Follow Me Mill City Follow Me Mill City

There Are No Unsent Christians

Transcript

It's good to see you guys this morning. My name is Matt. I'm one of the pastors here. And today we are finishing up our series called Follow Me, where we've basically been walking through the book of Mark and talking about discipleship, learning from Jesus and his interaction with his disciples. So what we've done is we've looked at that.

We've looked at what Jesus teaches his disciples, what his disciples were doing. And what we've done is ask the question, how do we do this? How do we, in 21st century America, actually respond to Jesus' call? How do we follow him just like James, John, Peter, and Andrew did? How do we do that in our context today? And so we started off with our baptism party where we celebrated people who have moved from death to life in Jesus, who've placed faith in Jesus.

And we talked about the fact that the gospel is good news that you live in light of. It's an event. It's news of something that has happened, that Jesus died on the cross for our sins. It's not, the gospel's not a whole bunch of rules. It's not moralism. It's news that you believe.

And then as you believe that, your life begins to change. So we started there. That's primary for disciples of Jesus is belief in the gospel. And then we moved on and said, okay, if that's true, there are no unrepentant Christians. That's what we talked about next, that the life of a Christian should be repenting and believing. Repenting being seeing your sin, confessing of your sin, turning away from it to follow Jesus.

And that's a lifelong process from a disciple. You don't just confess your sin when you become a Christian. It's the life of a Christian is repenting and believing. And we moved on from there and said, there are no Christians who have something other than Jesus as primary. That when you follow Jesus, he asks us, tells us, commands us to lay everything else down, and he becomes primary to us. Even the good things in our life, even family and friends and our jobs and things that would be considered good on their own.

Jesus takes the primary spot over top of those. And our response to that is when we see anything that's getting in the way of that is back to what we talked about the week before, which is to repent and believe the gospel again. And what we looked at last week is that there are no Christians that exist outside of church family. There are no Christians that are supposed to exist outside of the family that Jesus has made us into. And it's this beautiful mix of people of all different backgrounds and races and thought processes and understanding. Even the disciples were a hodgepodge mix themselves.

And what happens is Jesus calls them to come to him. And as they come to him, he begins to change them. And so today as we wrap up our series, what we're talking about today is the fact that there are no unsent Christians. All Christians are to respond to Jesus, to come to him, and then he actually sends them out. That we're actually supposed to live our lives to spread the gospel, that we should be on mission. And the truth is, if you're a Christian in the room, or even if you just know things about what Christians believe or who Christians are, you're already on board with what I'm saying.

Because the gospel at its core is a message that has to be shared. So nobody in the room is going, yeah, well, but, nuh-uh. That's not happening because we all understand that it's a message that's supposed to be shared. Nobody's doing that. But there's still a disconnect between knowing that we're sent out and actually doing it.

There's a disconnect between knowing that we're sent out and even knowing how to do that. So we say all the time as a church that we're a gospel-centered community on mission. That you should be on mission with your friends and your neighbors and your coworkers. That we're joining Jesus in his mission to save Columbia. Like, we talk about that all the time. But the question becomes, okay, well, if that's what I'm supposed to do, how do I do that?

So you get excited and you're like, okay, cool. I'm going to go be on mission at work. We talk about that a good bit. And then you show up to work and it's like, what now? Well, I'm here. I'm ready to be on mission.

Like, is it that you kind of walk over into the break room where people are having coffee and like you just, at whatever opportune moment presents itself, you just, Jesus. I'm really doing it, guys. Is that it? Or is it like if you're wearing a shirt, you kind of roll up your sleeves so that they can see your sweet cross tat and you're just hoping that they're going to come talk to you? Like, they're going to, hey, tell me about your cross tattoo and your relationship with Jesus. Like, is that it?

Or is it maybe people are in the break room eating lunch and you're just trying to figure out how do I slide in the idea that I had a sweet time of fellowship with my brothers and sisters in Christ last night? I mean, is that going to do it? It's kind of like when you're in middle school and you're trying to talk to someone of the opposite sex. You know this? Y'all remember this, right? Okay, it's like I'm a guy.

I'm walking up to a girl. Do I say something about her hair? Like, do I mention, do I say that I like my little pony too? Or like Lisa Frank, whatever that stuff is. Did I put on enough Acts before this conversation? But that's kind of the idea.

So nobody's arguing. Nobody in the room is going, no, I understand that Christians are supposed to be sent. The disconnect is, well, how do I do that? I know I'm supposed to tell people about Jesus. So what we're doing today as we finish this series is say people who follow Jesus are sent to go share the gospel.

