May this short video move us to pray, give and/or go!
“The gospel is only good news if it gets there on time” Carl Henry
May this short video move us to pray, give and/or go!
“The gospel is only good news if it gets there on time” Carl Henry

“Then He (Jesus) said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.”
(Matthew 9:37-38 ESV)
My friend David Sitton has written an excellent exhortation for us based on Luke 10:2-3/Matthew 9:37-38. May all our hearts be stirred in seeking to be part of our Lord’s mission! Thank you David for this word of encouragement!
Forcibly Flung to the Nations – Ekballo
The gospel task, essentially, is to take territory for the Kingdom of God. However, we’re not after geographical conquest. Rather, we target spiritual strongholds where Satan has exerted his control for centuries. We are compelled to go after the hearts and souls of people for whom Christ died.
To advance the gospel means that we are to go everywhere extending the Name and the Reign of Christ throughout all of the earth. That’s the Mission. God makes his own name great among all of the ethnicities of the earth1 and he does so through the geographical scattering of his people.2
The harvest of nations is an enormous task requiring thousands more of well mentored missionaries than are presently available. What should be our response to this labor force deficit?
The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest field. Go! I am sending you out like lambs among wolves.3
There is a Lord of the harvest. I’m so grateful that the work of the gospel around the world is in the hands of One who is big enough, wise enough, and powerful enough to manage it. The harvest of nations is the Lord’s work and he will do exactly what he wants to with it.
As Lord of the harvest Jesus will have a full crop of all the elect from all of the people groups of the world.4 Likewise, he will have a full contingency of harvesters who are necessary to gather them. All of the goers, all of the martyrs, all of the intercessors and financial senders who are necessary – Jesus will have a full number of everyone and everything that he intends to use for the ingathering of a People for his name and glory. Jesus is the Lord of the harvest.
There are workers in the harvest. This speaks to the opportunity we have of working with Christ. Don’t ever forget the magnitude of this privilege. We get to be missionaries for Jesus Christ! It is indescribable grace that Jesus allows us to be partners in mission with him. We get the joy of being front-line spokesmen for Jesus Christ in the far-flung places where his salvation is unknown!
The workers in the harvest are to do two things. First, we are instructed to “ask the Lord of the harvest to send out more workers.” Send out in Greek is ekballo, which means to “thrust out violently”; to “forcibly expel”; to “fling out.” It is a spiritually violent and authoritative word, used for example, to describe the driving out of demons.5 When Jesus commands demons to leave a person or place, they immediately relocate. In the same way, as we pray for the Lord of the harvest to send out workers, we are asking Jesus to strategically and forcibly redeploy his people into his worldwide harvest.

Prayer is the biblical way, primarily, that missionaries are inwardly compelled to change locations and go somewhere with the gospel.6 We don’t try to twist anyone’s arm or talk anyone into anything. We pray that the Lord of the harvest will ekballo a work force to accomplish his own work. In a refreshing way, instead of trying to argue people into becoming missionaries, we go over their heads. We ask the Lord to compel those whom he wants to carry his gospel seed bags and drive his harvesting combines. The same authority that expels demons in Jesus’ name propels missionaries to joyfully “pack their coffins” en route for remote and hostile places where Jesus is not known. When Jesus says, “go!” demons vacate and missionaries relocate. We do the praying and Jesus does the flinging!
Secondly, disciples are told to pray for harvesters and… What is the first word of Luke 10:3? – “GO!” Pray and go. The sense of the text is that we should pray for laborers to go and then get busy being a part of the answer to our own prayers! This is what the Church is called to do. We are to pray and go. Praying, going and sending glorifies God!
Important Question: If working with Christ in the gospel around the world is such a privilege, why is it necessary, so often, for the Lord to forcibly expel his laborers into the mission? Why aren’t potential laborers lining up for this incredible opportunity?
