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Jesus said: “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I am sending you.” (John 20:21)
This verse brings up two questions:
1) What did the Father send Jesus to do?
2) What is Jesus sending me to do?
Luke 4:18-19 provides the answer to the first question: “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, for he has anointed me to bring Good News to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim that captives will be released, that the blind will see, that the oppressed will be set free, and that the time of the Lord’s favor has come.” The answer to the second question is that Jesus is sending us to continue doing what He did.
What is bringing Good News for the poor? Is it paying someone’s rent this month? Is it a donated backpack and school supplies for their kids? Is it a box of groceries? Is it Christmas gifts for their kids? All those things are good news for the poor.
But don’t we have some good news that’s more important than material things? The Bible’s definition of Good News is the Gospel -- the great news that Jesus came to forgive our sins and give us eternal life, abundant life, both now and in eternity. If all we do is give people stuff, we are cheating people out of the best news they could ever receive. We must be willing to walk with them through their struggles and BE good news to them.
Being good news means living our lives on mission. Where is Jesus sending you? All the places you go – that’s where Jesus is sending you. Have you considered how you can live your life on mission where you work? Where your kids go to school? In your neighborhood? With your kids’ athletic teams or music or dance? You don’t have to go anywhere other than where you live to be on mission for Him. Or He may call you to be a missionary with a mission partner that our church has. The point is, “Are you living your life on mission?”
In his book, “Missional Renaissance,” Reggie McNeal, compares the church to an airport:
“Airports get confused about what they’re for–and for whom. They think that if a bunch of planes are on the ground, close to the hub, and the concourse is full of people, they are winning. They apparently think they are the destination! Of course, when this happens, it means a bunch of people aren’t getting where they want to go. They’re stuck at the airport, like flies on flypaper.
The airport is a place of connection, not a destination. Its job is to help people get somewhere else. An airport centric world of travel would be dull and frustrating, no matter how nice the airport is.
When the church thinks it’s the destination, it also confuses the scorecard. It thinks that if people are hovering around and in the church, the church is winning.”
While we love getting people into the church, it is not our destination if we are to be on mission with God. There are people in our community who don’t experience the sweet fellowship we experience in the church and they never will if we don’t meet them where they are and be the good news to them. We need to be on mission wherever we go, inviting people to church but then taking the next step and inviting them to be on mission with us.
Reggie McNeal goes on to say,
“The church is a connector, linking people to the kingdom life that God has for them. Substituting church activity as the preferred life expression is as weird as believing that airports are more interesting than the destinations they serve.”
Will you commit to living your life on mission? Helping those outside the walls of our church to find real life? The Good News? Go out today and BE the good news for someone else.
By Jeff Story
All Rights Reserved | Immanuel Baptist Church