Chapter 37
The First Evangelists
[This chapter is based on Matt. 10; Mark 6:7-11; Luke
9:1-6.]
The apostles were members of the family of Jesus, and they had
accompanied Him as He traveled on foot through Galilee. They had shared
with Him the toils and hardships that overtook them. They had listened
to His discourses, they had walked and talked with the Son of God, and
from His daily instruction they had learned how to work for the
elevation of humanity. As Jesus ministered to the vast multitudes that
gathered about Him, His disciples were in attendance, eager to do His
bidding and to lighten His labor. They assisted in arranging the people,
bringing the afflicted ones to the Saviour, and promoting the comfort of
all. They watched for interested hearers, explained the Scriptures to
them, and in various ways worked for their spiritual benefit. They
taught what they had learned of Jesus, and were every day obtaining a
rich experience. But they needed also an experience in laboring alone.
They were still in need of much instruction, great patience and
tenderness. Now, while He was personally with them, to point out their
errors, and counsel and correct them, the Saviour sent them forth as His
representatives.
While they had been with Him, the disciples had often been perplexed
by the teaching of the priests and Pharisees, but they had brought their
perplexities to Jesus. He had set before them the truths of Scripture in
contrast with tradition. Thus He had strengthened their confidence in
God's word, and in a great measure had set them free from their fear of
the rabbis and their bondage to tradition. In the training of the
disciples the example of the Saviour's life was far more effective than
any mere doctrinal instruction. When they were separated from Him, every
look and tone and word came back to them. Often when in conflict with
the enemies of the gospel, they repeated His words, and as they saw
their effect upon the people, they rejoiced greatly.
Calling the twelve about Him, Jesus bade them go out two and two
through the towns and villages. None were sent forth alone, but brother
was associated with brother, friend with friend. Thus they could help
and encourage each other, counseling and praying together, each one's
strength supplementing the other's weakness. In the same manner He
afterward sent forth the seventy. It was the Saviour's purpose that the
messengers of the gospel should be associated in this way. In our own
time evangelistic work would be far more successful if this example were
more closely followed.
The disciples' message was the same as that of John the Baptist and
of Christ Himself: "The kingdom of heaven is at hand." They
were to enter into no controversy with the people as to whether Jesus of
Nazareth was the Messiah; but in His name they were to do the same works
of mercy as He had done. He bade them, "Heal the sick, cleanse the
lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils: freely ye have received, freely
give."
During His ministry Jesus devoted more time to healing the sick than
to preaching. His miracles testified to the truth of His words, that He
came not to destroy but to save. His righteousness went before Him, and
the glory of the Lord was His rearward. Wherever He went, the tidings of
His mercy preceded Him. Where He had passed, the objects of His
compassion were rejoicing in health, and making trial of their new-found
powers. Crowds were collecting around them to hear from their lips the
works that the Lord had wrought. His voice was the first sound that many
had ever heard, His name the first word they had ever spoken, His face
the first they had ever looked upon. Why should they not love Jesus, and
sound His praise? As He passed through the towns and cities He was like
a vital current, diffusing life and joy wherever He went.
The followers of Christ are to labor as He did. We are to feed the
hungry, clothe the naked, and comfort the suffering and afflicted. We
are to minister to the despairing, and inspire hope in the hopeless. And
to us also the promise will be fulfilled, "Thy righteousness shall
go before thee; the glory of the Lord shall be thy rearward." Isa.
58:8. The love of Christ, manifested in unselfish ministry, will be more
effective in reforming the evildoer than will the sword or the court of
justice. These are necessary to strike terror to the lawbreaker, but the
loving missionary can do more than this. Often the heart will harden
under reproof; but it will melt under the love of Christ. The missionary
cannot only relieve physical maladies, but he can lead the sinner to the
Great Physician, who can cleanse the soul from the leprosy of sin.
Through His servants, God designs that the sick, the unfortunate, those
possessed of evil spirits, shall hear His voice. Through His human
agencies He desires to be a Comforter such as the world knows not.
The disciples on their first missionary tour were to go only to
"the lost sheep of the house of Israel." If they had now
preached the gospel to the Gentiles or the Samaritans, they would have
lost their influence with the Jews. By exciting the prejudice of the
Pharisees they would have involved themselves in controversy which would
have discouraged them at the outset of their labors. Even the apostles
were slow to understand that the gospel was to be carried to all
nations. Until they themselves could grasp this truth they were not
prepared to labor for the Gentiles. If the Jews would receive the
gospel, God purposed to make them His messengers to the Gentiles.
Therefore they were first to hear the message.