So we're going to look at Jesus sending out his disciples. And what we're going to look and say is, okay, if that's what he told them to do, if that's what he instructed them to do, how do we apply that as 21st century Americans? So my goal today is just to be helpful. I want to help coach us up just a little bit on like how can we begin to practically do this in our lives. So I'm hoping today will be helpful as we conclude this series.

So before we hop into the text, let's pray together. God, the fact that this church exists is evidence that you send your people to share the gospel. Or that you sent people to Columbia and then you sent those people out into their neighborhoods, into their places of work, to their schools, to continue sharing the gospel so that people could place their faith in Jesus. So God, I pray that you would help us remember our call this morning. I pray that you would help us remember why we're actually going out to share the gospel and that you would begin to help us practically see how we can begin to do that.

We pray these things in Jesus' name. Amen. All right, go ahead and grab a Bible. We're going to turn to Mark in a second. But before we do that, I want to remind us of one of the main points we talked about last week.

Because if you don't get this point, if you don't understand what we talked about last week and you just go into being sent out, you'll miss the whole point of why we're being sent out in the first place. And so this is Mark chapter 3, verses 13 through 14. You can turn there. It's on 544 in your Bibles. But it says this, And he went up on the mountain and called to him those whom he desired, and they came to him.

And he appointed 12 whom he also named apostles so that they might be with him, and he might send them out to preach. So it says there in verse 13, He called those whom he desired, and they came to him. So before we ever talk about being sent out, before Jesus sends out, the first call he makes is for us to come to him. Some of us need to hear that this morning. That may be the one thing you need to hear this morning. Jesus' call to you, first and foremost, is to come to him, to enjoy him, to be in a relationship with him.

And the problem is when we get this flipped, when we forget that as Christians, when we forget that that's actually primary, we'll go out and we're ambitious to share the gospel. We want to tell people about Jesus, but we end up getting frustrated and burned out and spinning our wheels because what we're doing is we're going out telling people about the gospel that we're not actually enjoying and living out in our lives. So if we're not enjoying Jesus walking with him daily, but we're trying to go tell people about Jesus, we're missing out. Jesus wants our... Before he wants your actions and your activity, he wants you.

He wants your heart. That's primary. It says, if you look again, we've got the verses still on the screen, but it says, They came to him and he appointed twelve. And it says, So that they might be with him. And then it says he sent them out. So I just want to...

That is the motivation this morning. When we talk about going and sending out, we're coming from a place where we're actually enjoying a relationship with Jesus. We're walking with him. And then we go out. Now, turn to Mark 6. We're going to be looking at verses 7 through 13.

And this is kind of a foundational passage for us as a church. Because what we're going to see is a group of guys whose lives are centered around Jesus and the gospel he proclaims, that are living that out in relationship with him and with each other, and then are being sent out on mission. Being centered around Jesus, gospel-centered, community, on mission. This is a big part. That's why we talk about groups so much, because we believe that's our best way to fulfill what Jesus is talking about here. To follow him in close relationship with other believers, and then in relationship with those other believers, go out and share the gospel.

So this is a foundational passage for us. And what we're going to do is we're going to just read straight through the passage and look at Jesus' instructions to the disciples and then we'll kind of get the big idea at the bottom and then come back to the instructions at the top and talk about, okay, how do you practically do that? How do we practically do that? So Mark 6, starting in verse 7, says this, And he called the twelve and began to send them out two by two and gave them authority over the unclean spirits. He charged them to take nothing for their journey except a staff, no bread, no bag, no money in their belts, but to wear sandals and not put on two tunics.

And he said to them, Whenever you enter a house, stay there until you depart from there. And if any place will not receive you and they will not listen to you, when you leave, shake off the dust that is on your feet as a testimony against them. Okay, so that's Jesus' instructions. Then verses 12 and 13 tell us what they actually did as they were sent out. So picking back up, verse 12.

So they went out and proclaimed that people should repent. And they cast out many demons and anointed with oil many who were sick and healed them. So 12 and 13 tell us what they actually did when they went out. And verse number 12 gives us the beginning. It says, They went out and proclaimed that people should repent. You see, the gospel is a message of joy.

It's a message of freedom, but at its core, it's also offensive. What we talked about in the second week is that when people are repenting of their sin, it's coming to them saying that you are a sinner in need of saving. That there's something about you that is off and broken. You need to admit that and confess that and turn from it and follow Jesus. So while in the gospel there is ultimate joy, we understand that there's heart level satisfaction, that all the longings of our heart are actually fulfilled and found in Jesus.

