
Somewhere along the way, the disciples mentioned in the title of this week’s lesson got lost. Rather than learning from the experiences of Andrew, Philip, Bartholomew, Simon, or Thomas, we are encouraged to find principles for missionary activities in the charge Christ gave the disciples in Matthew 10. After reading the chapter in The Message, Eugene Peterson’s contemporary paraphrase of the Bible, and trying to make a list as I went, the principles started appearing.
Then Matthew acknowledged the irony of being a missionary. “Proclaiming so much love, experiencing so much hate! But don’t quit. Don’t cave in. It is all well worth it in the end. It is not success you are after in such times but survival. Be survivors!” (verse 22).
Then, just as I was thinking this was a good comparison, along came this section head in Matthew “Forget About Yourself.” In our postmodern culture, to-do lists such as these are usually not about forgetting yourself, they are all about you and how you can be successful. Doesn’t success as a missionary mean counting baptisms, people contacted? Isn’t it about places to go, things to do? And yet, there in the section on survival was the admonition, “It is not success you are after in such times but survival.” And now, as the chapter concludes, it is about forgetting one’s self: “If you don’t go all the way with me, through thick and thin, you don’t deserve me. If your first concern is to look after yourself, you’ll never find yourself. But if you forget about yourself and look to me, you’ll find both yourself and me” (verse 39).
There was the core principle in the chapter. The aha moment of understanding that the whole missionary enterprise of the go ye into all the world command was meant to teach us how to get past ourselves. To be in relationship with Jesus is to care about all the people of the world in the same way that he does.
So how well did the disciples do as Master Guides? Were their sashes filled with merit badges? That’s not the point. They did go on God’s errands.
Bonnie Dwyer is editor of Spectrum magazine.
Comments
i have studied the lesson this week and i have been thinking
about that which jesus has said in matthew 10;16
he says this way;behold,i send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves;in that time the wolves were home of israel,
and today whom are the wolves?pay attention jesus sent them
to the wolves;the wolves were not anothers people they were jews.and today whom shall be them?
laercio
LOVE this, Bonnie!
The Pathfinder Law certainly has a way of sticking with you. I have no doubt that it will be one of those things that I will remember when everything else is gone.
As for the lesson, now I'm gonna hafta go back a reread Matthew 10 in the MessageRemix [that's the only one I've got].
jen*
St. Francis' advice was the best:
Preach the Gospel wherever you go. Use words only if necessary.
Doesn't that agree with the old adage: "Actions speak louder than words"?
There are too many verbose preachers among us, of all denominations; often shrill and fear-mongering: "Get Ready--the end is coming" while love is the strongest power of the world and living it is often the most difficult. Preaching, in comparison, is so much easier: come to town; give a short prophecy seminar; depart and shake the dust from your feet because you've done your duty.
Thanks Bonnie! I love the emphasis on getting past ourselves--somehow that's so much harder than it seems.
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