All over the field of Christ's labor there were souls awakened to
their need, and hungering and thirsting for the truth. The time had come
to send the tidings of His love to these longing hearts. To all these
the disciples were to go as His representatives. The believers would
thus be led to look upon them as divinely appointed teachers, and when
the Saviour should be taken from them they would not be left without
instructors.
On this first tour the disciples were to go only where Jesus had been
before them, and had made friends. Their preparation for the journey was
to be of the simplest kind. Nothing must be allowed to divert their
minds from their great work, or in any way excite opposition and close
the door for further labor. They were not to adopt the dress of the
religious teachers, nor use any guise in apparel to distinguish them
from the humble peasants. They were not to enter into the synagogues and
call the people together for public service; their efforts were to be
put forth in house-to-house labor. They were not to waste time in
needless salutations, or in going from house to house for entertainment.
But in every place they were to accept the hospitality of those who were
worthy, those who would welcome them heartily as if entertaining Christ
Himself. They were to enter the dwelling with the beautiful salutation,
"Peace be to this house." Luke 10:5. That home would be
blessed by their prayers, their songs of praise, and the opening of the
Scriptures in the family circle.
These disciples were to be heralds of the truth, to prepare the way
for the coming of their Master. The message they had to bear was the
word of eternal life, and the destiny of men depended upon their
reception or rejection of it. To impress the people with its solemnity,
Jesus bade His disciples, "Whosoever shall not receive you, nor
hear your words, when ye depart out of that house or city, shake off the
dust of your feet. Verily I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable for
the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment, than for that
city."
Now the Saviour's eye penetrates the future; He beholds the broader
fields in which, after His death, the disciples are to be witnesses for
Him. His prophetic glance takes in the experience of His servants
through all the ages till He shall come the second time. He shows His
followers the conflicts they must meet; He reveals the character and
plan of the battle. He lays open before them the perils they must
encounter, the self-denial that will be required. He desires them to
count the cost, that they may not be taken unawares by the enemy. Their
warfare is not to be waged against flesh and blood, but "against
the principalities, against the powers, against the world rulers of this
darkness, against the spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly
places." Eph. 6:12, R. V. They are to contend with supernatural
forces, but they are assured of supernatural help. All the intelligences
of heaven are in this army. And more than angels are in the ranks. The
Holy Spirit, the representative of the Captain of the Lord's host, comes
down to direct the battle. Our infirmities may be many, our sins and
mistakes grievous; but the grace of God is for all who seek it with
contrition. The power of Omnipotence is enlisted in behalf of those who
trust in God.
"Behold," said Jesus, "I send you forth as sheep in
the midst of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as
doves." Christ Himself did not suppress one word of truth, but He
spoke it always in love. He exercised the greatest tact, and thoughtful,
kind attention in His intercourse with the people. He was never rude,
never needlessly spoke a severe word, never gave needless pain to a
sensitive soul. He did not censure human weakness. He fearlessly
denounced hypocrisy, unbelief, and iniquity, but tears were in His voice
as He uttered His scathing rebukes. He wept over Jerusalem, the city He
loved, that refused to receive Him, the Way, the Truth, and the Life.
They rejected Him, the Saviour, but He regarded them with pitying
tenderness, and sorrow so deep that it broke His heart. Every soul was
precious in His eyes. While He always bore Himself with divine dignity,
He bowed with tenderest regard to every member of the family of God. In
all men He saw fallen souls whom it was His mission to save.
The servants of Christ are not to act out the dictates of the natural
heart. They need to have close communion with God, lest, under
provocation, self rise up, and they pour forth a torrent of words that
are unbefitting, that are not as dew or the still showers that refresh
the withering plants. This is what Satan wants them to do; for these are
his methods. It is the dragon that is wroth; it is the spirit of Satan
that is revealed in anger and accusing. But God's servants are to be
representatives of Him. He desires them to deal only in the currency of
heaven, the truth that bears His own image and superscription. The power
by which they are to overcome evil is the power of Christ. The glory of
Christ is their strength. They are to fix their eyes upon His
loveliness. Then they can present the gospel with divine tact and
gentleness. And the spirit that is kept gentle under provocation will
speak more effectively in favor of the truth than will any argument,
however forcible.
Those who are brought in controversy with the enemies of truth have
to meet, not only men, but Satan and his agents. Let them remember the
Saviour's words, "Behold, I send you forth as lambs among
wolves." Luke 10:3. Let them rest in the love of God, and the
spirit will be kept calm, even under personal abuse. The Lord will
clothe them with a divine panoply. His Holy Spirit will influence the
mind and heart, so that their voices shall not catch the notes of the
baying of the wolves.