There's also a part of us that is offended by the truth of the gospel because it calls us to change. It was true in Jesus' day and it's true in ours, especially in our culture. Our culture holds up the idea of expressive individualism. We talked about this in our Theology of Sex series. But the basic idea of that is you do you.

Whatever makes you happy is the greatest expression of yourself. Don't let anybody tell you what to do. You do you. But the problem is that the gospel comes along and helps us see that we're broken and we're in need of saving. So at its core, it's going to be offensive.

But ultimately there's freedom and joy that we can find in Jesus. And then it says in verse 13, so there's a call to repent. But then it says in 13 that they cast out demons and anointed many with oil who were sick and healed them. Now, it's likely that most of us in the room just kind of thought to ourselves, well, well, that's weird. And it gets even weirder when you realize that as Jesus sent them out, part of following Jesus was that they cast out demons and that they healed sick people. And in all honesty, when you hear that, it's like, oh, that's weird.

I don't understand how that exactly works out. And part of part of the reason for that is that we live in a culture that highly values intellect and education and reason. Those are those are pillars kind of in our society that we hold up. And those are those are good things. Those aren't bad things in and of themselves. But since our focus is kind of primarily there, our culture is very skeptical of the spiritual or the unexplainable.

And so I want us to take just a second. This really isn't the main point of what we're talking about today. But I want to take just a second to talk about what is what's going on here. What were the disciples actually doing? Because I think there are two errors that you can make when you come to something like this in the Bible. OK, you can read it and then just skip over it and act like it doesn't exist.

It's like I don't really know what that's talking about. So we're not going to talk about that's challenging. That's difficult. That's not being faithful to the text. I want us always as a church to be fighting to understand what the Bible is telling us. And the other thing that I think mistake people make is they read something like that and they say, well, that was only in the time of Jesus.

That doesn't happen now. And I don't believe that that's true either. I don't believe that that's true either. So I want to take just a second to unpack what he's talking about here and then we'll keep rolling. We believe that what the Bible says is entirely true. So that it says that they cast out demons and healed the sick.

We believe that happened. Our culture is obsessed with scientific explanation for everything. But when someone like Jesus enters into the conversation, someone who walked on water, who fed 5,000 people, and who died and three days later was raised from the dead, science isn't going to explain everything. It's not going to have all the answers. And the Bible helps us see that there is a spiritual reality that exists. And I want to help us out here for a second because I think sometimes even we can be skeptical on this kind of stuff.

If you believe in good spiritual beings, so if you believe in a God and if you believe in angels, it's not inconsistent for you to believe that there are also evil spiritual beings like Satan and demons. Okay, those two things are not inconsistent. And what the Bible tells us is that Satan is a created being. He's an angel who rebelled against God. He wanted to be greater than God. And God cast him out of heaven and there were other angels who followed him.

These fallen angels are what the Bible refers to as demons and they have influence in this world. They're actively trying to undermine God's will and God's work in the here and now. But God and Satan are not on par with each other. The Bible doesn't even get close to presenting it like that. It's more like Godzilla versus Bambi. Okay, and even that's kind of a, that's not even describing it well enough.

That's what the Bible tells us. But Satan, demons, hell, all real. The Bible makes that clear. The Bible tells the story of Satan deceiving our first parents, Adam and Eve, into sin to break God's command in their life and sin entered the world. And so the relationship between God was fractured as they were tempted. And the rest of the Bible tells the story of God's active pursuit to redeem people, to bring people back into a relationship with him.

And ultimately we see that accomplished through Jesus dying on the cross and rising from the dead. So that when Jesus died on the cross, Satan was defeated but not ultimately conquered yet. Still having influence in our world. Still able to do stuff in our world. We see in the book of Revelation that ultimately he is conquered and destroyed. And so what Jesus is doing here, what the disciples are doing as they go out, is they are actually combating the works of the enemy.

That Jesus is helping them push back darkness in their area. That they're actually ministering to people on a spiritual level. And the Bible tells us that part of the way that works throughout, that you see, is that there's power in the name of Jesus. And there's power as people pray. It says people were possessed or oppressed by demons or had spiritual warfare going on. That was how it was combated.

It was with the power that is in Jesus' name and through prayer. Now again, I don't want us to spend all of our time talking about that this morning. So if you've got questions or you want to talk more about it, Chet and I are going to be available after the gathering. You can ask us more questions. Also, we did a sermon on this back in our 1 Peter series called The Devil and the King. And I would also kind of point you towards that sermon.

