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The Messengers of the King
by
John MacArthur
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be obtained
by calling
Matthew 10:1 Tape GC 2270
Now remember from our last study together that our blessed Lord
saw Israel, and surely the whole world as a vast field to be
harvested. That’s why in verse 37 He said, “The harvest is plenteous.”
Everybody is involved. He could see the multitude coming to Him and
then as He looked at that multitude it stretched across the world and
He could see all men as a field to be harvested. And as we shared with
you the harvest is judgment. Jesus saw them in light of the
inevitability of judgment, the inevitability of coming doom, the
inevitability, the inexorable moving toward hell. They were grain,
either to be burned or to be barned, to be gathered in or to be cast
out. And they had been betrayed by their shepherds, who were false
shepherds, who had mangled them and mauled them and mutilated them and
left them for dead. And when Jesus saw people that way He was moved
with compassion, it says in verse 36. Literally He felt their pain, He
suffered, He hurt down deep as He Himself experienced their agony. And
out of that He calls on His disciples, in verse 38 and asks them to
pray, and He asks them to pray that God will send forth laborers.
Because it is clear that He Himself can’t do it, and so we enter a new
dimension in the gospel of Matthew as the Lord begins to add to His
own ministry these twelve men who can increase the potential for
reaching the field that inevitability is to be harvested. So the Lord
asks them to pray.
And then as we saw last time as we come to verse 1, He calls the
very ones He asked to pray to do the ministry themselves. First in
verse 38 it’s pray, then in verse 6 of chapter 10 it’s go, and then in
verse 7 it’s preach. The very ones who were the ones praying are the
ones who become the ones going and preaching. You see when they had
begun to see the world as Christ saw it, when they had looked with the
eyes of Jesus, when they had felt with the heart of compassion that He
had then they would begin to pray and as they began to pray they would
begin also to see that they needed to go. To warn men about the
judgment, to invite them into the kingdom. Prayer is never enough you
see, you can’t content yourself with just praying, there has to be the
willingness to go.
Martin Luther had a friend, a very dear friend who was a fellow
monk. They were in the Catholic Church but Luther became convinced
that justification was not by the flesh and the law, but that justification was by faith and he was convinced of that because that’s what
the Bible said. And he determined that he was going to reform the
Catholic Church, and he was going to go into the dust and the heat of
the battle head—on and be the confronter. His friend said to him, I
want to assist you because I believe equally in what you’re doing, and
they made an agreement, Luther would go into the dust of the battle,
he would go down into the world and fight, and his friend would
retreat to a monastery, and in that monastery he would pray and seek
God on the behalf of Luther’s task. He would hold up his hands as it
were through prayer, and that’s how they began. And the struggle was
fierce for Martin Luther, and he reported back to his friend and his
friend intensified his prayer on his behalf. And then one night the
biographer says his friend had a dream, and he dreamed that he saw the
world as a field. And as he looked over this field that stretched over
the entire world as he could perceive it in the dream, he saw one
solitary man going through that field as big as the globe. And in the
dream it was apparent that such was an impossible and heartbreaking
task. He looked closer in his dream and he saw the face of that one
man and it was the face of his dear friend Martin Luther. He woke up,
and he went immediately to find Luther and he said to him this, “I
must leave my prayers, for God has shown me that praying is not
enough, I must give myself to the work.” And so he set aside his pious
solitude, went down into the dirt and the heat of the battle to labor
beside his beloved friend.
I think that’s where we are in Matthew 10. That one solitary
person, Jesus Christ has moved through the field, alone, until now.
And now He is going to call twelve others as ministers. He’s going to
commission them as His personal ambassadors and send them out. And
chapter 10 is the record of their initial sending to assist in warning
men of the inevitable harvest of judgment.
Now the major thrust of the passage begins in verse 5, and from
there on to the end of the chapter you have the most marvelous
instruction about discipleship, the most marvelous instruction about
what happens when you go to minister for Christ, tremendous insight
into what it is to preach and represent the Lord Jesus Christ. And it
will instruct us, believe me, and change us I’m quite confident.
But before we get to verse 5 we have to really be fair about
looking at the first four verses, they’re very simple in terms of what
they say, and yet hidden behind them is some tremendous richness that
I want you to see. Now for this morning I, I just want to mention
three features of the first four verses. Three elements of the
commissioning of the twelve, first their initiation, and we’ll talk
a lot about that, then their impact, and we’ll talk briefly about that,
and then their identity, and we’ll talk about that next time. But we
see their initiation in verse 1, their impact in verse 1, and then
their identity is given in verses 2 through 4 as He names all twelve
of them.
