Chapter
86 -
Go Teach All Nations
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STANDING but a step from His heavenly throne, Christ gave the commission to
His disciples. "All power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth," He said.
"Go ye therefore, and teach all nations." "Go ye into all the world, and
preach the gospel to every creature." Mark 16:15. Again and again the words
were repeated, that the disciples might grasp their significance. Upon all
the inhabitants of the earth, high and low, rich and poor, was the light of
heaven to shine in clear, strong rays. The disciples were to be colaborers
with their Redeemer in the work of saving the world.
The commission had been given to the twelve when Christ met with them in the
upper chamber; but it was now to be given to a larger number. At the meeting
on a mountain in Galilee, all the believers who could be called together
were assembled. Of this meeting Christ Himself, before His death, had
designated the time and place. The angel at the tomb reminded the disciples
of His promise to meet them in Galilee. The promise was repeated to the
believers who were gathered at Jerusalem during the Passover week, and
through them it reached many lonely ones who were mourning the death of
their Lord. With intense interest all looked forward to the interview. They
made their way to the place of meeting by circuitous routes, coming in from
every direction, to avoid exciting the suspicion of the jealous Jews. With
wondering hearts they came, talking earnestly together of the news that had
reached them concerning Christ.
At the time appointed, about five hundred believers were collected in little
knots on the mountainside, eager to learn all that could be learned from
those who had seen Christ since His resurrection. From group to group the
disciples passed, telling all they had seen and heard of Jesus, and
reasoning from the Scriptures as He had done with them. Thomas recounted the
story of his unbelief, and told how his doubts had been swept away. Suddenly
Jesus stood among them. No one could tell whence or how He came. Many who
were present had never before seen Him; but in His hands and feet they
beheld the marks of the crucifixion; His countenance was as the face of God,
and when they saw Him, they worshiped Him.
But some doubted. So it will always be. There are those who find it hard to
exercise faith, and they place themselves on the doubting side. These lose
much because of their unbelief.
This was the only interview that Jesus had with many of the believers after
His resurrection. He came and spoke to them saying, "All power is given unto
Me in heaven and in earth." The disciples had worshiped Him before He spoke,
but His words, falling from lips that had been closed in death, thrilled
them with peculiar power. He was now the risen Saviour. Many of them had
seen Him exercise His power in healing the sick and controlling satanic
agencies. They believed that He possessed power to set up His kingdom at
Jerusalem, power to quell all opposition, power over the elements of nature.
He had stilled the angry waters; He had walked upon the white-crested
billows; He had raised the dead to life. Now He declared that "all power"
was given to Him. His words carried the minds of His hearers above earthly
and temporal things to the heavenly and eternal. They were lifted to the
highest conception of His dignity and glory.
Christ's words on the mountainside were the announcement that His sacrifice
in behalf of man was full and complete. The conditions of the atonement had
been fulfilled; the work for which He came to this world had been
accomplished. He was on His way to the throne of God, to be honored by
angels, principalities, and powers. He had entered upon His mediatorial
work. Clothed with boundless authority, He gave His commission to the
disciples: "Go ye therefore, and teach all nations," "baptizing them into
the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit: teaching them
to observe all things whatsoever I commanded you: and lo, I am with you
always, even unto the end of the world." Matt. 28:19, 20, R. V.
The Jewish people had been made the depositaries of sacred truth; but
Pharisaism had made them the most exclusive, the most bigoted, of all the
human race. Everything about the priests and rulers--their dress, customs,
ceremonies, traditions--made them unfit to be the light of the world. They
looked upon themselves, the Jewish nation, as the world. But Christ
commissioned His disciples to proclaim a faith and worship that would have
in it nothing of caste or country, a faith that would be adapted to all
peoples, all nations, all classes of men.
Before leaving His disciples, Christ plainly stated the nature of His
kingdom. He called to their minds what He had previously told them
concerning it. He declared that it was not His purpose to establish in this
world a temporal, but a spiritual kingdom. He was not to reign as an earthly
king on David's throne. Again He opened to them the Scriptures, showing that
all He had passed through had been ordained in heaven, in the councils
between the Father and Himself. All had been foretold by men inspired by the
Holy Spirit. He said, You see that all I have revealed to you concerning My
rejection as the Messiah has come to pass. All I have said in regard to the
humiliation I should endure and the death I should die, has been verified.