So what's the point? What's the point of what the disciples were doing? As the disciples went out to share the gospel and to minister to people, they were sharing the gospel with whole individuals. They weren't just meeting physical needs. They weren't just meeting emotional needs. They weren't just meeting spiritual needs.

That as they shared the gospel, the gospel was good news for the whole person. Whether it be sickness or spiritual warfare or the need to just repent of sin. That as they went out, they were actually ministering to whole people. So yeah, they helped feed people. They helped clothe people. They helped clothe people.

People who were in poverty. And the same thing is true for us. We should feed the hungry. We should help with homelessness. All the while knowing that it truly is the gospel that is at the heart of what people need. So what we're seeing is that the disciples went out and shared the gospel.

Because the gospel is good news for all of life. So now the question becomes, based off of what Jesus instructed them, how do we do that? How's that going to begin to show up in my life? How's that going to begin to show up in the life of our group? Now, some of you, maybe you're a note taker. Maybe you're not.

I'm going to challenge you to jot down some notes today. There are cards in front of you. There are pens in those seats. Because I want to just give us some practical coaching on how we can begin to be on mission. Based off of what Jesus is telling us. What he's instructing his disciples.

So go back to the top. Go back up to verse 7. It says this. Now he called the twelve and began to send them out two by two. He called the twelve and began to send them out two by two. Now, there are likely a lot of reasons why Jesus did that.

I think there was a safety element. That it was easier to travel with two people together. I think there was like personal discipleship kind of woven in there. Those two guys being able to pour into each other and build each other up. But I think the main reason is to show us that community is hardwired into Jesus' call to mission.

Hardwired into it. That it's supposed to be done in the context of relationships. Especially since the rest of the New Testament continues that idea. You see the church living it out in relationship. The letters are written to groups of believers. And so the first answer to the question, how do we do this?

How do we begin to practically be on mission? Is that we go together. Is that we go together. I was growing up and anytime mission or missionary was talked about. It was always in the context of like you as an individual. Go out and invite your friend to come to church with you.

Or even if it was foreign mission. It was like an individual going out to another country by themselves. But the command for mission in the New Testament is always in communal terms. But the problem is what we talked about last week is that we've been invited into a family. We've been invited into relationships with other believers. But when it comes to mission, it becomes an individual sport.

It would be like watching a football game. It's football season. There are going to be a lot of football metaphors. It would be like watching a football game. And the quarterback snaps the ball to himself. And he runs up and he blocks somebody because he's got to do that too.

And then he throws the ball and sprints after it as fast as he can to try to catch the ball. And then he gets splattered. And the rest of the game looks a lot like that. And their team loses 63 to nothing. And then in the press conference after the game, he's like, Oh, we just didn't play up to our potential today. We nothing, man.

You were trying to do it all by yourself. And I think when we talk about mission in the church, we all begin to think as individuals. But it's not. It's intended to be done by groups of believers going out together. And here's why. Community puts the gospel on display in a way that you as an individual don't have the ability to by yourself.

Community puts the gospel on display in a way that you can't do by yourself. Let me show you how this shows up. So many of our baptism videos start off with, I started hanging out with a community group. And so we have to remind people like, Your community group didn't save you. Mill City Church didn't save you. But what they're saying is, That's the first place I actually saw the gospel tangibly.

I saw real love and service and openness and family and hospitality. They saw the effects of the gospel. It goes hand in hand with what Jesus says that, By your love for one another, They'll know. They'll come to know the gospel. I mean, it's so clear all throughout the New Testament That it's supposed to be done in relationship with other believers. Okay, well, how do you do that?

A couple of practical things. Invite your group. Like I said, we're a groups-based church. We talk about groups all the time. Invite your group. And here's what I mean by that.

Don't just invite people to your group. Invite your group to people. Don't just invite people to your group, Like your group meeting time. But invite your group to people. It's not bad to invite people to hang out with your community group When you're getting together. But invite your group to people.

We all have relationships, Whether it's at work, Or the people that we go to the gym with, Or that we're in school with, Or people who live in our neighborhood. And so what the Bible helps us see is, Make the most of those relationships, And invite the other Christians you're already in relationship, Into that. You've already got the relationships. Just let them be a part of that. Let me show you how this can play out. Let's say I'm building a relationship with someone who plays video games.

I mean, he's a gamer and he loves it. I don't like video games. The reason being, I'm not very good at video games. I stopped at the Nintendo 64, GoldenEye 007, Which is the greatest game of all time. You cannot argue with that. It's true.

