The Multiplication Factor

INTRODUCTION

A three and one-half-year span of time compared with the total scope of human history is very insignificant.  This was the length of time Jesus used to bring the most important message the world would ever hear.  “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16).

How could one man – born in an insignificant stable, grow up in a carpenter shop and die an early death – so affect the world as no other person who has ever lived?  How fragile this moment of ministry is to the betterment and deliverance of mankind.  This would be a one-shot effort that carried the greatest consequences of history.  It could not fail or we would all be doomed. 

What would be the best way to package this message?  The modernized man was a thing far in the future.  Telecommunications were beyond the imagination of the times.  The printing press was 1600 years from development.  Mass media of the day was not sufficient to spread such a world changing message.  The only advantage was that Rome had developed a road system that enhanced travel between geographic regions, which would make it easier to spread the Gospel message.

Jesus had a plan.  After conferring with John the Baptist, three disciples began to follow Him.  Gradually, the number rose to twelve.  These twelve ordinary men carried the life giving truth of redemption for mankind.  Twelve men became the focus of Jesus’ ministry.  He was with them.  He mentored them; He taught them, and He sent them out to perform His works.  Even though He was surrounded by the masses He focused on the twelve.

I am amazed at the short time they had for preparation.  It is difficult to explain His choice of such ordinary men for such a task.  From a natural standpoint, this strategy would fall far short of impacting a world beyond what no other man had ever achieved.

Scripture reveals the methods of Jesus.  He was with them.  He chose to pull Himself away from the masses as He concentrated on meeting the needs of the twelve.  Jesus realized that it would be impossible to nurture and care for all those who followed Him, but He could impact this small group in a special way.  They could feel His gentle touch and learn by being ministered to.  Then they would be equipped to do the same with others.

His strategy worked.  Within one hundred years the known world was exposed to the Gospel.  Succeeding disciples have followed the pattern.  Many harsh things have happened to believers along the way but nothing has been able to stop them.  Today Christians number over 3 billion world-wide, yet we can trace it all to one Man and the twelve leaders—the disciples He developed.

We are entering into a new era.  The number of converts is being outstripped by population growth.  Trend forecasters have called our times the Post-Christian era.  We are told that 50% of the churches in North America are declining.    Some areas of the world, such as Europe, will no longer have a Christian majority within only twenty years.  The church is in desperate need of revival to stem the tide and bring a new sense of purpose.

The good news is that God is moving in many areas of the world: Africa, Asia, South America and Central America are emerging as the leaders in a renewal that is streaking the world.

THIS PRESENT WORLD

Church growth demands that we study and understand the times.  Revival is taking place around the world.  Korea continues to experience revival as churches respond to the needs through small groups.  Multitudes are finding Jesus Christ in Indonesia, the world’s largest Moslem nation.  In the midst of persecution, the church is experiencing phenomenal growth.  Bogotá, Columbia is an example of the great revival taking place in South America.  Europe, Africa, and former Communist states are all experiencing revival.

In the U.S.A. and Canada, there seems to be a lull.  We are not experiencing growth as we have in the past.   We have been taught that everything rises and falls on leadership.  That an organization will not rise above its leaders.   Statistics reveal that there is a leadership crisis in the American Church.   Is it any wonder that revival tarries?  God called leaders are in crisis.  As a result, the Church is in crisis.  WHAT IF there was a better way.

Pastors in the United States are facing crisis. Statistics reveal:

  • 50 percent of all congregations in the United States are either plateauing or declining.
  • 33 percent of pastors confess “inappropriate” sexual behavior with someone in the church.
  • 80 percent believe that pastoral ministry affects their families negatively.
  • 33 percent say that being in ministry is an outright hazard to their family.
  • 75 percent say they have had a significant stress-related crisis at least once in their ministry.
  • 50 percent feel unable to meet the needs of the job.
  • 90 percent feel they are inadequately trained to cope with ministry demands.
  • The typical pastor has his greatest ministry impact at a church in years 5 through 14 of his pastorate; unfortunately, the average pastor lasts only five years at a church.
  • 25 percent of pastor’s wives see their husband’s work schedule as a source of conflict.
  • 13 percent of pastors have been divorced.
  • The clergy has the second highest divorce rate among all professions.
  • 80 percent of pastors say they have insufficient time with spouse.
  • 48 percent of pastors think being in ministry is hazardous to family well-being.
  • 70 percent say they have a lower self-esteem now than when they started out.
  • 20 percent of pastors say they view pornography once a month.
  • 20 percent of pastors admit to having had an affair while in the ministry.
  • 37 percent of pastors admit that internet pornography is a current struggle.
  • 33 percent of clergy and 36 percent of the laity have visited a sexually explicit website; of that number, 53 percent of the clergy and 44 percent of the laity say they have visited the sites a few times in the past year.
  • More than 1300 pastors each month are forcibly terminated without just cause.
  • A church that has fired a pastor has a 70 percent probability of doing the same to the following pastor.
  • Each month more than 1200 pastors leave the ministry due to stress, church related issues, family issues, or burnout.
  • 50 percent of seminary graduates leave the ministry after 5 years.

How can you build healthy, growing, churches when pastors are crumbling like sandcastles on the beach?

There is a ministry crisis.  How can we overcome the current crisis and lead the church to fulfill the purpose of God?

WE MUST HAVE A 21ST CENTURY STRATEGY

Genuine church growth begins with a visionary leader who is willing to see beyond obstacles, tradition and peers to embrace the mission and vision of God. Gene Wilkes states, “Leadership begins when a God-revealed mission captures a person.  This person becomes leader as he becomes servant to the mission.”[ii]  Leadership for Moses began on  Horeb, the mountain of God.  He saw the bush that burned with fire and was not consumed.  He heard the voice of God and turned to see.  Moses had been a leader of sheep.  When he met God on Horeb, his mission and vision changed.  His mission or purpose in life was transformed through his encounter with God.  He no longer was just a herder of sheep.   Instead, he became consumed with the deliverance of the people of God.  No longer would he be held captive by his weaknesses.  Instead, he would learn to depend on God.  He overcame his weaknesses through the promise of God’s presence.  In Exodus 4:10-12 we read:

Then Moses said to the Lord, ‘O my Lord, I am not eloquent, neither before nor since You have spoken to Your servant; but I am slow of speech and slow of tongue.’  So the Lord said to him, ‘who has made man’s mouth?  Or who makes the mute, the deaf, the seeing, or the blind?  Have not I, the Lord?  Now therefore, go, and I will be with your mouth and teach you what you shall say.’

Leadership that reaches the 21st century must begin with an encounter with God.

Our mission for the 21st century is not complicated.  Jesus clarified the mission in Matthew 28:18-20:

All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth.  Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the world (Matthew 28:18-20).

The original text implies that having been with Jesus, the disciples were to go win souls and make disciples.  The mission for the 21st century leader is not to impress the masses but to win people to Jesus and develop them into leaders.  The mission goes beyond making converts.  The mission for 21st century leaders is win souls and develop leaders.  Gene Wilkes said, “If Jesus was a servant to His mission, He led with a vision of what things would look like when He completed that mission.”  Jesus poured Himself into twelve disciples.  He called them, spent time with them, taught them, modeled leadership for them, interacted with them, empowered them and sent them to win souls and make leaders.

What if Mission…

We accept the mission to build healthy, growing, praying ministers that build healthy growing, praying churches.

What if Vision …

We build communities of Twelve, who through training duplicate themselves by prayer, evangelism and discipleship.

Andy Stanley notes four things vision weaves into the fabric of our daily experience: passion; motivation; direction and purpose. He states:

Honoring God involves discovering His picture or vision of what our lives could and should be. Glorifying God involves discovering what we could and should accomplish.  We were created and re-created with His purposes in mind.  And until we discover His purpose–and follow through–there will always be a hole in our soul.[iii]

Discovering mission and vision from God is foundational for 21st century leaders.