Continuing His instruction to His disciples, Jesus said, "Beware
of men." They were not to put implicit confidence in those who knew
not God, and open to them their counsels; for this would give Satan's
agents an advantage. Man's inventions often counterwork God's plans.
Those who build the temple of the Lord are to build according to the
pattern shown in the mount,--the divine similitude. God is dishonored
and the gospel is betrayed when His servants depend on the counsel of
men who are not under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Worldly wisdom is
foolishness with God. Those who rely upon it will surely err.
"They will deliver you up to councils, . . . yea and before
governors and kings shall ye be brought for My sake, for a testimony to
them and to the Gentiles." Matt. 10:17, 18, R. V. Persecution will
spread the light. The servants of Christ will be brought before the
great men of the world, who, but for this, might never hear the gospel.
The truth has been misrepresented to these men. They have listened to
false charges concerning the faith of Christ's disciples. Often their
only means of learning its real character is the testimony of those who
are brought to trial for their faith. Under examination these are
required to answer, and their judges to listen to the testimony borne.
God's grace will be dispensed to His servants to meet the emergency.
"It shall be given you," says Jesus, "in that same hour
what ye shall speak. For it is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your
Father which speaketh in you." As the Spirit of God illuminates the
minds of His servants, the truth will be presented in its divine power
and preciousness. Those who reject the truth will stand to accuse and
oppress the disciples. But under loss and suffering, even unto death,
the Lord's children are to reveal the meekness of their divine Example.
Thus will be seen the contrast between Satan's agents and the
representatives of Christ. The Saviour will be lifted up before the
rulers and the people.
The disciples were not endowed with the courage and fortitude of the
martyrs until such grace was needed. Then the Saviour's promise was
fulfilled. When Peter and John testified before the Sanhedrin council,
men "marveled; and they took knowledge of them, that they had been
with Jesus." Acts 4:13. Of Stephen it is written that "all
that sat in the council, looking steadfastly on him, saw his face as it
had been the face of an angel." Men "were not able to resist
the wisdom and the spirit by which he spake." Acts 6:15, 10. And
Paul, writing of his own trial at the court of the Caesars, says,
"At my first defense no one took my part, but all forsook me. . . .
But the Lord stood by me, and strengthened me; that through me the
message might be fully proclaimed, and that all the Gentiles might hear:
and I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion." 2 Tim. 4:16, 17,
R. V.
The servants of Christ were to prepare no set speech to present when
brought to trial. Their preparation was to be made day by day in
treasuring up the precious truths of God's word, and through prayer
strengthening their faith. When they were brought into trial, the Holy
Spirit would bring to their remembrance the very truths that would be
needed.
A daily, earnest striving to know God, and Jesus Christ whom He has
sent, would bring power and efficiency to the soul. The knowledge
obtained by diligent searching of the Scriptures would be flashed into
the memory at the right time. But if any had neglected to acquaint
themselves with the words of Christ, if they had never tested the power
of His grace in trial, they could not expect that the Holy Spirit would
bring His words to their remembrance. They were to serve God daily with
undivided affection, and then trust Him.
So bitter would be the enmity to the gospel that even the tenderest
earthly ties would be disregarded. The disciples of Christ would be
betrayed to death by the members of their own households. "Ye shall
be hated of all men for My name's sake," He added; "but he
that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved." Mark
13:13. But He bade them not to expose themselves unnecessarily to
persecution. He Himself often left one field of labor for another, in
order to escape from those who were seeking His life. When He was
rejected at Nazareth, and His own townsmen tried to kill Him, He went
down to Capernaum, and there the people were astonished at His teaching;
"for His word was with power." Luke 4:32. So His servants were
not to be discouraged by persecution, but to seek a place where they
could still labor for the salvation of souls.
The servant is not above his master. The Prince of heaven was called
Beelzebub, and His disciples will be misrepresented in like manner. But
whatever the danger, Christ's followers must avow their principles. They
should scorn concealment. They cannot remain uncommitted until assured
of safety in confessing the truth. They are set as watchmen, to warn men
of their peril. The truth received from Christ must be imparted to all,
freely and openly. Jesus said, "What I tell you in darkness, that
speak ye in light: and what ye hear in the ear, that preach ye upon the
housetops."