So that as video game systems got better and more complex, I was, Like I was behind the curve. Like my roommates, When we were in college, Would invite me to play Halo, Just so they could get their kill count up. I mean, I'm literally the guy in the corner with a gun, Doing this. And they're all three standing behind me, Just waiting for me to turn around. They don't even care who gets the kill. They're just loving watching me, Because I can't, I can't control.

I'm all over the place. I'm not good at video games. But let's say I'm hanging out with my group, And my group leader says, Hey, Anybody that we should be praying for, Anybody you're building a relationship with currently? I say, Yeah, I've got a friend of mine who, Well, Tell us about him. He loves playing video games. And Tom goes, I like playing video games.

Can I get in on that? And immediately you go, Why did I think of that? Tom plays like 15 to 20 hours of video games a week. Now that's another conversation for another day. But Tom's good at video games.

And so Tom and I and my friend, We begin hanging out. And of course I play with them, So, You know, They can get their kill counts out and whatever. But that's a picture of you inviting somebody in, A Christian that you're friends with, Into a relationship that you already have. And that actually goes hand in hand with the second thing. Use your gifts. We believe that all Christians have been given gifts by Jesus for the edification of the church.

So you are not like everybody else that you're in relationship with. You've got different skills and abilities. And inside the context of a group, You actually get to use your gifts for the benefit of helping people come to know Jesus. I want to tell you all a real life story of how that happened. Okay. And I'm going to use real names because these are real people.

When Chet and I and our families moved down to be a part of Planting Mill City, Chet worked at Sears. Okay. At Sears, Chet met a guy named Jack. So he started building a relationship with Jack. They kind of became friends. Started hanging out some outside of work.

Maybe grabbing lunch. Playing some video games together. And then Russ, Who was the first person who became a Christian as a part of our church, Also worked at Sears. And was also a part of the community group that Chet was in. So they all started getting together and playing video games.

So different people using different skill sets. Then Chet invited Jack to come to a Halloween party that his group was throwing. Okay. There had to be someone who was organizing the party. There had to be someone who was communicating with all the people what they were supposed to bring. There were people who served and made food and set up and kept it kind of going.

There were people who were just fun and just relational. They were playing cornhole and can jam. And so Jack shows up to this thing. And, you know, I mean, you've had a conversation with Chet. And, you know, I mean, maybe it goes somewhere. Maybe it doesn't.

Who knows? But there are two super friendly guys in that group, Boneweed and Dan Stoiku, Who spent that night getting to know Jack. Just got in conversation with him. And then after that night, they started inviting them to come to their house. So he started hanging out with their families.

They invited him into their homes. And then Jack started hanging out with their community group. And eventually Jack became a Christian. You see that? That's different people within a community group using their different gifts. To throw that Halloween party.

To open up their homes. Someone had to eventually share the gospel with Jack. So we actually get to use our gifts. And that really takes the pressure off. I think all of us think, I've got to know exactly what to say. And I've got to do all this stuff.

But the New Testament tells us that it's done in the context of relationships. The third thing is this. Have rhythms. Have rhythms. That's kind of common language in our day. You'll say something like, you know, just going through the normal rhythms of life.

And what you're saying is, all the stuff that you're doing on a regular basis. That's what rhythms of life means. Well, we encourage all of our community groups to have rhythms. Rhythms of life where they spend time together. So obviously that's going to include coming to a gathering on Sundays.

That's going to include their group meeting time. But it's not just that. That we have some of the things that are going on in some of our groups. Some of the guys get together for lunch during the week. The girls have girls' nights. Some of the groups get together outside and they go and serve.

We've got stay-at-home moms that go to the zoo together. And try to invite their friends. And here's the deal. The more that you guys are actually spending time together in relationship with other believers. The more opportunities you have to bring other people in. Okay, so if the invitation is, hey, come to my house.

We're going to read the Bible and repent of sin. It's going to take a special kind of person to respond to that and say yes. But if your invitation is, hey, come watch a football game and eat some ribs. I'm down. What time? Do I need to bring anything else?

I want to make this the best party ever. So when it says they went two by two, mission is done together. So I want us to change our mindset from just being individuals, being renegade cowboy Christians out on our own trying to do this to actually beginning to do it together. Okay? So we go together.

Go back to the text. Look at verses 8 and verse 9. It says he charged them to take nothing for their journey except a staff. No bread. No bag. No money in their belts.

But to wear sandals. And not to put on two tunics. Okay, I think part of Jesus' design here is to emphasize that they needed to totally depend on God for this to happen and go well. Not on themselves. Not on their provisions. Not on their provisions.