The School of Leaders is designed to provide leadership training in the areas of leadership, organization, relationship, spiritual authority, and lifestyle evangelism.

Visionary leadership demands that we invest in training leaders and releasing them to fulfill the purpose of God.  Releasing trained leaders to fulfill the purpose of God moves from addition growth to multiplication growth.  Jesus trained the disciples and released them into service trusting them to fulfill the vision. Andy Stanley identifies the two best-kept secrets of leadership as:

  1. The less you do, the more you accomplish.
  2. The less you do, the more you enable others to accomplish.[iv]

The challenge for 21st century leaders is to follow the model of Jesus training leaders and releasing them in service to train other leaders.

Robert Coleman states, “Men were His method.  It all started by Jesus calling a few men to follow him.  This revealed immediately the direction His evangelistic strategy would take.  His concern was not with programs to reach the multitudes, but with men whom the multitudes would follow.”[v] Coleman states further:

His only hope was to get leaders inspired by His life who would do it for Him.  Hence, He concentrated on those who were to be the beginning of this leadership.  Though He did what he could to help the multitudes, He had to devote Himself primarily to a few men, rather than the masses, so that the masses could at last be saved.  This was the genius of his strategy.[vi]

Jesus invested His time in developing a few men for leadership.  Coleman notes that the pattern of Jesus teaches that, “The first duty of church leadership is to see to it that a foundation is laid in the beginning on which can be built an effective and continuing evangelistic ministry to the multitudes.  This will require more concentration of time and talents on fewer people in the church while not neglecting the passion for the world.”[vii] The challenge is for Christian leaders to focus on training student leaders who will train other student leaders.  The process of leadership development is one of multiplication. This article mentions your favorite at super low prices. Choose from same-day delivery, drive-up delivery or order pickup.

If one pastor has the great commission vision, the church will be transformed into a mighty army fulfilling the plan of Jesus to win souls and make disciples.  If one pastor truly disciples twelve people who are committed to the vision the results will be 144 disciples fulfilling the great commission to win souls and make disciples.  144 believers committed to the vision will produce 1728 vibrant Christians to fulfill the great commission.  If each of the 1728 believers won and discipled 12 people the results would be 20,736 believers committed to the mission and vision of Jesus.  If each of the 20,736 believers won and discipled 12 people the results would be 248,832 soul winners committed to the great commission.  What if . . .

Every leader must grasp the great commission vision.  The leadership development process must include leadership training.  John Maxwell states that, “Leadership is influence–nothing more, nothing less.”[viii]   Yes, leadership is influence.  However, a study of the Gospels reveals that leadership development is an intentional process that is dependent on a leader committed to investing in the training and development of others.

A study of the leadership development process of Jesus reveals the priority of servant leadership.  Jesus taught His disciples by example.  Gene Wilkes states, “The essential lesson I learned from Jesus on leadership was that He taught and embodied leadership as service.”[ix]  Paul’s greeting in Romans 1:1 states that he is a servant of Jesus Christ.  Servant is from the Greek word dou`lo”, a slave. [x]Oswald Chambers notes that, “When Jesus used the term, however, it was a synonym for greatness.  And that was a revolutionary idea.”[xi] Jesus said, “Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever want to be first must be slave of all” (Mark 10:43-44).  Jesus was the example of spiritual leadership.  “He humbled Himself and became obedient, even to death on the cross” (Philippians 2:8).  Jesus taught, “A disciple is not above his teacher, nor a servant above his master.  It is enough for a disciple that he be like his teacher, and a servant like his master” (Matthew 10:24-25).  Jesus took a towel, girded Himself, and washed His disciple’s feet modeling servant leadership (John 13:1-17).

Leaders understand the mission and vision.  Leaders must be people of prayer.  Leaders must be led and empowered by the Holy Spirit.  Leaders must understand the times.  Leaders must understand and be committed to spiritual authority.  One of the great tragedies of leadership in the modern church is failure to understand spiritual authority.  The Apostle Paul states, “Let every soul be subject to the governing authorities.  For there is no authority except from God, and the authorities that exist are appointed by God.  Therefore whoever resists the authority resists the ordinance of God, and those who resist will bring judgment on themselves” (Romans 13:1-2).  The scriptures are clear.  God appoints leaders and calls on us to honor and submit ourselves to spiritual authority.  Rebellion against spiritual authority opens the door to division and satanic attack.