Now as we look at this I want you to do some thinking with me if
you will. I want to just explain to you some of the things behind His
preparation and calling of these men, but I want you to see how they
apply in your own life. I want you to make them directly applicable to
you because I really believe that we’re going to look at the way Jesus
prepared and called these twelve, and it is a tremendous pattern for
our own understanding of discipleship. I want you to learn how you
should disciple someone else, and I want you to learn how God wants to
disciple you. And I think you’ll see it here. This is our Lord’s
discipling pattern, this is how He trained the twelve.
First let’s look at the initiation, and we want to spend our time
mostly on this, the initiation of the apostles, and we only have one
statement, “And when he had called unto him his twelve disciples, he
gave them authority.” Or having called unto Him His twelve disciples He
gave them authority. And as I was reading that, and having called unto
Him His twelve disciples, I began to think, now how did He do that? How
did He initiate this, how did He get them involved? How did He get them
to the place where He called them and then sent them? Well first of all
look at the phrase itself, the verb is proskaleo, and uhm, it’s a
simple term, kaleo means to call, pros means toward, it’s an intense
word it means to call some one toward you so that you’re face to face
with them. It has the idea of a face to face calling so that one can
receive a commission from the other. This is an official commissioning.
He called them before His face to give them commands, to give them a
commission, to send them, to instruct them, it’s the same word used in
the 13th chapter of Acts, verse 2, where God was calling those leaders
who were in the church at Antioch. An official, if you will, commissioning. So it’s time now for the commissioning of the disciples, and if
you’ll notice verse 2 He says they are the twelve apostles, they’re the
disciples in verse 1, they’re the apostles in verse 2. They were
disciples when they were learning, they were apostles when they were
sent. Disciple means learner, mathetes means learner, apostle is
apostello it means to be sent. First they were learners then they were
sent. And so this is their transition from being learners in verse 1 to
being sent in verse 2, they’ve been trained and now they’re sent. Our
Lord is calling them to work with Him, He’s calling them to gather some
of the lost and mauled and exhausted and prostrate shepherdless sheep
before the reapers, who are the angels it tells us in Matthew 13, come
to cut them down and take them and throw them in the fire of judgment.
It’s time to evangelize, it’s time to preach the kingdom, it’s time as
verse 6 says to go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, and going
to preach and tell them the kingdom of heaven is at hand. And so this
is a critical point in the training of the twelve and I want us to
focus on that for a moment.
There were basically four phases in Christ’s training of the twelve,
and I’m just going to give you these briefly. Number one, was their
salvation or their conversion. And if you look sometime, not now but
some other time at John 1:35 to 51, you find there an illustration of
the initial calling to faith or calling to conversion or calling to
salvation that our Lord used in the lives of these twelve. He called
many, but there it pinpoints several of them in John 1, who are well
known to us. And that is the initial calling, they were called to
believe, they were called to Christ in a conversion sense. But then
after that they went back to their jobs, back to their secular
employment, back to their homes. And there came a second phase, and
that is recorded for us in Matthew chapter 4 verses 18 to 22, and this
was phase two in the training of the twelve. “He saw two brethren,
Simon, called Peter, and Andrew, his brother, casting a net into the
sea; for they were fishers. He said unto them, follow me, and I will
make you fishers of men.” Now, they had already been converted, I
believe they had already been saved in the the sense that we believe in
conversion or salvation, they had already believed in Christ, they had
already affirmed that He was the Messiah as they did in John 1. But now
He is calling them to leave the nets, and to leave the secular
employment, and to leave their homes, and to follow Him exclusively and
totally. This is their calling, if you will, into ministry. They’d been
called to salvation, that’s phase one, now they’re called to attach
themselves to Him permanently, that’s phase two. And He’s going to make
them into fishers of men. If, if you’d like to see this in perspective
this was their education, they were called out of their employment,
they were called away from their livelihood, and they were grown men,
they were called away from everything they ever knew about making a
living and they were called to follow Jesus around for three years to
be trained. This was their schooling. And by the way, their training
encompassed alot of people, for wherever Jesus went there was a large
number of disciples. Some stuck around and according to John 6 some
left and followed Him no more. But in the midst of this group were
these special twelve, and they were being trained along with everybody
else, and perhaps even more specifically because the Lord knew that the
twelve were special.
Now there is a third phase of their training, of their calling.