That they needed God to open up the doors and to provide for them as they were going. God's setting this up in a way where they're not able to take credit for what actually happens. And so second practical thing that we can do to begin to be on mission to be sent is to trust God. Now, you may hear that and go, okay, thanks preacher boy. I know I'm supposed to trust God. It's like, no, but actually trust God.

If we believe, if we believe that salvation begins and ends with God, that God draws people and through his Holy Spirit leads them to repent, leads them to a correct understanding of who Jesus is, leads them to turn from their sin and to have a life of following him, then we're going to treat it that way. We're going to trust God. And for us as Christians, one of the ways that we express our trust in God on a regular basis is that we pray. That's what prayer is. It's communication with God and asking him to work in our lives and on behalf of other people, whether it be sickness or salvation, whatever it is, that's us coming.

God's saying, I trust you. We need you actively at work here. So if that's true, if that's how we trust God is through praying. If I could listen to your prayer life, would it be abundantly clear what you want to see Jesus do in the life of your friends? Would your dependence on God be evident if I could listen to your prayers? Which of your unbelieving friends did you pray for by name this week?

Because the truth is, if you're not praying, if we're not praying, we're not actually on mission. We're not a part of the mission. There is no mission without prayer because there are no results without God. I'm going to say that again. There is no mission without prayer because there are no results without God. So we pray.

That's part of how we actively begin to be on mission is that we pray. The first thing you can do is pray for yourself. You may hear that and go, well, that's kind of selfish, isn't it? No. That's what we talked about in our Prayer in the Holy Spirit series is that God is our good Father. And we're needy children.

And he wants us to ask him for stuff because we're needy children so that he can send the Holy Spirit. So part of the way you begin to do this is you pray for yourself. You're praying for your eyes to be open to the people who are around you. You're praying that God would send the Holy Spirit to give you courage. You're asking for the Holy Spirit to give you the right words. You're asking the Holy Spirit to actually help you care about the people who you are around.

We need God active in us first and foremost. Then we begin to pray for people by name. Pray for people by name. And this is for you personally and for us as a group. That we actually go before the throne of God asking him to move and work in the lives of people around us. Because if we actually want to see them become Christians, we actually want to see them saved, then that's going to be the active work of God in their lives.

And I want to tell you all this. There are two guys that our group began praying for two years ago by name on a regular basis. We started praying for those two guys to become Christians, that Jesus would move and work and lead them to repent. And both of those guys have become Christians, were baptized as a part of this church, and now are actively involved in community and serving to see more people become Christians. Now, as we were praying, we were also inviting them to go get lunch and spending time together. But that's a confidence booster for our group.

We get together and we remember, Man, two years ago this person wasn't saved and we prayed and God saved them. So that's part of how we can practically do it. Third thing is this, pray for others to go. Pray for others, the people who are in your group. Pray for other people in our church. Pray for Christians in our city and in our state and in our country and in other countries.

Jesus says, Pray to the Lord of the harvest that he would send out laborers because the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers few. We're praying for opportunities that God would open up the right doors. We get to join other people in their mission. Here's the deal. The more you begin to pray about people and pray about the people in your group who they're trying to reach, the more you begin to care. The more you're willing to invest your own time, your own energy, your own effort.

The stuff that we just talked about, working together as a group to see that actually be possible. Jump back to the text, verse 10. It says this, And he said to them, Whenever you enter a house, stay there until you depart from there. And if any place will not receive you and they will not listen to you, when you leave, shake off the dust that is on your feet as a testimony against them. Okay, there's a cultural thing going on here. In the Old Testament, when the prophets would go into a town to proclaim the message, if it was received, they would stay there and let their blessings stay there.

Okay? If they rejected the message, the sign that they would do as a sign of condemnation against them was that they would shake their sandals. They would shake the dust from their sandals and move on. So that's what he's talking about here, is that look for those type of people that will receive you. And again, what we've been doing in this series is saying, here's what Jesus did with his disciples. Now, how do we learn from it?

And specifically in this text, he's actually sending the disciples out. They're going out. So it's not really in the context of their day-to-day lives. It's more, he's actually sending them to places. And the church is still a sending agency. We still send people to other cities and other states and to other countries to share the gospel and to plant more churches.

That's why our church partnered with City Church for our gift project. Last year, we gave $2,300. And 25 people from Columbia, South Carolina moved to Knoxville, Tennessee. And I'm happy to tell you that they have since doubled moving there. So now they've got 25 that moved in and 25 that were actually from Knoxville.