A pastor asked the question, “Why are my people rebellious?”  Why are they so cynical and critical?  It is possible that they are modeling behavior they have observed in pastoral leadership?  An important attribute of a great leader is his submission to spiritual authority.

Every leader should be encouraged to part of a covenant group.  Leaders must be accountable.  The mentoring fellowship group will provide a vehicle to bring congregations a radical new approach to winning souls and making disciples that has been neglected by most of the church world.  Each group exists to provide nurture, education, edification, accountability and support for every leader.

Nurture is critical in the development of Christian communities.  People are like sheep they need to be cared for.   Too often we make the mistake of trying to care for the masses.  Pastors’ health and homes are in shambles when they try to be everything to everybody.  Jesus’ primary focus was on the twelve.  He talked with them, He fed them, He affirmed them, and he communicated his vision to them and they shared with others.

More than nurture there must be an outward focus.  Too many cell concepts have been introspective and self-serving, but, when the major emphasis is on the original twelve finding twelve and becoming 144, etc., this limits the ability of one to get attached to a personality and constantly point toward expansion.  It makes “the main thing” “the main thing,” winning souls and making disciples.  In a nutshell, it is an evangelistic strategy.

The team approach leads to accountability.  In the secular world “report back” is critical to growth and development.  Lack of accountability is in my opinion the reason we do not pray, read the Bible, become good stewards, in short disciples.  Jesus required accountability on the part of the disciples.  We could save ourselves much agony if we would submit to each other in accountability.  Not only do we set our goals, but we report our progress or the lack there of to those who hold us responsible.

The mentoring group process is based on the concept that we are not growing until the entire group is growing.  The team/mentoring approach becomes an educational tool.  Twenty-five members share their knowledge, they edify and build up each other.  This becomes an information pipeline that passes on knowledge.   We stand on each others shoulders.   Paul said the “same commit thou to faithful.”

Leaders must know what they believe.  Truth was attacked by modernism. Postmodernism declared that there is no absolute truth.  Christian leaders must know what they believe.  Every leader must be a lifetime learner. We must commit ourselves to the study of God’s Word.  Winning souls and making disciples cannot be accomplished unless we know what we believe.  French Arrington authored a book, Exploring the Declaration of Faith, challenging every believer to know what they believe.  The world may struggle with absolute truth but we cannot.  We must know the Word of God and the God of the word.

Finally:

What if – Our Mission was to build healthy, growing, praying ministers that build healthy, growing, praying churches?

What if – Our Vision was to build communities of twelve, who through training, duplicate themselves by prayer, evangelism, and discipleship?
We would then be involved in fulfilling the Great Commission, Jesus’ mandate to each of us personally.

What if . . .


    • H. B. London, Jr., Neil B. Wiseman, Pastors at Greater Risk, (Ventura, CA: Regal Books, 2003).
  • [ii] Gene C. Wilkes, Jesus on Leadership, (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, 1998), 19.
  • [iii] Andy Stanley, Visioneering, (Sisters, Oregon: Multnomah Publishers, Inc., 1999), p. 9-13.
  • [iv] Andy Stanley, The Next Generation Leader, (Sisters, Oregon: Multnomah Publishers, Inc., 2003), p. 15.
  • [v] Robert E. Coleman, The Master Plan of Evangelism, (Grand Rapids: Fleming H. Revell, 1993).
  • [vi] Ibid.
  • [vii] Ibid.
  • [viii] John C. Maxwell., The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership, (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1998), 20.
  • [ix]  Gene C. Wilkes, Jesus on Leadership, (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, 1998), 9.
  • [x]  Enhanced Strong’s Lexicon. (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc., 1995), [Online] Available: Logos Library System.
  • [xi] Sanders, Spiritual Leadership, 21.