The answer is in the next phrase. Jesus forcefully reiterates the implications of going. “I am sending you out like lambs among wolves.”7
Jesus sends lambs out among wolves! Is there any doubt what the outcome of that will be? Jesus is describing a slaughter. As we go in his name, Jesus says, we’re going as the main course meal! That’s what lambs are to wolves. This is a primary reason people refuse to go. Even believers are not usually eager to line up for a blood bath!
And so, the Lord ekballoes us. He forcibly flings us out into the world by his grace. He does it by transforming our hearts. He makes himself so valuable to us, that suddenly, we begin to “break the jar and pour out all of the oil upon his feet.”8 Our fears and love for this world disintegrate and morph into a passion for his name and compassion for perishing people. So much so, that nothing else matters anymore. Jesus becomes our most treasured “pearl of great price” and we find ourselves doing strange things. We begin to sell homes and land and property. We begin to take our families, even our young children, into some of the most dangerous and difficult places in the world. And we do it with joy, because Jesus and the gospel are worth it!
This is what Jesus did.9 He saw the people and was moved by compassion for them because they were distressed, harassed and helpless like sheep without a shepherd. Jesus came to earth as the Lamb of God to die. That was the plan from the beginning. The slaughter of Christ on the cross wasn’t an afterthought or an accident. The Lamb of God intentionally came to die for his sheep.10 After Jesus rose from the dead, he turned to his disciples and said, “As my Father sends me, so send I you.”11
That’s how people become missionaries and how the world will be won for Christ. That’s how it works.
We do not need a missionary calling. If we are believers in Jesus Christ we are called to Christ! If we are called to Christ we are simultaneously called to his mission. And when we are called to his mission, we don’t “cut and run” when the going gets tough and treacherous.
I’m asking the Lord to ekballo (forcibly expel) every believer in Christ who reads these words. Some will be ekballoed to actually go as missionary martyrs. Some will be ekballoed into financial martyrdom, as believers in the early church did.12 First century disciples were frequently compelled by the Spirit of God and by the joy of Christ in their hearts to give in ridiculous ways. Some of them actually sold homes; some gave land, and many hundreds of thousands of others shed their blood and guts, in extraordinary ways, in order to see to it that the gospel would go to the ends of the earth.
This is the mission of God. Missionary martyrs going, financial martyrs sending; and all of us praying and working together, for the gospel and the glory of God to be known and enjoyed by all peoples.
____________________
1 Malachi 1:11
2 Matthew 28:18
3 Luke 10:2-3
4 John 6:39; Revelation 5:9
5 Matthew 10:1
6 Persecution is one way that workers are outwardly compelled to change locations and go with the gospel. Acts 8:1-4
7 Luke 10:3
8 Mark 14:3-4
9 Matthew 9:35-37
10 John 10:15
11 John 20:21
12 Acts 2:45; Acts 4:32-36
Below is Dalton Thomas’s excellent piece Driving Convictions Concerning Frontier Missions P4 “The Need to Distinguish Between Domestic Ministry and Frontier Missions” . I greatly appreciate how Dalton brings clarity to this missions topic. The whole series deserves reading and thinking upon. Thank you Dalton Thomas for this message!
[read the intro] [read part 1] [read part 2] [read part 3]
At the core of my theology of missions is the distinction between domestic ministry and frontier missions. The New Testament emphasizes this distinction. Therefore, so should we.
I dare say that, to a large degree, the fate of the unreached may hang in the balance.
THE CRISIS OF ACCESS
It’s common in some Church circles to hear statements like these:
“We’re all called to be missionaries.”
“America is as much of a missions field as India.”
“Missions is as much about going across the street as it is about going overseas.”
“You don’t need to go to the other side of the world to do missions. There are unreached people all around us!”
While such assertions appear noble and sound beneficial to the Church’s evangelistic efforts, they lack biblical substance and have grave consequences for the unreached among the nations.
