraham though whom all nations were to be blessed. When Christ appeared, the fullest meaning of the blessing of Abraham came into focus. The Great Commission of the Old Testament In the very wording of Matthew 28:18-20, Jesus makes it clear that He was not giving the people of Israel some new revelation. He was actually quoting the mandate given to their father Jacob, which is recorded in Genesis 28:14-15. Click here to see that comparison. Observe that in both
passages it says, "I am with you," indicating that the Lord will continue
working with them until something is completed. In Genesis God says He
will be with the descendants of Abraham until He has done all that He
promised. The key element of the promise is the blessing of all peoples.
One aspect of what the Lord was saying is that He intends to keep working
with His people until all peoples are penetrated with His power. Similarly,
in Matthew He says He will be with them until the end of the age. They
would know what that meant because in Matthew 24:14
Jesus told them the age would not end until all nations (ethne) were reached.
Jesus - not received by His own nation, But by the Gentile nations Although Jesus spent most of His time ministering to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, amazingly Gentile nations often times received Him with more faith and acceptance. Prime examples are the Roman centurion [Luke 7:1-10] and the Syro-Phoenician woman [Mark 7:24-30].Jesus marveled at both and said He had not found faith like the centurion's even in Israel. To ensure his disciples learned His saving grace was available to all, Jesus ministered to Samaritans, people of Decapolis, Tyre & Sidon, Phoenicia and Galilee - all areas with large concentrations of Greek-speaking Gentiles. In fact, many scholars believe Jesus was bilingual; ministering both in Aramic and Greek. Sadly, despite all he did to reach the Jews, His own did not receive Him. Yet, to all who received Him He gave the right to become the children of God [John 1:11-12]. Who did receive Him? Luke makes it clear that the Gentiles did. This is brought out in many of Jesus' parables and very graphically in the parable of the great banquet and the parable of the vineyard tenants. From the very beginning of his Gospel, Luke stresses that Jesus was to be the Messiah not just for Israel but for all peoples. He tells of Simeon, a godly man, who was looking for the fulfillment of Israel. Simeon quotes Isaiah 49:6, declaring Jesus to be a "light for revelation to the Gentiles...glory to your people Israel," declaring the fulfillment of the purpose for which God had chosen them. In Chapter four Luke continues to develop his portrayal of Jesus as the Messiah for all peoples. Picture Jesus as a young seminary graduate, having come to His home town to give His "graduation sermon." He preached a message which pleased everybody. He could have left it at that. But He then added a few words which turned the happy group into a mob determined to kill him. What did Jesus say to cause such a reaction? He spoke of two prophets, Elijah and Elisha, whom God used to bless two Gentile nations, the widow of Zarephath and Naaman the Syrian. They were upset because they felt that He was betraying His people, Israel, by speaking of blessing for Gentiles. If they had not already betrayed the purposes of God, they would not have exploded in anger. They had forgotten their "missionary responsibility" under the Abrahamic covenant; and their hearts had become hard at any mention of foreigners being blessed. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus hoped to change this attitude [Luke 6:26-37; Matthew 5:39-42]. Many miss the importance of what Jesus was saying when He declared that it wasn't enough for people to be friendly to their friends. He was introducing the radical concept: they were to love their enemies, even to pray for them. Most of the Jews did not listen. Even today people feel resentful of foreigners in their land. "They are taking away our jobs; overcrowding our cities; they don't speak our language." Are we responding in the same way as the Jews did? Are we eager to pass on Jesus' blessing to any newcomer to our hometown. It is God's way of providing us with the opportunity to obey His commission. Jesus - Willing to Die for All People Besides the episode at Nazareth, there were constant attempts on Jesus' life. However, as the Messiah for all peoples, He was ready to give His life that the nations might live. In Luke 9:23 He utters the challenge that if anyone follows Him, he would have to deny himself and be willing to die. From that point, right up to Calvary, the Bible contrasts the self-centered attitude of the disciples with the "peoples-centered" attitude of Christ. During His long walking trip from Galilee to Judea, in Luke chapter ten, His disciples realize that Jesus is heading into trouble both for Himself and for them, and eventually into His own death. When Jesus clearly tells them He is going to die, Peter rebuked Him. Jesus told Peter he did not understand the purposes of God. This will always be the case when we are worrying about ourselves rather than about God's purpose for all peoples. [Matthew 16:21-25]. On three different occasions Jesus makes it painfully clear that He was going to die. The third time found James and John arguing over prospective positions in the kingdom. How similar this is to power hungry Christians-today. Jesus corrected His disciples, saying they didn't know what they wee asking. Have we fully understood Jesus' statement that positions of importance in His kingdom come when we are ready to be servants of all. Willing to sacrifice ourselves for others. Giving our lives to save those beyond our worldly concern, the unreached peoples? [Mark 9:30-35; 10:32-45]. In the twenty-fourth chapter, after the resurrection, Luke again makes it clear that Jesus' followers had still not caught the idea. Two disciples walking along the Emmaus Road were discouraged and almost certainly grumbling. Gone were grandiose hopes