 

The Global Mission and Ministry of the Local Church

INTRODUCTION

By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another (John 13:35 NIV).

In order to fully understand the global mission and ministry of the church, one must go back to its origin.  The origin rests entirely in God; God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.  The New Testament refers to the church as “the church of the living God” (1 Timothy 3:15).  Jesus Christ speaks of the church as “my church” (Matt. 16:18).  Throughout the Book of Acts, it is the Holy Spirit who inspires and fills the church with wisdom and power.[1]

In the past one hundred and eighteen years, the Church of God has experienced many changes:  hairstyles, neckties, transportation to and from church, from telegraph to telephone to e-mail and today, high-speed internet ministries transports the Gospel anywhere electricity is found.  A ministerial application from the year 1916 (The letterhead was posted: General Overseer, A. J. Tomlinson, 2525 Gaut Street, Cleveland, Tennessee) had the following questions:

  • Question # 42 – Are you able to repeat the books of the Bible from memory?
  • Question # 64 – Do you have any personal debt that is owed and if so, do you have property to cover them?
  • Question # 69 – Have you ever used any medicine for yourself?
  • Question # 73 – Have you ever chewed gum before?
  • Question # 74 – Does your wife or children use chewing gum?
  • Question # 80 – Do you usually try to dress nice and neat when you preach?

We, as twenty-first century Church of God members, have seen many changes in the church throughout the past 118 years.  But there is one thing for sure, the global mission and ministry of the church has never changed nor will it ever change.

Jesus said, “The church is my church.”  Ephesians 1:22 proclaims that God has placed all things under the authority of Christ, and God has given Christ this authority for the benefit of the church.  This scripture defines the church as “Christ’s body”.  When people say, “I do not need the church,” what they are really saying is “I do not need Christ’s body.”

When we speak of the church, we’re not merely speaking of the Church of God, Cleveland, Tennessee or the Assembly of God, Springfield, Missouri or the Methodist, the Baptist, the First Nazarene…the church is the body of Christ!  We must understand that the church is the body of Christ if we are to carry out the global mission of the church.

1) What Makes the Church Work – What Makes the Church Grow?

There is a Church of God in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti with over 8,000 Church of God members.  What is impressive about this particular church is that Haiti is a nation that just 200 years ago dedicated her country to Satan.  Overcoming obstacles that many of us may never be able to understand, God has blessed the Haitian church in more ways than we can imagine or think.  “What makes this church work?”  It is miracles, signs, and wonders!  Many of the people in this church were once in bondage but were miraculously saved and delivered by the power of Jesus Christ.  These people had been radically transformed from darkness to light.  This is what makes the church work and grow! Miracles!  Signs!  Wonders God’s presence!

2) The Church and its Mission

If we truly understand the origin and foundation of the church, its mission becomes evident.  The church, which includes the Church of God, is to be an agency of God for evangelizing the world.  Jesus said, “Ye shall be my witnesses.” Witnesses – that’s what we are to be!  When the church loses the focus of witnessing,  that’s when we’re done.  You can write us off.  We’re finished!  When a church starts looking inwardly, that’s when the ministry is over…done!  Jesus said, “Go into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature.”  Involvement in missions, at home and abroad, is not an option; it is a command!  “Go ye therefore,” Jesus said, “Teach all nations, baptize them, teaching them to observe all things I have commanded you and lo I am with you even until the end of the earth” (Matthew 28:19).

It is not enough to say that the church is simply interested in missions or even that we are somehow involved in taking part in the promotion of missions.  A great deal of missionary interest and effort fall short of being satisfactory because many times the whole concept of what missionary enterprise is totally inadequate.  Many would relate “pity for the people, cruel sufferings, hungry children,” and even the “training for a better way of life” to be the definition of true missionary work.  The definitions of the global mission and ministry of the church must be much deeper and much broader in order to have a solid foundation for worthy and enduring missionary effort.  In Robert Hall Glover’s book entitled The Bible Basis of Missions, he states:

The missionary enterprise is no human conception or undertaking, no modern scheme or invention, no mere philanthropy even of the finest kind.  It did not originate in the brain or heart of any man, not even the apostle Paul.  Its originating source was in the heart of God himself.  In Jesus Christ, God’s great missionary to a lost world, was the supreme revelation of His heart and expression of His love.[2]

John 3:16 boldly underlines the great surrender as Jesus Christ paid the ultimate sacrifice for the sins in the lives of the world.  This scripture clearly states that God so loved the world that He gave.  You cannot love without giving.  John 3:16 is commonly regarded as the central text of the New Testament, the very heart of the Gospel.  This text and many others like them make clear the fact that the redemption of the whole world was God’s great purpose from the beginning. 

3) The Missionary Heart of the New Testament

It has been said that the New Testament is the greatest missionary volume ever produced.  Every section of it was written by a missionary, with a primary objective of meeting a missionary need and promoting missionary work.  Robert Glover puts it this way:

The New Testament draws its breath in missions, it incarnates missions, wherever it goes it creates missions.[3]  From beginning to end, the New Testament is a book of mission.  It owes its very existence to the missionary work of the early Christian churches, both Jewish and Hellenistic.[4]

The Gospels are “living recordings” of missionary preaching, and the Epistles are not so much some form of missionary apologetic as they are authentic and actual instruments of mission work.[5]

The global mission and ministry of the local church can be identified all through the New Testament and the teachings of the personal ministry of Jesus.  For example, “God so loved the world” – “The field is the world” – “I am the light of the world” – “If I be lifted up, I will draw all men unto me” – “Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must bring.”  Jesus himself is identified as a missionary as He spoke to the woman of Samaria and announced Himself as both the Messiah of the Jews and the Savior of the world.  With His miracles and parables alike, Jesus gave evidence of His sympathy and mission.  How can anyone diminish these Scriptures into simple church tradition?  For the Christian Church, the body of Christ, these Scriptures bring specific importance to the theology of Christian mission.

4) The Great Commission

The Great Commission was not recorded just once but actually fives times in the New Testament.  By this fact, it must be evident that the global mission and ministry of the local church and every Christian is the preaching of the Gospel to the whole world and the church’s supreme business. Mark 16:15 says, “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.”  Luke 24:47 says, “Repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations.” John 20:21 says, “As my Father hath sent me, even so send I you.”  The missionary task is the responsibility of Christ’s followers, the body of Christ, and each Christian as we are the ones entrusted to the spreading of the Gospel in the Christian movement.

5) Church is About Worship

The church is to be a corporate body in which we worship God.   I Corinthians 12 deals with this at great length.  As said earlier, we are part of the body of Christ and in this body of Christ we are to worship God.  It is the will of God for us to worship Him. Worship involves music, it involves praise, but it involves a whole lot more than that!  Worship involves our personal daily devotion time with the Lord.  Worship involves spending time with God, individually and corporately.  Not just on Sunday morning during worship, but seven days a week.  Many times, we as Christians in the great body of Christ come together on Sunday morning and we sing how wonderful He is…how lovely He is… how marvelous and glorious He is…  If He is everything we say He is on Sunday morning, then why do we not spend more time with Him everyday?  Worship involves the way we live and it is a part of the ministry of the local church to promote the worship of its King, its Lord, and its Savior of the world.

6) The Church and the Scope of Salvation

The Chicago Daily News once reported that Billy Graham, in talking about what Americans need most, stated: “It is absolutely impossible to change society and to reserve the moral trend unless we ourselves are changed from the inside out.  Man needs transformation or conversion….our only way to mold reform is through repentance of our sins and a return to God.”  The Old Testament, in no uncertain terms, reiterates the same truth over and over again.  Second Chronicles 7:14 is a perfect representation of this very specific statement: “If My people, who are called by My name, will humble themselves, and pray, and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”

Even a casual look at the world quickly reveals man’s condition in sin and the awful plight in which this fallen condition has left him.  Furthermore, it is a condition against which mankind is completely helpless when left to his own human resources.  The Bible speaks, however, of God’s gracious plan to provide a solution to man’s problem.  We call it salvation or soteriology.[6]