First to conversion, then to ministry, thirdly, they are to be sent
out, and that’s were we come in verse 1 of chapter 10. This is not the
final phase this is the third phase, and this is a sending out, and
Mark tells us they were sent out two by two, they weren’t ready to go
alone yet, they had to have one another along for support. And may I
also add that the Lord stuck with them very closely in phase three. He
was like a sort of a mother eagle watching His eaglets as they begin to
fly, He was always there and they’re always checking back in all the
time, and letting Him know how it was going. This was their internship,
this was the time for them to go out on their first short term missions
assignment, and get a feel for how it was out there, to do an
internship. And then after a season of this personal labor they
returned to the Lord and they remained again a long time with the Lord
being taught and taught more and more. And by the way they learned
better now because they had been out there and they knew where the
trouble was, and they knew what they needed to know and there was a
little more desperation when they came back scarred a little bit from
this first shot at being on their own.
Then there was a fourth phase of the training of the twelve, and
that was after the resurrection and after the ascension. When Christ
went back into heaven He sent the Holy Spirit, the Holy Spirit came
into them and they then scattered and went into all the world discipling the nations, and that was the final sending of the twelve.
So there was a conversion phase, there was a calling to Himself
for training phase, there was a first experience phase and then there
was a final sending. And as we come into chapter 10 we’re in phase
three. This is their first experience alone in the field, and He
doesn’t let them out very far, but just far enough to learn where the
trouble is going to come from. Their initiation into ministry, so we
call it the initiation. They were hand-picked by Jesus from all the
other disciples who followed Him, He knew they were to be the ones, He
even hand-picked Judas because that fit the prophetic plan as well. He
chose these twelve men to be the ones who would go throughout the world
to, to establish the church and verify His Messiahship and affirm His
resurrection from the dead as well as His atoning death. He taught them
and taught them and taught them and taught them, that they might be the
representatives of the dynamic of the Gospel.
Now, in the process of training them, phase two and phase three,
Jesus was basically overcoming five manifest problems that they had,
and I want to talk about those. These five problems are very common in
the process of discipling, I know the Lord is working with me, because
in a small sense I am one sent. I’m not an official apostle, nobody is
today, but I’m also sent, the, the word is still true of me, I’ve been
sent to preach the Word, so have you. And as I look at how the Lord
works in my life I can see parallels as to how He worked in their
lives. And one thing really excites me and that is that He didn’t have
alot to work with in their case, and He still doesn’t in my case, and
that’s very gratifying. He really had a scruffy group of guys. In fact
if, if some phony religionist had written this gospel, if Jesus was
some fraud trying to convince everybody of His perfection and convince
everybody that He was God He never would have picked twelve such crummy
characters to hang around Him. Because by the time you get to the end
of the story you wonder whether He could ever pull it off with them,
and some people might question His ability on that basis alone. It’s a
marvelous insight into the honesty of God, as He sees Christ dealing
with men who are weak. And we’ll see that in a minute.
But as we move to that let me just tell you a little about the
training process, and a little about their initiation and a couple of
things in the background. First of all they were chosen sovereignly,
that is apparent. They play a critical role in the history - of the
world and in eternity as well, and God had it all laid out so that
they were chosen sovereignly. It says in verse 1, “He called unto him
his twelve disciples.” In fact in Mark 3:13 is a wonderful statement,
it says, “He called unto Himself whom he would.” It was His choice, His
will, His sovereign purpose. There was no executive search. It wasn't,
now how many of you would like to be apostles? Put up your hand. It
wasn’t that. If you can’t ah, succeed.. .if you’re a lousy fisherman
maybe you’d like to go into the ministry. It wasn’t that. They were
called by the sovereign will and purpose of God, He knew the men He
wanted and they were not consulted and neither was anybody else
consulted but God the Father, it was foreordained like Abraham, like
Moses, like Jeremiah, it was foreordained like Isaiah, it was
foreordained like John the Baptist, foreordained like the Apostle Paul
who was called into the ministry against his will. And so did Jesus say
in John 15, “Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained
you, that you should go forth and bring forth fruit.” Sovereignly God
chose these individuals, and that has always been God’s pattern, He
chose Israel, He chose the apostles, and He chooses His church, and He
chooses those who serve Him within His church. So that we who are
representing Him are the called according to His purpose.
Now may I add something to that? They were sovereignly chosen, but
secondly they were chosen after a night of prayer. Yes, Christ chose
whom He would but marvelously and wonderfully in His submission to the
Father it occurred only after He sought the Father’s will. This is such
a wonderful thing in terms of discipling, as we select those that we’ll
pour our life into it should be only after great prayer, so that God
can show us who it is that we are to give ourselves to. Listen to Luke
6:12, “And it came to pass in those days, that he (being Jesus) went
out into a mountain to pray, and continued all night in prayer to God.”
