How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of those who bring
good news,
who proclaim peace, who bring good tidings, who proclaim
salvation,
who say to Zion, “Your God reigns!”
Isa. 52:7
If our mission statement
were only the first two lines below, which we’ve covered in this
space the last three weeks …
KNOW God
GROW together in Christ
… as important as those
are, it would be woefully incomplete. We would be ignoring the
purpose which God has created us to achieve!
This coming weekend
Martin is preaching on the following portion of the Lord's prayer:
"Your Kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in
heaven."
It's clear from Christ's
final instructions in Matthew 28 that "going and making disciples"
is ultimately how God will fulfill this prayer of Christ’s.
Without disciples making disciples in each generation, the Kingdom
will decline rather than advance.
As the Strategy Team was crafting this new vision statement, we
debated many different words that we could have chosen for the
third line of the statement. Here is why we chose the words we
did:
GO - We cannot simply sit on our duffs in our comfy church,
waiting for potential disciples to come to us. That's never been
how it works in God's economy. He's always moved His Church
outward ... into Jerusalem (the community around us), Judea
(neighboring regions outside our comfort zone), and then,
ultimately, to the uttermost ends of the earth – WAY outside our
comfort zone! "Going" is about taking action: using our feet and
moving out. We must be both strategic and urgent about
how we are going to move into our community and beyond.
At Elim, one key way we
do that is through our Outreach and Missions team, led by Dr. Cal
Kierum, and through the teams they support. We as a church really
need to ramp up our involvement in these teams! If you can’t find
a team that fits what you feel God is calling you to do … start
one! And if you feel God calling you to be more involved in
shaping the growth of this ministry, talk to Cal about serving on
the leadership team.
SERVE - In recent Christian history there has been much
emphasis placed on proclamation. But proclamation is just one part
of Christ's strategy. Christ was sent to the earth, humbling
Himself, as a suffering servant. He modeled and demonstrated
servanthood as the primary way we should express God's love for
the people around us.
We have focused on the
word "serve" in our vision statement not to say that there should
not also be proclamation (for telling the truth to someone who
needs and is prepared to hear it is indeed serving them), but to
recognize that service is the key way that we will build
relationships in our community and beyond, and win a hearing for
the Gospel, raising questions (such as, "Why do you love like
this?") to which Jesus alone is the answer.
SOUTH HILL and BEYOND - The holistic nature of our target
audience is reflected in this statement. We are to bear witness
both locally and globally, just as the first Christians were
called to do the same. We continue to wholeheartedly embrace
foreign missions, while recognizing the need to also focus on our
community. For years churches have made it "too easy" for
themselves by visualizing missions only as something that happens
"over yonder." We could live whatever way we wanted to in our
communities (not seeking to know or serve our neighbors) because
we comforted ourselves in the fact that we were paying
professionals to reach the Pygmies in Africa.
But the truth is that our
next-door neighbors (not to mention the people who live in tent
cities all around us) need Jesus just as badly as the Pygmies do
... and we are responsible to be reaching out to our neighbors
even as we are supporting efforts to spread the Gospel in fertile
soils throughout the rest of the world.
This third part of our vision statement is the hardest, because it
is ultimately the end goal. Christianity is always one generation
away from extinction, and may also be one generation (or less!)
away from Christ's imminent return. We don't want to be caught
sleeping when He comes!
And because it is the
hardest, it will require the most prayer. The need for “more and
better” prayer, both personal and corporate, is the single largest
gaping hole in our church uncovered by the Reveal survey. If we
fail to become the praying people that Christ is calling us to
become, we will fail to achieve the purpose to which He has called
us. For the truth is that we cannot, in our own strength, “Go and
serve.” We need His power, His leading, His passion … and these
things come only through prayer.
God is calling us to
faithfulfulness … faithfulness in knowing Him, in growing together
in Christ, and in going and serving, South Hill and beyond. Will
we respond to His call?