The global mission and ministry of the local church is not just to build buildings, to educate and train, to feed the hungry, or even to raise large amounts of money.  The greatest priority of the body of Christ and the highest mission of the church is to bring salvation throughout the world.  Acts 3:19 says, “Therefore repent and turn in order that your sins may be blotted out, so that seasons of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord”; Acts 26:20 states, “…they should repent and turn to God and perform deeds worthy of repentance.”  Repentance without turning one’s life over to God does not obtain remission of sins; neither does turning one’s life over to God without repentance bring remission of sins.  It is a given that people do not repent and become converted until they know that they are sinners and that they need the Savior.  This is where the church can define the importance of its ministry and mission.  Before one can accept Christ as his/her personal Savior, he/she must become informed of the elements of the Gospel.  Evangelism is at the center of the global mission and ministry of the local church.  Not only does humankind need to know that their sins will bring the inescapable judgment of God upon themselves, but also that they can never enjoy life in its fullness here and now until they become converted and experience God’s marvelous transforming grace.

Jesus himself offered a better existence for humankind when He declared in John 10:10, “I came that they may have life and have it abundantly.”  He also promised “…my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full (John 15:11)…and your sorrow will turn into joy (John 16:21)…and no one will take your joy from you (John 16:22).” The apostle Paul described the salvation experience in these words: “Wherefore if any one is in Christ he is a new creature; the old has passed away, behold it has become new” (II Corinthians 5:17).  The global mission and ministry of the local church and body of Christ clearly prioritize the message of salvation. John Wesley once stated,

Sinners, turn, why will you die?
God, your Saviour, asks you – Why?
He who did your souls retrieve,
Died Himself that you might live.
Will you let him die in vain?
Crucify your Lord again?
Why, you ransomed sinners, why
Will you slight his grace and die?

Conclusion

We, the community of faith, a priesthood of believers, those who understand the mission of Ecclesia have personally confessed salvation in Christ and are living in the “already – not yet” dimension in which Dr. Steve Land speaks of in his book on Pentecostal Spirituality.  We should watch and wait with anticipation and excitement for the return of Christ.  We are to live everyday as a witness to the love of Jesus and to demonstrate holiness of life to the world.  Let us be what He wants us to be and never lose the desire of His soon return for His Church.  Only then can we really hope to hear the words of welcome from the Father: “Enter in my good and faithful servant.”  We have not yet arrived at our goal, but we have already discovered the joy of our global mission and mandate to bring the message of God’s love and grace to a lost world.


  • [2]Robert Hall Glover, M.D., F.R.G.S. The Bible Basis of Missions (Los Angeles, California: Bible House of Los Angeles, 1946), p.13.
  • [3]Ibid. p. 22
  • [4]Ibid. p. 23
  • [5]Ralph D. Winter & Steven C. Hawthorne, (eds.) Perspectives on the World Christian Movement (Pasadena, California: William Carey Library, 1981), p. 45

Woman At The Well

Scripture Reference: John 4:1-15 
1 “Therefore, when the Lord knew that the Pharisees had heard that Jesus made and baptized more disciples than John
2 (though Jesus Himself did not baptize, but His disciples),
3 He left Judea and departed again to Galilee.
4 But He needed to go through Samaria.
5 So He came to a city of Samaria which is called Sychar, near the plot of ground that Jacob gave to his son Joseph.
6 Now Jacob‟s well was there. Jesus therefore, being wearied from His journey, sat thus by the well. It was about the sixth hour.
7 A woman of Samaria came to draw water. Jesus said to her, “Give Me a drink.”
8 For His disciples had gone away into the city to buy food.
9 Then the woman of Samaria said to Him, “How is it that You, being a Jew, ask a drink from me, a Samaritan woman?” For Jews have no dealings with Samaritans.
10 Jesus answered and said to her, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you, „Give Me a drink,‟ you would have asked Him, and He would have given you living water.”
11 The woman said to Him, “Sir, You have nothing to draw with, and the well is deep. Where then do You get that living water? 
12 Are You greater than our father Jacob, who gave us the well, and drank from it himself, as well as his sons and his livestock?”
13 Jesus answered and said to her, “Whoever drinks of this water will thirst again,
14 but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never thirst. But the water that I shall give him will become in him a fountain of water springing up into everlasting life.”
15 The woman said to Him, “Sir, give me this water, that I may not thirst, nor come here to draw.”