He prayed all night. Then this, “And when it was day, he called unto
him his disciples; and of them” out of the whole group “he chose
twelve, whom also he named apostles.” They were chosen sovereignly,
they were chosen after a night of prayer as the submissive Son in His
humility sought only the will of the Father. And in John 17 He affirms
that indeed they were the ones the Father wanted, given by the Father
to the Son, He says, “- I have manifested thy name unto the men whom
thou gayest me out of the world; thine they were, and thou gayest them
to me.” John 17:6. He affirmed that they were the gift of God. And so
these very special men, very special were chosen by God and affirmed by
the Son after all night of prayer.
So they were chosen sovereignly, they were chosen through prayer,
and thirdly, and this is what I want to focus on, they were chosen to
be trained, to be trained. Training is an essential part, they weren’t
chosen just to be sent out, there has to be a training time. And for
them it was a training of three years, walking with the Lord, they left
their nets, they left their boats, they left their crops, they left
their businesses, they left their tax collecting stands, they left
everything and they wandered around behind Jesus. And some have
criticized, one writer says, “They have no occupation, they’ve given up
the pursuits in which they were engaged, their fishing, their tax
gathering and their agriculture. They carry on no business, they simply
walk around and behind their leader talking to each other or to Him,
and when He speaks to the people who begin to gather, they listen just
like everybody else. The only thing they do is go with Him from place
to place, they are idle and it begins to be a question whether it’s not
doing harm and giving rise to reproach that twelve grown men are being
kept idle for no apparent purpose and neglecting obvious duties in
order to do so.” End quote. Twelve grown men just roaming around like a
bunch of freeloaders. I suppose you could look at it like that. But on
the other hand there has to be training. There are a lot of people who
are called to Christ and maybe called to the ministry and they’re like
the guy who jumped on his horse and rode off madly in all directions,
they just want to go they don’t know where or to do what. But Jesus
knew they needed to be trained, to be taught, to become disciples,
mathetes, learners, before they could be sent. Moses spent forty years
being trained, Paul only three years, and these three. Moses must have
been a very tough case. Some of us have spent three year, four or five
years in seminary, others have spent years and years not in a formal
education but learning the Word of God, maybe being taught by another
Christian. But there has to be a training time before one can be sent.
And I can’t imagine any greater thrill than to have been trained by the
Lord Himself, can you? I mean when I think about that it’s just mind
boggling, to just walk around. And in - ah, Matthew 11:29 He said to,
to the group which included them, “Learn of me.” Oh, my, what a
training. Listen, learning doesn’t happen because you sit in a class
and hear a lecture, learning really happens when you watch a holy man
or a holy woman walk through life. That’s when you learn. You learn
from the pattern, and the consistency of life and that’s what
discipleship is, it isn’t ten weeks in a class it’s walking with a
godly person and feeling their heartbeat, and hearing them speak and
seeing them pray and spending time. Now I’ll be frank with you, it
wasn’t any easy job to train this bunch, the best of them, their
leader, Peter still didn’t have a clue what he was doing even after the
resurrection. Well they were really a defective bunch. And it’s good to
see their defects because it gives us hope that God can use us.
Now let me come to the five things I think Jesus had to work with,
to overcome, and you’re going to see them in your own life. They were
chosen sovereignly, they were chosen also by prayer, and they were
chosen to be trained. And in the training the Lord had to deal with
five basic inadequacies, and it’s the same with us and it’s the same
with the people we disciple.
Number one, they lacked spiritual understanding. Now that’s pretty
tough to start with, right? You’re going to work twelve guys into
evangelizing the whole world, only they have one basic problem, they do
not understand spiritual truth. Oh man! That’s a tough way to begin but
that’s exactly what He had, they were blind, they were thick, they were
dull, they were stupid. And they didn’t understand the parables. You
know I, I just can’t help but chuckle every time the Lord says to them,
do you understand this? You know what they always say? Yes Lord. Always
say that. Yes Lord. Did they understand? No, they didn’t understand.
But they were so dull they did not know they did not understand. And so
they always say, yes Lord, we understand. They didn’t understand the
parables, they didn’t understand the precepts He taught, it was so hard
to get through all of their prejudices and their preconceived
attitudes. Peter said to Him in 15:15, “Explain unto us this parable.
And Jesus said, Are you also yet without understanding?” I mean don’t
you understand yet? A certain frustration there, isn’t there? He
rebuked them, haven’t you got it yet?
The first class I took in seminary was a very difficult class, and
I’ll never forget that class, was going over my head I didn’t even
understand the vocabulary. And it was... I was taking Hebrew and Greek
and everything else at the same time and I had eighteen units in my
first semester, and I was under it. And I was trying to listen to all
these voices all day long. And in one class one fella asked a question,
the professor answered it. The professor was in a big hurry to cover a
whole lot of stuff and nobody really knew what he was talking about.