We are all called to live on mission where ever we are. And we are all called to obey Jesus’ command to make disciples of all nations–even our home nations. I don’t deny these things! But in our desire to stir passion for the lost around us, we need to discern the apostolic perspective concerning the crisis of unreached people groups.
When we use the term “unreached people groups” we’re not talking about lost people in Orlando, Sydney, and Edinburgh. We’re referring to lost people who don’t have access to a Church, a Bible, or a follower of Christ. According to the Joshua Project there are almost 17,000 ethno-linguistic people groups. Just under 7,000 of them don’t have access to a Church, a Bible, or a Christian.
Those 6,000+ people groups who have never had the opportunity to hear the Gospel are the reason why I think it’s so important to distinguish between domestic and frontier ministry. As long as we believe that “missions is missions wherever you are,” we won’t be able to see the crisis for what it is. Consequently, we will live free from the appropriate burden that is ours to bear.
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PAUL AND TIMOTHY
In the New Testament there is a clear distinction between the work of the evangelist in a location where the Gospel has penetrated at some level, and a location where the name of Jesus has never been spoken. A comparison of two passages makes this distinction quite clear. In II Timothy, we read of Paul’s words to a young man who was established in a city (possibly Ephesus) where Paul had previously labored.[1] He wrote to Timothy saying
. . . do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry. (1 Timothy 4:5)
The “work of an evangelist” and the “ministry” to which Timothy was called was in a city in which the Gospel had already been preached and a Church already established. This is what we mean by “domestic ministry.” He was laboring in a location in which the Gospel had already penetrated. He was hard at work among a community in which seeds of Gospel truth were being scattered by an established Church Body. Let’s compare this with Romans 15 where Paul explains his own calling.
I make it my ambition to preach the gospel, not where Christ has already been named, lest I build on someone else’s foundation . . . (Romans 15:20)
Timothy was fulfilling a ministry of domestic evangelism. Paul was fulfilling a ministry of frontier evangelism. Timothy was “building on a foundation” that was laid by “another.” Paul was driven by passion to lay the foundation in regions where there wasn’t one.
EMBRACING THE CALL TO FRONTIER MISSIONS
Frontier missions and domestic evangelism are both legitimate callings that are indispensible to the advance of God’s purposes in the nations. It is important therefore that we do not exalt one above the other. Both are to be honored, proclaimed, and embraced. Some are called to pour themselves out in “Ephesus” where the Gospel has taken root, and some are called to pour themselves out in “Macedonia” where the name of the Lord has yet to roll from the tongue of even one individual. We must be careful to never hold one in a higher regard than the other. However, with that said, it is apparent that the Church needs to hold frontier missions in a higher regard than we currently do.
Tragically, at this point, frontier missions is simply not a priority to most in the western Church. We invest less than 1% of our resources into ministry to unreached people groups. This means that either God is unconcerned about the issue (which leaves Him responsible for the near wholesale avoidance of these people), or it is we who are indifferent (which places the guilt of negligence upon us). The website of one missions organization puts it this way:
If everyone is obeying God’s “calling” to be a missionary wherever they are then God is calling 99.9995% of people to work among the 44.3% of the world population that already has the gospel, and calling virtually no one (.0005%) to relocate among the other 53.7% of the world population that are not Christian. You have a better chance of being in a plane crash than being one of the 2 billion Christians in the world that are UPG [Unreached People Groups] missionaries.[2]
The fact that we in the west are so unconcerned about the unreached and unengaged is an injustice of epic proportions. Still, after two thousand years, half of the earth’s population has never met an ambassador for Christ! In the book The Spiritual Secret of Hudson Taylor, the son and daughter-in-law of the frontier missionary recall the story of an interaction between Taylor and a new and deeply grateful Chinese convert. The new believer confronted him and
unexpectedly raised the question: “How long have you had the Glad Tidings in your country?” “Some hundreds of years,” was the reluctant reply [from Taylor]. “What! hundreds of years? “My father sought the Truth,” he continued sadly, “and died without finding it. Oh, why did you not come sooner?” It was a moment, the pain of which Hudson Taylor could never forget, and which deepened his earnestness in seeking to bring Christ to those who might still be reached.[3]
PUTTING FRONTIER MISSIONS INTO PERSPECTIVE
The Joshua Project[4] has done extensive research concerning the progress of the Gospel in the nations among the unreached and unengaged. Their research puts the task of frontier missions in perspective.[5] As of November 2011 they reported the following statistics about the progress of the Gospel by people group and global population.