On the third day I rose again. Search the Scriptures more diligently, and
you will see that in all these things the specifications of prophecy
concerning Me have been fulfilled.
Christ commissioned His disciples to do the work He had left in their hands,
beginning at Jerusalem. Jerusalem had been the scene of His amazing
condescension for the human race. There He had suffered, been rejected and
condemned. The land of Judea was His birthplace. There, clad in the garb of
humanity, He had walked with men, and few had discerned how near heaven came
to the earth when Jesus was among them. At Jerusalem the work of the
disciples must begin.
In view of all that Christ had suffered there, and the unappreciated labor
He had put forth, the disciples might have pleaded for a more promising
field; but they made no such plea. The very ground where He had scattered
the seed of truth was to be cultivated by the disciples, and the seed would
spring up and yield an abundant harvest. In their work the disciples would
have to meet persecution through the jealousy and hatred of the Jews; but
this had been endured by their Master, and they were not to flee from it.
The first offers of mercy must be made to the murderers of the Saviour.
And there were in Jerusalem many who had secretly believed on Jesus, and
many who had been deceived by the priests and rulers. To these also the
gospel was to be presented. They were to be called to repentance. The
wonderful truth that through Christ alone could remission of sins be
obtained was to be made plain. While all Jerusalem was stirred by the
thrilling events of the past few weeks, the preaching of the gospel would
make the deepest impression.
But the work was not to stop here. It was to be extended to the earth's
remotest bounds. To His disciples Christ said, You have been witnesses of My
life of self-sacrifice in behalf of the world. You have witnessed My labors
for Israel. Although they would not come unto Me that they might have life,
although priests and rulers have done to Me as they listed, although they
have rejected Me as the Scriptures foretold, they shall have still another
opportunity of accepting the Son of God. You have seen that all who come to
Me, confessing their sins, I freely receive. Him that cometh to Me I will in
nowise cast out. All who will, may be reconciled to God, and receive
everlasting life. To you, My disciples, I commit this message of mercy. It
is to be given to Israel first, and then to all nations, tongues, and
peoples. It is to be given to Jews and Gentiles. All who believe are to be
gathered into one church.
Through the gift of the Holy Spirit the disciples were to receive a
marvelous power. Their testimony was to be confirmed by signs and wonders.
Miracles would be wrought, not only by the apostles, but by those who
received their message. Jesus said, "In My name shall they cast out devils;
they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they
drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the
sick, and they shall recover." Mark 16:17, 18.
At that time poisoning was often practiced. Unscrupulous men did not
hesitate to remove by this means those who stood in the way of their
ambition. Jesus knew that the life of His disciples would thus be imperiled.
Many would think it doing God service to put His witnesses to death. He
therefore promised them protection from this danger.
The disciples were to have the same power which Jesus had to heal "all
manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the people." By healing
in His name the diseases of the body, they would testify to His power for
the healing of the soul. Matt. 4:23; 9:6. And a new endowment was now
promised. The disciples were to preach among other nations, and they would
receive power to speak other tongues. The apostles and their associates were
unlettered men, yet through the outpouring of the Spirit on the day of
Pentecost, their speech, whether in their own or a foreign language, became
pure, simple, and accurate, both in word and in accent.
Thus Christ gave His disciples their commission. He made full provision for
the prosecution of the work, and took upon Himself the responsibility for
its success. So long as they obeyed His word, and worked in connection with
Him, they could not fail. Go to all nations, He bade them. Go to the
farthest part of the habitable globe, but know that My presence will be
there. Labor in faith and confidence, for the time will never come when I
will forsake you.
The Saviour's commission to the disciples included all the believers. It
includes all believers in Christ to the end of time. It is a fatal mistake
to suppose that the work of saving souls depends alone on the ordained
minister. All to whom the heavenly inspiration has come are put in trust
with the gospel. All who receive the life of Christ are ordained to work for
the salvation of their fellow men. For this work the church was established,
and all who take upon themselves its sacred vows are thereby pledged to be
co-workers with Christ.
"The Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come."
Rev. 22:17. Everyone who hears is to repeat the invitation. Whatever one's
calling in life, his first interest should be to win souls for Christ. He
may not be able to speak to congregations, but he can work for individuals.