But he had to get it — across to us, and we weren’t really listening or
paying much attention to it. And another guy raised his hand and asked
the very same question that he had just spent five minutes answering.
Ohhh...He said to him, Sir, if you cannot ask a more intelligent
question than that do not ask a question, I have answered that
question. Well everybody just sort of went sshhh, under the seat and
nobody asked any questions after that and it was a great lesson about
listening. It was a great lesson about taking note of what’s going on,
and our Lord is saying the same thing, I know now where that teacher
got the model. You mean you still don’t understand that? You learn to
listen and perceive.
In Luke 18, just to show you how this goes on throughout the whole
time, later on in their time together. “He took them aside,” verse 31
of Luke 18, “he says, Behold, we’re going to Jerusalem, and all ‘things
that are written by the prophets concerning the Son of man shall be
accomplished.” Now that should have been a clue right there. All things
written by the prophets concerning the Son of man will be accomplished,
wow, we got that, we can figure that out, we know what the prophets
taught. “He’ll be delivered unto the Gentiles,” He said, “mocked,
spitefully treated, spit on; scourged, put to death. And the third day
he’ll rise again.” All the stuff that had been presented in the Old
Testament, some explicitly and some veiled, all that will be fulfilled,
and verse 34, “And they understood none of these things.” None of them.
You know - if I were the Lord at that point I’d say, are You sure these
are the right twelve? I mean We have been together a long.. . . I mean
couldn’t they have understood some of this? None of this? But all the
while they were saying, yes Lord, we understand. Don’t be fooled by
those who think they understand what you say, be sure they do. They
didn’t grasp the parables, they didn’t grasp the precepts and as I
pointed out there they didn’t even understand the suffering of Christ.
In John 13, Jesus humbled Himself and washed their feet and Peter said,
You’ll never wash my feet, and Jesus says to him, Peter you don’t
understand what I’m doing, do you? You don’t understand, but you’ll
understand in the future. In Matthew 16 Peter says, You’re never going
to go to the cross, and He says, “Oh, get thee behind me, Satan.” You
still don’t understand. This is the way it always went. And after the
resurrection and Peter had seen the risen Christ, Peter and all of his
buddies went back to fishing, can you imagine? Went right back to where
they started. And the Lord comes up there and of course He rerouted all
the fish in the sea so none went near their boat, they were never going
to be able to fish again. And then He gets them all into the shore and
in effect He says, what is going on? Do you love Me, Peter? Then feed
My sheep, that’s what I called you to do. You see here he is clear in
John 21 and he still doesn’t understand his role. He didn’t understand
his role, he didn’t understand the purpose of Christ’s sufferings, they
didn’t understand the principles, they didn’t understand the parables.
Lack of understanding. And that’s part of the discipleship process, you
have to overcome that. How did Jesus deal with that? Simply by
teaching, teaching, teaching, teaching, teaching. In fact when He came
back after His resurrection, for forty days Acts 1 says He taught them
the things pertaining to the kingdom of heaven. Just teaching,
teaching, teaching, teaching. He dealt with their lack of understanding
by instruction.
Now they had a second problem, lack of humility. They were
a proud, jealous, envious bunch. I can just see the Lord walking
down the road and they’re walking behind Him, elbowing each
other and pushing and shoving and.. .You say, well what makes
you think...those, those are the twelve apostles, you should
talk about them like that. Well we’ll let the Lord talk about
them, Mark 9, verse 33, “And they came to Capernaum; and, being
in the house, he asked them this, What was it that you argued
among yourselves about along the way?” What were you guys
fighting about behind Me? See all the while He’s going along He
knows they’re fighting back there. What was going on? “And they
held their peace;” they just got real sheepish and clammed up,
“because they’d been arguing among themselves,” get this, “who
would be the greatest.” Nice guys, huh? Real selfless, humble
souls. All the time our dear Lord is walking along they’re back
fighting about who is going to be the greatest. “And he sat them
down,” and He brought a little child, and He gave them a lesson
on humility. What a rebuke! Look at Matthew 20. Now the argument got really hot about who’d be the greatest, and James
and John had enough gall to get their mother into the deal. And
so in Matthew 20 verse 20, Then came to Him Mrs. Zebedee, and
she’s got her sons, and of course they worshiped Him first
because you always do that when you want something. “And he said
unto her, What do you want? She said unto him, Grant that these,
my two sons, may sit, the one on thy right hand, and the other
on the left, in thy kingdom.” Well I’ll tell you folks that is
really brash. I mean they wanted it so bad that they didn’t have
the courage to ask and they got their mother to do it, and they
stood there standing beside their mother while she asked that
ridiculously selfish thing. “Jesus answered and said, Do you
know not what you ask.” But that was typical, they didn’t know
what they heard, so why would they know what they asked. It
says, “Are you able to drink the cup that I shall drink, and be
baptized with the baptism that I’m baptized with? And they said
unto him, (what?) We are able.” Of course, of course we can
handle anything. Of course we can. “And he said unto them, all
right then you’ll drink the cup that I’ll drink, and you’ll be
baptized with the baptism that I’m baptized with, but you’ll
never sit on my right hand, or my left,” and what He was talking
about was martyrdom, persecution, in the case of James
martyrdom, in the case of John persecution and exile. You’re
going to go through the pain and the suffering and the anguish
you’re just not going to get the right and left seats, “because
they’re not mine to give.” And then verse 24, “When the other
ten heard about this, they were furious.” Why? Because they
wouldn’t stand for such pride? No. Because they went in front of
the other ten. They were mad that James and John were going to
get those places, and not them. Their indignation wasn’t
righteous it was selfish. And He says to them, boy you guys are
all fouled up about what it means to be a leader. Verse 27,
“Whoever would be chief among you, let him be your (what? your)
servant.” You got it all wrong, and so He had to teach them. And
then He used Himself as an example, “Son of man came not to be
ministered unto, but to minister, and give his life a ransom for
many.”