And starting in January, they're going to be beginning like a worship service. It's like we've got to be a part of that. That's why we're a part of a church planting network with them and with three other churches. That's why in the future, we want to partner with unreached people groups and other parts of our world to see them become Christians. So the church does send out.

But for us, what we're looking at today is how do we take this same idea and apply it to right now? How do I apply this to the everyday? And here's how we say it. Here's how we say what we're looking at in this passage. Build with those who want to build. So in this passage, it says, Go to people who will welcome you into their homes.

Some of the other gospel accounts say like, Go to people of peace. People who are open and receptive to your message. And if people aren't, just shake the dust from your sandals and keep moving. And so for us, we want to build with those who want to build. That means we're going to pour the majority of our time and energy into those who are receptive. Now, this isn't an excuse to be lazy or to not be persistent.

It's a strategy thing. If someone is open and receptive to the gospel, you want to spend the majority of your time there. There's a lady in my community group that when she talks about me inviting her to be a part of our group, she says, Well, I basically just ran out of excuses. Yep. I'm persistent, if nothing else. I think the word she used was annoying, but let's not split hairs.

But what it's talking about here is building with those who want to build, going after those who are receptive. So how do we do that? Reach people in your calendar. Reach people in your calendar. Here's what I mean. Okay.

What? Y'all don't like the popping sound effects as we talk? Here's what I mean. We are surrounded by people constantly. The people that you work with, the people that you are in relationship with. And honestly, these are the easiest people for us to reach.

And one of the most common excuses that people give for not being on mission is that, Man, I don't have time. I don't have time to add something else into my schedule. Well, here's the beauty of seeing all of life as your place, as your means for being on mission. First of all, it kind of makes that excuse crumble apart. But that means that every situation, every relationship, every circumstance that you find yourself in is an opportunity for you to build relationships and to be on mission.

Work, school, coworkers, I already said work, neighbors, friends, family, the person at the gas station, the person at the DMV. All of those are opportunities for us to begin building relationships. So you can ask two questions to kind of figure out what are my options here? How do I spend my time? How do I spend my time? Who has God already placed me around?

How do I spend my time? What are the things that I do? And who are the people that God has already placed me around? And for the majority of us in this room, whether it be school or work, that is the place that you spend the majority of your time outside of anything else. I mean, we spend so much time at work or at school. And so we actually begin to look for ways to be in relationship with the people that we work with.

Here's how that shows up. Just imagine for a second that instead of going out to eat, going to eat lunch by yourself or maybe even just going to sit in your car for a couple of minutes of peace and quiet, you actually began inviting the people that you work with to go have lunch with you or you began going and sitting in the break room to look for people that you could have a conversation with, to begin building a relationship with. What if the people that you actually asked, how are you doing, that you actually stopped and listened? I'm for real. Like these are the people that you're in school with or that you were with.

They really don't have an option to not be around you. And so you get to begin to be strategic. All the other things we've already talked about, like praying and asking for God to be active in their lives. And then as you begin to talk with them and build relationships, you're going, okay, God, help me actually listen. Help me be able to share good news with them. Help me be able to encourage them.

Help me to be able to help guide them in the life situations that they may have going on. Before I started working for our church, I worked at Dick's Sporting Goods for two years. And I got to experience this firsthand. There's a guy that's a part of our church whose name is David. And David and I worked in the same department at work. And we just, I just talked to him.

We built a relationship. We talked about things that we had in common. We talked about Clemson. We talked about our love for golf. Then I found out, like he's got a pretty odd last name, that one of his cousins was one of my professors at PC.

And then we went out to lunch together. And then he and his wife started hanging out with our community group. Like it was just building normal relationships with someone who was receptive. Let's see. Let's see if I can tell another story.

My group's laughing because I tell these stories all the time. But it's not even just in the good times. It can also be in the frustrating situations. So there was this time, I know you're all going to find this hard to believe. There was a time when I did something at work that I wasn't supposed to do. I was hitting golf balls in the golf simulator when I was supposed to be helping people.

And someone went online and wrote a comment about how nobody could help them because he was too busy working on his chip shots in the range. And Tony Ando was the store manager at the time. But they didn't know who it was. And so they went to the golf pro and said, who was it? Who was watching it? And the golf pro was, I really don't know who it was.

And he came to me and he goes, look, dude, this was you. You were watching the department, right? And I was like, yes, I was watching. He's like, look, man, I'll just tell him I didn't know who it was. I was like, man, I can't do that. I'm asking you to be dishonest and I'm not being real.

