Now that I have your attention, permit me to explain.
There's an ongoing debate in Reformed and Evangelical circles regarding the mission of the church. That's good, because the Body of Christ needs to be clear on what the Head expects the hands and feet to be doing.
There's an ongoing debate in Reformed and Evangelical circles regarding the mission of the church. That's good, because the Body of Christ needs to be clear on what the Head expects the hands and feet to be doing.
But the way one frames the question can greatly affect the
answer. So we need to make sure we're rightly framing the question.
Rightly Framing the
Question
More often than not, the question “What is the mission of
the church?” is framed so as to give either the exclusive mission, or
the comprehensive mission, rather than the primary mission.
As important as the first two are, the third is, by definition, the most
important.
Exclusive mission means those things that the
church and the church alone has responsibility for. There is no
serious debate regarding the exclusive mission of the church. All
parties are pretty much agreed that the church's exclusive mission is
to minister the Word of God, particularly in fulfillment of the Great
Commission. If the church doesn't do that, no one else will.
Comprehensive mission means all things the
church has responsibility for. The comprehensive mission of the
Church is what the aforementioned debate centers
on. It involves determining what things are “official” church responsibilities
and what things are not.
Primary mission means those things that are the
church's most important responsibilities: the things she will be
held most accountable for by Christ. Unfortunately, neither side of
the debate is giving much consideration to this, and, incredibly, it is falling
through the cracks. Christ and His apostles laid it out so plainly it is
difficult to understand how we are overlooking it, but we are.
The Church's Primary
Mission
So what is the church's primary mission, her most important
responsibility? Jesus summed it up in what He called “the first and great
commandment”: “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy mind” (Matthew 22:37). He linked it inextricably
with “the second [commandment]” which He said is “like unto [the first]: Thou
shalt love thy neighbour as thyself” (v. 39). “On these two commandments,” He
asserted, “hang all the law and the prophets” (v. 40).
The apostle Paul was even more concise: “All the law,”
he wrote,
“is fulfilled in one word . . . love. . . .”
Biblical examples of the primacy of love could be listed almost endlessly. The church's primary responsibility, collectively and individually, is to love God and people. God is pro-people and expects His body, the church, to be likewise. It is impossible to be an obedient Christian or an obedient church without loving people, for to love people for God's sake is to love God. It is hard to imagine anything being more clear. And yet.
We've Made Our
Highest Priority Our Lowest
The church—the evangelical church in particular—is guilty of
a spectacular sin of omission when it comes to loving people, especially the
people Jesus referred to as “the least of these”: those we deem least important
and easiest to neglect.
No people in America better fit the description “the least
of these” than pre-born babies whose mothers choose, often under pressure and
with subsequent regret,
to abort them. Fifty-five million murdered now makes us statistically nearly
ten times worse than the Nazis. And by “us” I mean the church, because it is
largely our collective silence that has enabled the butchery to
continue virtually unopposed.
I'm an evangelical, and I've been asking myself for four
decades, how on earth does the church justify such egregious sins of omission
as silence on abortion? The answers I've found center on the same thing:
worldview. We rationalize our culpable inaction on the basis of flawed
worldview.
We think we have a biblical worldview, and in many essential
ways we do (that's why I'm still an evangelical). But in many other, equally
essential ways, we do not. I described two examples of flawed worldview
impinging on the abortion issue in previous BreakPoint articles, here and here.
This whole question about the mission of the church is a third. Owing to a
defective worldview on the Church's mission we have effectively made our
highest priority our lowest.
The Rationale
There are at least two key aspects to the misguided
rationale for our neglect of the church's primary mission, love.
First, sins of omission are easier to commit and justify than sins of commission. A study published in “Psychological Science” suggests that this is because people know others will think worse of them if they do something bad, than if they merely let something bad happen.
Second, we mistakenly think we are loving people as we ought
simply by sharing the gospel with them. The church today is characterized by
words without works.
True, the words we share are the words of God. But we forget
that talk is cheap, and we assume that because we speak God's words our sparse
actions are excusable, that our merely saying “be warmed and filled” is somehow
reckoned an acceptable substitute for actually filling the need.
But even the words of God are cheap if the life dispensing
them does not show the love of God it preaches. That is the whole point of
James, chapter 2. We say “God is love,” yet demonstrate by our self-absorbed
Christianity that this means exactly nothing except “God is willing to overlook
the sins of those who speak well of Jesus, act religious, and win souls.”
This is not Christianity. And yet it is; it is what we have
made of it. The body of Christ has more resemblance to the insular Pharisee
avoiding lepers than to the unselfconscious Good Samaritan showing—not
speaking, but showing—compassion for the needy, regardless of cost.
There is no difference between one who says “be warmed and
filled” and does nothing, and one who says “I'm pro-life” and does nothing.
Faith without works is dead; love without action is not love.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer said,
“The Church is the Church only when it exists for others.” The German
Evangelical Church ignored him, and innocents within the borders of the Reich
were slaughtered by the trainload, without opposition. Ironically, we vilify
the German Evangelical Church.
Pro-life activism is not a mission of the Church;
it is the mission of the church because the mission of the church is
loving people. If we are to be the Body of Christ we must care about “the least
of these” as our Master did. That, or quit calling ourselves the church.
Lord, when saw we Thee naked, an
unloved fetus, and did not march, did not preach, did not vote or write letters
or hold signs, did not agonize over Thee, did not advocate for Thee?
Transfiguration
How like this little
fetus, Holy God,
You writhed, enwombed in suffocating pain,
Until sharp instruments unpumped your blood
And left your form transfigured to a stain.
How like a loving mother's natal pine
Your prayer, encrypted as a primal groan,
Umbilical from heaven's soul to mine,
Proved you unwilling to unpair your own.
How like a wand commanding miracles
Your hand, atwitch in death, transmuted blood
Of murder into healing pharmicals,
Coagulating evil into good.
How like one crucified, my little boy
Now makes me, sick with wellness, retch in joy.
You writhed, enwombed in suffocating pain,
Until sharp instruments unpumped your blood
And left your form transfigured to a stain.
How like a loving mother's natal pine
Your prayer, encrypted as a primal groan,
Umbilical from heaven's soul to mine,
Proved you unwilling to unpair your own.
How like a wand commanding miracles
Your hand, atwitch in death, transmuted blood
Of murder into healing pharmicals,
Coagulating evil into good.
How like one crucified, my little boy
Now makes me, sick with wellness, retch in joy.
(Dedicated to the
precious women who profoundly regret their abortions)
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