Now, He had to deal with their lack of humility, how did He
deal with it? I believe He dealt with it by giving them a
demonstration of His own humility. He likened Himself to a
little child, in Mark 9. He likened Himself here to a servant.
In John 13 He washed their feet and then He said you should do
in your love to one another as I have done to you. Right? A new
commandment, love one another as I have loved you. In other
words He overcame their lack of understanding by instruction, He
overcame their lack of humility by example, He used an example
of His own life as a teaching tool.
They had a third problem. They had a lack of faith. Which is
fairly severe if you’re going to be in the ministry, if you
don’t believe God. They had a lack of faith. Over and over and
over again, in fact probably the most common phrase He ever said
to them was this, “0 ye of (what?) little faith.” He would do so
many things and still they didn’t see. In fact in Mark 4:40 He
says to them, “How is it that you have no faith?” How can it be
that after all of this you still don’t believe? How can it be?
How can it be? At the end of Mark’s gospel in chapter 16 and the
14th verse it says, He rebuked them, because of “their unbelief
and hardness of heart, because they believed not those who had
seen him after he had risen.” They didn’t even believe reports
of the resurrection. Now what a bunch to work with, and how do
you ever transform them into those who can change the world?
Boy. How did He deal with their unbelief? By miracles, by -
mighty deeds, showing them His power over and over. In fact the
miracles... I’ll be very honest with you, I believe in my heart
that He did the miracles primarily for the disciples, not for
the crowds, they were secondary. The disciples needed to be sure
and absolute and confident, they needed to know the resurrection
really happened, He appeared to them and He appeared to them
again and He let them touch Him and feel Him and see Him, they
had to know, and “He showed himself” Acts 1, “by many infallible
proofs.” So He overcame their lack of understanding with
teaching, He overcame their lack of humility with example, He
overcame their lack of faith by miracles and mighty deeds. All
of this was part of the teaching process.
They had a fourth problem, lack of commitment, lack of
commitment. They would say, we will never forsake You. Why
everyone may forsake You, says Peter, I’ll never forsake You. I
would never deny You. Oh they really talked it up, but when it
came down to the crisis of that terrible hour when Christ needed
them the most they were gone. And Peter was denying and Judas
was betraying and the other ten just split, got out of there.
They couldn’t handle it, they were gone. They talked a good
game. In Luke 5:11 you know what it says? When He called His
disciples, “they forsook all.” Isn’t that interesting? When He
called them they forsook all. In Mark 14:50 it says, “they all
forsook.” They took off. They deserted Christ when they saw the
swords and the staves and the lanterns and the Romans. When they
started to smell death they got out. Oh yeah, they thought
they’d be okay but they weren’t. How did Jesus deal with that?