To them he can communicate the instruction received from his Lord. Ministry
does not consist alone in preaching. Those minister who relieve the sick and
suffering, helping the needy, speaking words of comfort to the desponding
and those of little faith. Nigh and afar off are souls weighed down by a
sense of guilt. It is not hardship, toil, or poverty that degrades humanity.
It is guilt, wrongdoing. This brings unrest and dissatisfaction. Christ
would have His servants minister to sin-sick souls.
The disciples were to begin their work where they were. The hardest and most
unpromising field was not to be passed by. So every one of Christ's workers
is to begin where he is. In our own families may be souls hungry for
sympathy, starving for the bread of life. There may be children to be
trained for Christ. There are heathen at our very doors. Let us do
faithfully the work that is nearest. Then let our efforts be extended as far
as God's hand may lead the way. The work of many may appear to be restricted
by circumstances; but, wherever it is, if performed with faith and diligence
it will be felt to the uttermost parts of the earth. Christ's work when upon
earth appeared to be confined to a narrow field, but multitudes from all
lands heard His message. God often uses the simplest means to accomplish the
greatest results. It is His plan that every part of His work shall depend on
every other part, as a wheel within a wheel, all acting in harmony. The
humblest worker, moved by the Holy Spirit, will touch invisible chords,
whose vibrations will ring to the ends of the earth, and make melody through
eternal ages.
But the command, "Go ye into all the world," is not to be lost sight of. We
are called upon to lift our eyes to the "regions beyond." Christ tears away
the wall of partition, the dividing prejudice of nationality, and teaches a
love for all the human family. He lifts men from the narrow circle which
their selfishness prescribes; He abolishes all territorial lines and
artificial distinctions of society. He makes no difference between neighbors
and strangers, friends and enemies. He teaches us to look upon every needy
soul as our brother, and the world as our field.
When the Saviour said, "Go, . . . teach all nations," He said also, "These
signs shall follow them that believe; In My name shall they cast out devils;
they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they
drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the
sick, and they shall recover." The promise is as far-reaching as the
commission. Not that all the gifts are imparted to each believer. The Spirit
divides "to every man severally as He will." 1 Cor. 12:11. But the gifts of
the Spirit are promised to every believer according to his need for the
Lord's work. The promise is just as strong and trustworthy now as in the
days of the apostles. "These signs shall follow them that believe." This is
the privilege of God's children, and faith should lay hold on all that it is
possible to have as an indorsement of faith.
"They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover." This world is a
vast lazar house, but Christ came to heal the sick, to proclaim deliverance
to the captives of Satan. He was in Himself health and strength. He imparted
His life to the sick, the afflicted, those possessed of demons. He turned
away none who came to receive His healing power. He knew that those who
petitioned Him for help had brought disease upon themselves; yet He did not
refuse to heal them. And when virtue from Christ entered into these poor
souls, they were convicted of sin, and many were healed of their spiritual
disease, as well as of their physical maladies. The gospel still possesses
the same power, and why should we not today witness the same results?
Christ feels the woes of every sufferer. When evil spirits rend a human
frame, Christ feels the curse. When fever is burning up the life current, He
feels the agony. And He is just as willing to heal the sick now as when He
was personally on earth. Christ's servants are His representatives, the
channels for His working. He desires through them to exercise His healing
power.
In the Saviour's manner of healing there were lessons for His disciples. On
one occasion He anointed the eyes of a blind man with clay, and bade him,
"Go, wash in the pool of Siloam. . . . He went his way therefore, and
washed, and came seeing." John 9:7. The cure could be wrought only by the
power of the Great Healer, yet Christ made use of the simple agencies of
nature. While He did not give countenance to drug medication, He sanctioned
the use of simple and natural remedies.
To many of the afflicted ones who received healing, Christ said, "Sin no
more, lest a worse thing come unto thee." John 5:14. Thus He taught that
disease is the result of violating God's laws, both natural and spiritual.
The great misery in the world would not exist did men but live in harmony
with the Creator's plan.
