“When you enter a town and are welcomed, eat what is offered to you. Heal the sick who are there and tell them, ‘The kingdom of God has come near to you.’ But when you enter a town and are not welcomed, go into its streets and say, ‘Even the dust of your town we wipe from our feet as a warning to you. Yet be sure of this: The kingdom of God has come near.’” (Luke 10:8-11)
Jesus
sent thirty-six teams of two out to the towns and villages that were on His
itinerary. They were His street team or advance team. I’ve heard some explain
that this was an experiment on God’s part. Could His power be extended beyond Jesus?
That suggests to me that God isn’t omniscient. Instead, I come back to the
title given to him by so many: Rabbi. Teacher. This is one of the titles we
need to keep in mind whenever we’re dealing with God. When we are dealing with
the kingdom of God, we’re dealing not just with the King, but also with the
Teacher and the Father.
If this was an experiment, it wasn’t His
experiment. It was His guiding His disciples to experiment or to step out in
faith. He knew what they could and would do, and what the people could and
would do. They didn’t. They needed to gain some experience. What’s more, the
people needed to experiment. Could these folks who came in Jesus’ name to
proclaim the kingdom be trusted?
As
I read this passage, I cringe. Am I supposed to go out and preach in the
streets that the kingdom of God is near? That might have worked then, because there
were lots of Jews who were hoping for a kingdom of God – not necessarily the
one Jesus and the disciples were offering, but some form of a kingdom of God.
In America in the Twenty-first Century, kingdoms aren’t good talking points. Is
that the message we’re to bring? I think it is, but perhaps not in those words.
There
are other factors here. Jesus didn’t send them alone. He sent out thirty-six
teams of two. And He only sent out thirty-six teams of two. Was that everyone
present? Can we be absolutely sure that all His disciples were sent to do this
task? Maybe the women stayed behind because their going out would create scandal in that culture. Maybe the very young or the very old remained behind, along
with whatever caregivers they needed. Only seventy-two were sent. Jesus may
have given those who remained behind other tasks. But those who were sent went.
Those
who were sent had a message but also a task. They were to heal the
sick. We already know that God didn’t give everyone the gift of healing. In His
command that we love our neighbors as ourselves, however, we can also bring the
kingdom near or into their lives by
serving/helping them in some other way. We may not think about it in this way
often, but this is the purpose of our gifts, to bring God’s kingdom into the lives
of another. And maybe, just maybe, we shouldn't be afraid to experiment.
This morning, our youth group
ReplyDeleteat church spoke of their
experiences at Church camp.
Part of their days were spent
ministering to a group of troubled
teens. Rather than preaching the
word of God, they tried to show
and live the love of God. They
invited the teens to join in their
fun activities and talk with them,
and show them understanding.