How did He deal with that? Luke 22:31 I just love this. Peter is
the issue in his denial, “The Lord says, Simon, Simon,” He calls
him by his old name because he was acting like his old self,
“Simon, Simon,” listen to this, “behold, Satan hath desired to
have you, that he may sift you like wheat.” He wants to test you
Peter, and you’re going to flee and you’re going to deny Me, but
here’s the remedy, “I have prayed for you, that your faith fail
not.” You can stop right there. How did Jesus deal with their
lack of commitment? He dealt with it through prayer. I’ve tried
to disciple men in my life, men with a lack of understanding and
tried to work with that by teaching them. Men with a lack of
humility, and tried to work with that by trying to demonstrate
the right spirit. Men with a lack of commitment, and tried to
overcome. .or lack of faith rather, and tryed to overcome that
by showing them dramatically the power of God. And men with a
lack of commitment, and tried to deal with that through praying
for them. Jesus in John 16 says now - I want you to know that
you’re going to get persecuted, they’re going to persecute you,
they’re going to hate you, they’re going to despise you. And He
comes to the end of the 16th chapter talking about that. And
then immediately goes into chapter 17 and He starts to pray, and
He says, Father, “I pray for them; not that you’d take them out
of the world, but that you’d keep them from (what?) the evil
one.” You see He prayed for their lack of commitment.
Fifth problem they had was a lack of power. They were
impotent, they had a lack of power. They were weak and helpless.
For an illustration of that and there are many but for one would
be Matthew 17, “And they were come to the multitude, there came
to him a certain man kneeling down, and saying, Lord, have mercy
on my son; he’s epileptic, and greatly vexed; and he falls into
the fire, and often into the water. And I brought him to your
disciples, and they could not cure him.” Now they’ve been out
trying to do their thing and they’re, they’re doing all the
motions but nothing happens. “Jesus said, 0 faithless and
perverse generation, how long shall I be with you? How long
shall I bear with you?” Who do you think He was talking to? Well
some people think He was talking to the whole crowd, some people
think He was talking to the twelve. Oh, you guys, how long do I
have to put up with this? “Bring him here. Jesus rebuked the
demon, and departed out of him; and the child was cured from
that very hour. And then came the disciples to Jesus privately,
and said, Why couldn’t we do that? And Jesus said, Because of
your (what?) unbelief; If you had faith of a mustard seed, you
could move a mountain. And you ought to know that things like
this only happen through prayer and fasting.” Great faith,
intense prayer. They were impotent, they didn’t have power. How
did He deal with that? I believe He dealt with that in one
marvelous way. In John 20, “He says he breathed on them, and
said, Receive ye the Holy Spirit.” And in Acts 1:8 it says, “And
when the Holy Spirit is come, you shall receive power.”
Listen, it’s very simple. The disciples were chosen
sovereignly by God to be the associates of Christ to found the
church. They were chosen through prayer, they were chosen to be
trained, and in their training they had to overcome a lack of
spiritual understanding through instruction, a lack of humility
through example, a lack of faith through wondrous miracles, a
lack of commitment through prayer, and a lack of power through
the agency of the Spirit of God in their lives. And the lesson
for us is the same, when you disciple somebody you’re going to
have the same problems with the same remedies. What a bunch. But
as one writer says, “In them He saw hidden weakness and
incipient strength. There was an abundance of chaff with the
scanty grains of wheat which would need much winnowing but He
was equal to the task. The germs of promise were there and in
time would yield the perfect fruit. He believed in the men He
had chosen and what was more, He had absolute confidence in His
own power to make them what He wanted them to be.” There’s hope
for us.
Boy I identify with those twelve, don’t you? I’m so glad God
could use me, I’m so glad that I can find others and invest my
life in them. And they accomplished the task, yeah, He, He
transformed them, He really did. And you know when they looked
at them in Acts 4:13, all of the hotshots in Jerusalem looked at
them and said, “These are ignorant and unlearned men.” How is it
that they have accomplished this? They’re the.. .they have
literally filled Jerusalem with their doctrine, and they’re
uneducated in fact they’re ignoramuses and they’re unskilled.
But it says this, “They took note of them,” I love this, “that
they had been with Jesus.” Isn’t that good? How did they know
that? How did they know that they’d been with Jesus? I’ll tell
you how they knew. They did the same things Jesus did. They said
the same thing Jesus said, they loved the same way Jesus loved.
Finally, the job was done, and they went out as living mirrors
to reflect Christ. And that’s why they finally wound up calling
them Christians, which means what? Little Christs. And it’s all
bound up in Luke 6:40 listen to it, “A pupil is not above his
teacher, but every one after he has been fully trained, will be
like his teacher.” Isn’t that great? Jesus trained them in three
years, and when they went out they were like their teacher. And
they graduated. I think graduation day is in John 15, when Jesus
said, “I will no longer call you servants,” that’s down here, “I
will now call you (what?) friends.” That was graduation day.
They had graduated. That night in the upper room before His
death He gave them their certificates. They had graduated. Think
of it, think of it, what they learned in being with Christ,
literally transformed their life and as a result transformed the
world. Can you imagine walking everyday with Jesus? Can you
imagine hearing His matchless wisdom, everything He ever said
was perfectly wise and absolutely true. Can you imagine being
with some one who never lost His temper, never got angry, but
was only righteously indignant over things that took glory from
God? Can you imagine being with some one who cared absolutely
nothing for Himself but always gave Himself to everybody else?