So I went to Tony's office and I sat down and said, hey, I just want you to know I was the person who was watching the golf department. I'm sorry. I was doing something that I should not have been doing. I just want to apologize because that's not who I am. I'm a Christian. And so I just wanted to ask for your forgiveness.

And from that moment, the relationship that Tony and I had changed because I was willing to go and admit a mistake. And even in admitting my mistakes, was able to share the gospel in a way that I had not been able to previously. That's what I'm saying. We've got all these different opportunities at work. So begin reaching the people who are in your calendar.

The second thing is this. Be a friend who is a Christian. Simply be a friend who is a Christian. Another reason that people give for not being on mission is that I'm afraid. Now, they may not say this. They may say things like, I don't want to hurt people's feelings or I don't want to lose friends over this or I don't want to mess this up.

I don't know enough. But if we actually believe the gospel is good news for all of life, all of that just kind of falls apart. Because ultimately, we get to do this with other people as we're praying for God to be active and at work. So we just get to be a friend who is a Christian. It's not always going to mean that you just come out with your Bible laid open and just telling them all of this stuff. Be a friend who's a Christian.

You begin listening. Here's how you do it. You begin listening to what's going on in their life. And when they come to you and ask, what should I do about this in my marriage? What should I do about this with my money? The way you get to respond is, well, I'm a Christian.

So that impacts how I think about this. But here's how it is. Here's how I would handle that. Here's what I believe to be true. Nobody's offended by that because you're talking about what's true for you. You get to begin looking for people who've invited you to things.

Who's the person that always wants to come talk to you at work? Or talk to you at school? That may be the very person that God wants you to reach. When you go for walks in the neighborhood, who's the one person who's like waving to you and wants to talk to you? Like, go be their friend who's a Christian. I already told you a little bit about how that shows up at work.

How it shows up in the frustrating situations. It's all of life. If following Jesus is primary for you, it's eventually going to come out in the conversations that you have. You don't have to put this weird pressure on yourself to tell them everything about Jesus. You begin to listen to their life and love them and serve them well. And eventually God will open the door, whether it's through you or somebody in your group, to share the gospel with them.

So the way we answer Jesus' call to be sent out is that we go together, that we trust God, and that we build with those who want to build. So the question becomes, for those who have answered Jesus' call to come follow him, the question becomes, are we answering that call to be sent out? Are we actually going and sharing the gospel? Are we looking for those opportunities all around us? Because there are no unsent Christians. And for those who have been radically changed by the gospel, who realize that Jesus came on mission to save us, to give us ultimate fulfillment and life in him, how much more do we want to go out and share that with other people?

And we get to do it with other people in the context of normal, everyday life. We get to begin praying and praying for other people that our group members have relationships with. That we get to build with those who actually want to build, throwing parties and going to football games and doing all the things that God's called us to do because there are no unsent Christians. We get to follow Jesus in our normal lives going out. And so Raz and Isaac are going to come back up and lead us in a song as we close. But I want to help us see how we can respond in three ways today.

The first one is this. If you're not a Christian, the first thing that we talked about this morning is the way that you can respond this morning. Jesus' call to you first and foremost is to come to him. And we invite you to do that, to come to him, to repent of your sin and place your faith in Jesus and begin a lifelong, eternal relationship with him. If you're a Christian and you've listened to what we've been talking about today and you know that you've been sent, but you're thinking about work and you're thinking about family and you're just realizing, I haven't been doing this. That's part of what Jesus calls us to do.

And so my invitation to you this morning is to repent, to repent of that. And then the third thing is change. Actually begin to go. Don't just leave here and go, man, that's such an inspiring message. We should be on a mission. That's great.

No, actually, your life begins to change. My hope for you is that you walk out of this room today thinking specifically about people at work or people that you're in school with. And you begin thinking about the conversations that you're going to have with the people in your group about how you can begin to serve together, how you can invite each other in on the mission. And that as the years go by as a part of our church, we would see more people become Christians and more community groups multiplied as Jesus does work in the city as we join him on his mission. Let's pray.

God, we can't do this without you. We don't have the ability to. We can't change people's minds. We can't change their hearts. And so first and foremost, God, we pray that you would be working in the lives of the people around us. God, we thank you for the wonderful opportunity you've given us to actually go out and share the gospel.

God, I pray that we would leave today and actually begin making plans for how we can reach our friends and our neighbors and our coworkers. God, there's so many people who need to hear the good news of the gospel, and you've given us the opportunity to do that. God, I pray that through our community's own mission that you would begin to do work, that you would help people repent of their sin, that you would help them place faith in you. God, that you would give us courage and boldness and joy as we follow you in it. In Jesus' name, amen.

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