Christ had been the guide and teacher of ancient Israel, and He taught them
that health is the reward of obedience to the laws of God. The Great
Physician who healed the sick in Palestine had spoken to His people from the
pillar of cloud, telling them what they must do, and what God would do for
them. "If thou wilt diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God," He
said, "and wilt do that which is right in His sight, and wilt give ear to
His commandments, and keep all His statutes, I will put none of these
diseases upon thee, which I have brought upon the Egyptians: for I am the
Lord that healeth thee." Ex. 15:26. Christ gave to Israel definite
instruction in regard to their habits of life, and He assured them, "The
Lord will take away from thee all sickness." Deut. 7:15. When they fulfilled
the conditions, the promise was verified to them. "There was not one feeble
person among their tribes." Ps. 105:37.
These lessons are for us. There are conditions to be observed by all who
would preserve health. All should learn what these conditions are. The Lord
is not pleased with ignorance in regard to His laws, either natural or
spiritual. We are to be workers together with God for the restoration of
health to the body as well as to the soul.
And we should teach others how to preserve and to recover health. For the
sick we should use the remedies which God has provided in nature, and we
should point them to Him who alone can restore. It is our work to present
the sick and suffering to Christ in the arms of our faith. We should teach
them to believe in the Great Healer. We should lay hold on His promise, and
pray for the manifestation of His power. The very essence of the gospel is
restoration, and the Saviour would have us bid the sick, the hopeless, and
the afflicted take hold upon His strength.
The power of love was in all Christ's healing, and only by partaking of that
love, through faith, can we be instruments for His work. If we neglect to
link ourselves in divine connection with Christ, the current of life-giving
energy cannot flow in rich streams from us to the people. There were places
where the Saviour Himself could not do many mighty works because of their
unbelief. So now unbelief separates the church from her divine Helper. Her
hold upon eternal realities is weak. By her lack of faith, God is
disappointed, and robbed of His glory.
It is in doing Christ's work that the church has the promise of His
presence. Go teach all nations, He said; "and, lo, I am with you alway, even
unto the end of the world." To take His yoke is one of the first conditions
of receiving His power. The very life of the church depends upon her
faithfulness in fulfilling the Lord's commission. To neglect this work is
surely to invite spiritual feebleness and decay. Where there is no active
labor for others, love wanes, and faith grows dim.
Christ intends that His ministers shall be educators of the church in gospel
work. They are to teach the people how to seek and save the lost. But is
this the work they are doing? Alas, how many are toiling to fan the spark of
life in a church that is ready to die! How many churches are tended like
sick lambs by those who ought to be seeking for the lost sheep! And all the
time millions upon millions without Christ are perishing.
Divine love has been stirred to its unfathomable depths for the sake of men,
and angels marvel to behold in the recipients of so great love a mere
surface gratitude. Angels marvel at man's shallow appreciation of the love
of God. Heaven stands indignant at the neglect shown to the souls of men.
Would we know how Christ regards it? How would a father and mother feel, did
they know that their child, lost in the cold and the snow, had been passed
by, and left to perish, by those who might have saved it? Would they not be
terribly grieved, wildly indignant? Would they not denounce those murderers
with wrath hot as their tears, intense as their love? The sufferings of
every man are the sufferings of God's child, and those who reach out no
helping hand to their perishing fellow beings provoke His righteous anger.
This is the wrath of the Lamb. To those who claim fellowship with Christ,
yet have been indifferent to the needs of their fellow men, He will declare
in the great Judgment day, "I know you not whence ye are; depart from Me,
all ye workers of iniquity." Luke 13:27.
In the commission to His disciples, Christ not only outlined their work, but
gave them their message. Teach the people, He said, "to observe all things
whatsoever I have commanded you." The disciples were to teach what Christ
had taught. That which He had spoken, not only in person, but through all
the prophets and teachers of the Old Testament, is here included. Human
teaching is shut out. There is no place for tradition, for man's theories
and conclusions, or for church legislation. No laws ordained by
ecclesiastical authority are included in the commission. None of these are
Christ's servants to teach. "The law and the prophets," with the record of
His own words and deeds, are the treasure committed to the disciples to be
given to the world. Christ's name is their watchword, their badge of
distinction, their bond of union, the authority for their course of action,
and the source of their success. Nothing that does not bear His
superscription is to be recognized in His kingdom.