Being with some one who was totally consumed with literally
wearing Himself out with fatigue to do the will and the work of
another person? Can you imagine being with some one who could
love anybody and everybody? Some one who could raise the dead
and heal the sick and give sight to the blind, hearing to the
deaf?
Well it had an affect on them, and you don’t get that kind of
training by sitting in a classroom, you get it by walking around
with a godly man. That’s the process of discipleship, they were
with Him, they were with Him it says. The twelve were ordained
according to Mark 3:14, “that they should be with him.” That’s
the process, they were with Him, and they became like Him.
That’s how discipleship works. And it worked in their case and
they changed the world.
May I add a final point? They were chosen sovereignly, they
were chosen after a night of prayer, they were chosen to be
trained, and finally they were chosen to be sent. And that’s why
you have in verse 1 of chapter 10, disciples being trained and
in verse 2 apostles, the names of the twelve apostles. They were
chosen to be sent. Apostello, stello means to dispatch, apo,
away from, to dispatch away from. In classical Greek the word is
used almost entirely of a naval expedition sent to a foreign
city or a foreign country. In other words somebody sent the
foreign service. All right you have been trained now you’re
going to be sent. They became sent ones that’s what apostolos
means, a sent one.
Beloved it’s not enough to be saved, it’s not enough to be
called to serve Christ, it’s not enough to be trained, it’s only
enough when all of that’s done to go. And that is exactly why in
Matthew it tells us that we are to go into all the world and
make disciples. We have been made disciples in order to make
disciples. The Lord made twelve marvelous individuals with one
exception, filled in the ranks later and in Matthew 19:28 He
says there’s twelve thrones for those, they’re going to be
elevated throughout all eternity. The process was completed in
their lives, and we’re to be in that same process. Are you being
discipled, are you learning with a view to going? Are you
discipling, are you training some one with a view to sending
them to reach others, whether here or around the world? You see,
training and sending are two sides of the same coin.
Discipleship and apostleship go together. Phase one, follow Me,
phase two, leave, and carry the message.
So as we come to chapter 10 they begin with their first
short term mission assignment, learning by doing. They’re going
to go out and they’re going to run into all kinds of problems,
they’re going to come back and when they come back they’re going
to spend many more months with Jesus and He’s going to teach
them off of that experience. And finally phase four, the final
phase will come when the Spirit enters them and fills them and
they go to baptize and to teach all nations. What a marvelous
pattern. That’s their initiation.
The second thing, and I’m just going to mention it is their
impact. When they went they had an impact. It says in verse 1,
“They had authority (or exousia which means the right) to have
power over unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all
manner of sickness and all manner of disease.” Why? Because that
would demonstrate they were from Christ, because they were doing
the very same things He did. And you can follow them all the way
through the Book of Acts, and what are they doing? Casting out
demons and healing the sick. They had an impact. They did the
same thing Jesus did, Jesus cast out demons, Jesus healed the
sick. They manifested the same kingdom kind of, of power that
Jesus manifested. And so they were inseparably linked with
Christ and they had a tremendous impact, they turned Jerusalem
upside down, and then they turned the world upside down, and
everywhere they went there was a riot. People were converted
because of their impact.
Then He talks about their identity in verse 2. Who were
they? That’s for next time. And next Lord’s Day I’m going to
tell you a little bit about every one of them, so you get to
know them personally. Let’s pray.
Father thank You this morning for our time, thank You for
showing us how Jesus discipled men, things He was able to
overcome in His power and how He did it. May we learn from this.
May we see ourselves in the process of being learners, mathetes,
yet to become apostles, apostolos. Being trained to go, to be
sent. Oh not in some official way, not in some manner as those
special twelve for whom are reserved the twelve thrones, but
nonetheless to be sent. Train us Lord and help us to train
others, send us and help us to send others that the work may go
on which You began. May we disciple all nations, baptizing them
in the name of the Lord Jesus and teaching them to observe all
things whatsoever He commanded them. Bringing them to maturity
and then sending them.
We pray Father for those in our midst who perhaps have been
converted, they’ve been called to Christ, they’ve come to the
second point of being called to serve. Perhaps they’re resisting
the training or perhaps having been trained they’re resisting
the final sending. Lord speak to each of us wherever we are, may
be some Lord who have not yet even come the first time to follow
Jesus in faith. Wherever we are Lord draw us to Yourself, do
Your perfect work in each heart. In Christ’s name. Amen.
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