Jesus Himself never purchased peace by compromise. His heart
overflowed with love for the whole human race, but He was never
indulgent to their sins. He was too much their friend to remain silent
while they were pursuing a course that would ruin their souls,--the
souls He had purchased with His own blood. He labored that man should be
true to himself, true to his higher and eternal interest. The servants
of Christ are called to the same work, and they should beware lest, in
seeking to prevent discord, they surrender the truth. They are to
"follow after the things which make for peace" (Rom. 14:19);
but real peace can never be secured by compromising principle. And no
man can be true to principle without exciting opposition. A Christianity
that is spiritual will be opposed by the children of disobedience. But
Jesus bade His disciples, "Fear not them which kill the body, but
are not able to kill the soul." Those who are true to God need not
fear the power of men nor the enmity of Satan. In Christ their eternal
life is secure. Their only fear should be lest they surrender the truth,
and thus betray the trust with which God has honored them.
It is Satan's work to fill men's hearts with doubt. He leads them to
look upon God as a stern judge. He tempts them to sin, and then to
regard themselves as too vile to approach their heavenly Father or to
excite His pity. The Lord understands all this. Jesus assures His
disciples of God's sympathy for them in their needs and weaknesses. Not
a sigh is breathed, not a pain felt, not a grief pierces the soul, but
the throb vibrates to the Father's heart.
The Bible shows us God in His high and holy place, not in a state of
inactivity, not in silence and solitude, but surrounded by ten thousand
times ten thousand and thousands of thousands of holy intelligences, all
waiting to do His will. Through channels which we cannot discern He is
in active communication with every part of His dominion. But it is in
this speck of a world, in the souls that He gave His only-begotten Son
to save, that His interest and the interest of all heaven is centered.
God is bending from His throne to hear the cry of the oppressed. To
every sincere prayer He answers, "Here am I." He uplifts the
distressed and downtrodden. In all our afflictions He is afflicted. In
every temptation and every trial the angel of His presence is near to
deliver.
Not even a sparrow falls to the ground without the Father's notice.
Satan's hatred against God leads him to hate every object of the
Saviour's care. He seeks to mar the handiwork of God, and he delights in
destroying even the dumb creatures. It is only through God's protecting
care that the birds are preserved to gladden us with their songs of joy.
But He does not forget even the sparrows. "Fear ye not therefore,
ye are of more value than many sparrows."
Jesus continues: As you confess Me before men, so I will confess you
before God and the holy angels. You are to be My witnesses upon earth,
channels through which My grace can flow for the healing of the world.
So I will be your representative in heaven. The Father beholds not your
faulty character, but He sees you as clothed in My perfection. I am the
medium through which Heaven's blessings shall come to you. And everyone
who confesses Me by sharing My sacrifice for the lost shall be confessed
as a sharer in the glory and joy of the redeemed.
He who would confess Christ must have Christ abiding in him. He
cannot communicate that which he has not received. The disciples might
speak fluently on doctrines, they might repeat the words of Christ
Himself; but unless they possessed Christlike meekness and love, they
were not confessing Him. A spirit contrary to the spirit of Christ would
deny Him, whatever the profession. Men may deny Christ by evilspeaking,
by foolish talking, by words that are untruthful or unkind. They may
deny Him by shunning life's burdens, by the pursuit of sinful pleasure.
They may deny Him by conforming to the world, by uncourteous behavior,
by the love of their own opinions, by justifying self, by cherishing
doubt, borrowing trouble, and dwelling in darkness. In all these ways
they declare that Christ is not in them. And "whosoever shall deny
Me before men," He says, "him will I also deny before My
Father which is in heaven."
The Saviour bade His disciples not to hope that the world's enmity to
the gospel would be overcome, and that after a time its opposition would
cease. He said, "I came not to send peace, but a sword." This
creating of strife is not the effect of the gospel, but the result of
opposition to it. Of all persecution the hardest to bear is variance in
the home, the estrangement of dearest earthly friends. But Jesus
declares, "He that loveth father or mother more than Me is not
worthy of Me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than Me is not
worthy of Me. And he that taketh not his cross, and followeth after Me,
is not worthy of Me."
The mission of Christ's servants is a high honor, and a sacred trust.
"He that receiveth you," He says, "receiveth Me, and he
that receiveth Me receiveth Him that sent Me." No act of kindness
shown to them in His name will fail to be recognized and rewarded. And
in the same tender recognition He includes the feeblest and lowliest of
the family of God: "Whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these
little ones"--those who are as children in their faith and their
knowledge of Christ--"a cup of cold water only in the name of a
disciple, verily I say unto you, he shall in nowise lose his
reward."
Thus the Saviour ended His instruction. In the name of Christ the
chosen twelve went out, as He had gone, "to preach the gospel to
the poor, . . . to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to the
captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them
that are bruised, to preach the acceptable year of the Lord." Luke
4:18, 19.
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