The gospel is to be presented, not as a lifeless theory, but as a living
force to change the life. God desires that the receivers of His grace shall
be witnesses to its power. Those whose course has been most offensive to Him
He freely accepts; when they repent, He imparts to them His divine Spirit,
places them in the highest positions of trust, and sends them forth into the
camp of the disloyal to proclaim His boundless mercy. He would have His
servants bear testimony to the fact that through His grace men may possess
Christlikeness of character, and may rejoice in the assurance of His great
love. He would have us bear testimony to the fact that He cannot be
satisfied until the human race are reclaimed and reinstated in their holy
privileges as His sons and daughters.
In Christ is the tenderness of the shepherd, the affection of the parent,
and the matchless grace of the compassionate Saviour. His blessings He
presents in the most alluring terms. He is not content merely to announce
these blessings; He presents them in the most attractive way, to excite a
desire to possess them. So His servants are to present the riches of the
glory of the unspeakable Gift. The wonderful love of Christ will melt and
subdue hearts, when the mere reiteration of doctrines would accomplish
nothing. "Comfort ye, comfort ye My people, saith your God." "O Zion, that
bringest good tidings, get thee up into the high mountain; O Jerusalem, that
bringest good tidings, lift up thy voice with strength; lift it up, be not
afraid; say unto the cities of Judah, Behold your God! . . . He shall feed
His flock like a shepherd: He shall gather the lambs with His arm, and carry
them in His bosom." Isa. 40:1, 9-11. Tell the people of Him who is "the
Chiefest among ten thousand," and the One "altogether lovely." The Song of
Solomon 5:10, 16. Words alone cannot tell it. Let it be reflected in the
character and manifested in the life. Christ is sitting for His portrait in
every disciple. Every one God has predestinated to be "conformed to the
image of His Son." Rom. 8:29. In every one Christ's long-suffering love, His
holiness, meekness, mercy, and truth are to be manifested to the world.
The first disciples went forth preaching the word. They revealed Christ in
their lives. And the Lord worked with them, "confirming the word with signs
following." Mark 16:20. These disciples prepared themselves for their work.
Before the day of Pentecost they met together, and put away all differences.
They were of one accord. They believed Christ's promise that the blessing
would be given, and they prayed in faith. They did not ask for a blessing
for themselves merely; they were weighted with the burden for the salvation
of souls. The gospel was to be carried to the uttermost parts of the earth,
and they claimed the endowment of power that Christ had promised. Then it
was that the Holy Spirit was poured out, and thousands were converted in a
day.
So it may be now. Instead of man's speculations, let the word of God be
preached. Let Christians put away their dissensions, and give themselves to
God for the saving of the lost. Let them in faith ask for the blessing, and
it will come. The outpouring of the Spirit in apostolic days was the "former
rain," and glorious was the result. But the "latter rain" will be more
abundant. Joel 2:23.
All who consecrate soul, body, and spirit to God will be constantly
receiving a new endowment of physical and mental power. The inexhaustible
supplies of heaven are at their command. Christ gives them the breath of His
own spirit, the life of His own life. The Holy Spirit puts forth its highest
energies to work in heart and mind. The grace of God enlarges and multiplies
their faculties, and every perfection of the divine nature comes to their
assistance in the work of saving souls. Through co-operation with Christ
they are complete in Him, and in their human weakness they are enabled to do
the deeds of Omnipotence.
The Saviour longs to manifest His grace and stamp His character on the whole
world. It is His purchased possession, and He desires to make men free, and
pure, and holy. Though Satan works to hinder this purpose, yet through the
blood shed for the world there are triumphs to be achieved that will bring
glory to God and the Lamb. Christ will not be satisfied till the victory is
complete, and "He shall see of the travail of His soul, and shall be
satisfied." Isa. 53:11. All the nations of the earth shall hear the gospel
of His grace. Not all will receive His grace; but "a seed shall serve Him;
it shall be accounted to the Lord for a generation." Ps. 22:30. "The kingdom
and dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven, shall
be given to the people of the saints of the Most High," and "the earth shall
be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea." "So
shall they fear the name of the Lord from the west, and His glory from the
rising of the sun." Dan. 7:27; Isa. 11:9; 59:19.
"How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good
tidings, that publisheth peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that
publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion, Thy God reigneth! . . . Break
forth into joy, sing together, ye waste places: . . . for the Lord hath
comforted His people. . . . The Lord hath made bare His holy arm in the eyes
of all the nations; and all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of
our God." Isa. 52:7-10.
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