John said of Christ, “He must go through Samaria.” There were many people there who desperately needed Christ just as everyone needs Him today. Jesus knew the exact hour a sinful woman would come to draw water from Jacob‟s well. We see a little of Jesus‟ human side when He became weary from His journey and was thirsty for fresh cool water.

As the Samaritan woman came up to the well to draw enough for her own needs; Jesus used his thirst to instigate a conversation with her and politely asked of her, “Give me a drink of water.” How startled she was to have this Jewish Rabbi even speak to her, a Samaritan! Not knowing that this was Jesus Christ who knew all things, her past and her future, she flippantly replied, “How is it that you, being a Jew, ask a drink from me, A Samaritan woman? “ His answer was strange indeed. “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you, „Give Me a drink,‟ you would have asked Him, and He would have given you living water.” (John 4:10, NKJV)

“Living water?” she might have thought. “You don‟t even have a vessel to draw with from this deep well. You have asked me for a drink. Where do you find such abundant water? Surely you‟re not greater than our father Jacob who gave us this well, are you?” Jesus answered quietly but with authority, “Whoever drinks of this water will thirst again, but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never thirst. The water that I shall give him will become in him a fountain of water springing up into everlasting life.” For a moment this woman, who had undoubtedly been ostracized by the community and often came to draw water when all others were away from the well, felt faith arise in her heart and she believed this man‟s words. She sincerely answered, “Sir, give me this water, that I may not thirst, nor come here to draw.” (John 4:14-15, NKJV)

Jesus then asked of her what she may have considered to be a strange request, “Go call your husband.” She admitted she had no husband and Jesus replied that she spoke truly: “You have had five husbands and the one you are living with now is not your husband.” When He said this her understanding of His reality began to emerge. “Sir, I perceive that thou art a prophet.” Jesus revealed Himself to her and she believed in her heart He was the Messiah. She became a witness to many others in the city, bringing them to meet Christ who had shared the “living water” with her.

The message goes forth to everyone. All anyone has to do to be saved from their sin is ask for living water, that is the water of life that flows from Jesus Christ. He is ready and anxious to give eternal life to all who ask. He shed His blood on Calvary and offers salvation to the world. In Zechariah 13:1 we read the wonderful news: “In that day a fountain shall be opened in the house of David and for the inhabitants of Jerusalem, for sin and for uncleaness.”

The old hymn says, “There is a fountain filled with blood, drawn from Immanuel‟s veins; and sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains. The dying thief rejoiced to see that fountain his day; and there may I, though vile as he, wash all my sins away.” (William Cowper) This is God‟s plan for everyone who will accept it.

The woman at the well first saw Jesus as a Jew. She then called Him a prophet. Finally, she recognized He was the sought after Messiah. She then began to do what every born-again child of God should do. She immediately began to tell others about the Savior. Her testimony was simple, “Come see a man who told all I ever did. Is not this the Christ?” The citizens of her village were astonished and hundreds of them came streaming across the fields to see Jesus. The despised Samaritan woman became the spokes-person that resulted in salvation for many other people. The Savior stayed two more days in this village, and man more souls came to a saving faith.

Believe on Jesus and accept Him as your Savior. Share your testimony with others. Let them know you have found the Messiah who offers everlasting life to all who believe.

Prayer: Jesus, I come to you believing you are Christ who gave your life on Calvary for all. I ask you to forgive me of all my sins. Wash me white as snow with the precious blood you shed on the cross. I believe You arose from the grave and ascended to the Father. I accept you into my heart and will live for you as you lead and help me day by day. Thank you for saving me this day. Amen.