that Jesus would overthrow the Romans and set the disciples up in power. Jesus joins them and asks the reason for their disgruntlement. Snarling, they ask, "Are you the only one in Jerusalem that doesn't understand what happened?" Actually, Jesus was the only person who did understand. Their worldly selfish focus prevented them from "seeing" who Jesus was and what the Old Testament had clearly taught about His death and resurrection. A short time later Jesus appeared to the eleven disciples to remind them of the fulfillment of what was actually written in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms. These were things they should have known! Things our churches should know and act upon today! Opening their hardened hearts, Jesus made very clear the primary message of the entire Old Testament Scriptures, saying, "This is what is written: The Christ will suffer and rise from the dead on the third day and repentance and forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem" [Luke 24:45-47]. He doesn't let them believe for a minute that this was a brand new idea. All the peoples have always been within the love, concern and purpose of God. Incredibly, in Acts chapter one, we find the disciples still do not understand the nature of the Kingdom. They are still focusing on their own small corner of the world called Israel. Paraphrasing Acts 1:8, Jesus said, "If you people are still after power you will receive power, but only when the Spirit of God takes over your life, and your lives are refocused on the ends of the earth." The power they received was not an end in itself. It was to be available to those who spent their energies on the unreached peoples of the earth. Today, we too want to claim the purposes and power of the Great Commission - the "Lo, I will be with you always." But, as someone has said, if there is "no Go, then there is no LO." If you don't GO into God's purposes, then the "Lo, I will be with you" doesn't follow. It is all part of one picture; missions to the nations and receiving God's power are inseparably linked. Messiah for all Peoples Throughout His ministry in the New Testament, Jesus continues to show His interest in the little people; the poor, the sick; the Greeks and the Samaritans. Not just the people from the race he was born into, but the world around Him, was His concern. In fact the most repugnant feature of Jesus to the Jews was His continued focus on God's love for the Gentiles and not just for them. Perhaps Jesus makes this clearest during His triumphal entry into Jerusalem. Many were singing "Hosanna," - meaning "save (us) now", - putting out palm branches to signify their hope that Jesus would seize power from the Romans. They were undoubtedly thinking that "When this happens, then WE (the Jews) will be in power again"! Christians can also be like this - thinking that all God should be interested in is giving them power in their own lives; over sin, over their material problems, over their circumstances. Power to get something they want for themselves. In other words, seeking spiritual power without understanding the intended purpose of His power-which is to be used to disciple the nations. To do this is to be like Simon the Sorcerer who wanted spiritual power for his own gain. Refocus Our Priorities for Jesus - the Messiah for all peoples! Jesus, our Forerunner, is a lesson for us. He did not go to the Roman barracks to seize power from the governing authorities. NO. Instead he went to the Temple, to the court of the Gentiles. The place set aside by God from the very beginning where all peoples could come and seek Him. What did He find? He found the religious establishment of His day had failed to reach out to the peoples of the then world and were, instead, busy changing money and selling animals - for the benefit of the Jews. Here we see recorded our Lord expressing anger. It was the religious establishment's failure to each out to the peoples of the earth, that occasioned one of the few instances the Bible recounts of our Lord expressing anger. Let us all take heed that we refocus our priorities for Jesus - the Messiah for all peoples! [Luke 19:45 and Mark 11:17]. Click here for a quick review of the Biblical Perspective! ![]()
Notice how close the two passages are:
In Matthew 28:18-20
Jesus says His followers are to enable the blessing of all nations as
those nations are "discipled." The Greek word for nations is ethne, which
refers to an ethnic or people group, but clearly not to a political nation.
In Genesis He says that through the children of Israel all peoples on
earth will be blessed. In the Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament,
widely used in Jesus' day, the word for peoples is, again, ethne. Parables
of Gentiles receiving Jesus In the parable of
the vineyard tenants, the Bible makes it clear that the kingdom of God
would be taken away from the Jews and given to the Gentiles, whom Jesus
said would bring forth its fruit (Luke 20:9-19, Matthew
21:33-46). Verses in Lesson 3 Matt
24:14 Luke
7:1-10 Mark
7:24-30 John
1:11-12 Luke
20:9-19 Matthew
21:33-46 Isaiah
49:6 Luke
6:26-37 39 But I tell you,
Do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek,
turn to him the other also. 40 And if someone wants to sue you and take
your tunic, let him have your cloak as well. 41 If someone forces you
to go one mile, go with him two miles. 42 Give to the one who asks you,
and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you. Luke
9:23 Matthew
16:21-25 Mark
9:30-35 Mark
10:32-45 Luke
24:45-47 Acts
1:8 Luke
19:45 Mark 11:17
Click here for a quick review of the Biblical Perspective!
DISCLAIMER: This material has been assembled over several years and some may be pulled directly so please contact us if you have any objections as we do not intend to infringe on any copyrights. |
Overview 1. Blessed To Be A Blessing 2. The Golden thread 3. Jesus for All Peoples Review 1 Historical Perspective Cultural Perspective World Christian Perspective |
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