Progress by People Group
Total People Groups: 16,750
Unreached People Groups 6,921
% People Groups Unreached: 41.3 %Progress by Population
World Population: 6.83 Billion
Population in Unreached People Groups: 2.84 Billion
% of Population in Unreached People Groups: 41.5%
The largest religious block on the map of the unreached and unengaged is Islam. The Joshua Project reports these sobering statistics.
– The population of the Muslim world is 1,537,185,000.
– Within that population of 1.5+ billion people are 2,840 different unreached people groups.
– 87.4 % of those 1.5+ billion people have yet to hear the Gospel.
– Or, to say it another way, 1,343,613,000 Muslims have yet to hear the name of Jesus.
THE FINAL FRONTIER OF GLOBAL MISSIONS: ISLAM
While every religious block constitutes a substantial challenge to the global Church, clearly Islam is the most daunting. It is the largest as well as the most hostile. Consequently, the number of missionaries on the field is tragically few. In the wake of the September 11th attacks, Joshua Lingel explained the level of activity within this block by saying that
Only one percent of all Christian missionaries go to do direct ministry amongst Muslims (1,800 missionaries total). That’s one missionary for every 550,000 Muslims! For every Mormon you have ever met, there are 130 Muslims in the world. That’s equivalent to having about five churches and 150 pastors for all of North America. Said differently, it would be like having the option to go to church in Texas (if you’re fortunate to be that close) or say Boston perhaps, and three other locations in the U.S. on any given Sunday morning.[6]
This should take our breath away, especially considering that the challenge of engaging the Islamic world is not new. Writing from Bahrain in 1902, Samuel Zwemer, the American missionary, historian, and “apostle to Islam,” appealed to an emerging generation of Christians saying that
the twentieth century is to be preeminently a century of missions to Moslems.[7]
The twentieth century has come and gone. And the majority of the Islamic world remains unreached and unengaged. While the number of laborers has considerably increased since Zwemer’s day, so also has the population of Muslims. In other words, we are no closer now than we were 100 years ago to accomplishing the task of establishing a faithful Gospel witness among those whose allegiance now belongs to Mohamed. The proverbial boundaries of the field have expanded, and the Church in the west has not proportionally expanded its efforts to reap it. Thus, it is a harvest which remains ready, yet largeley unengaged.
The challenge of serving the Muslim world demands a thoughtful and sober response. This will be the final frontier of world missions and the Church’s greatest challenge. It will by no means be the only challenge. But it will be the greatest, and the costliest.
The Church is long overdue in its response to embrace the responsibility of engaging the Islamic world. The dangers that will accompany our doing so are real. But so are the scriptural commands to preach the Gospel to all peoples, and the promises of a harvest from every tribe and tongue. The moment we exalt the dangers above the commands and the promises that accompany them, we have gone astray. Thus, while it would be foolish to ignore the dangers, we must be careful to view them in light of all that Jesus has commanded and promised us.
[1] Visit joshuaproject.net for more information.
[2] Statistics of this kind vary depending on who is compiling the information and how. The Joshua Project is the most reliable by virtue of their extensive research.
[3] Joshua Lingel, “Consider Again Your Vocation,” i2 Ministries (website), accessed November 2011, http://www.i2ministries.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=13:consider-again-your-vocation&catid=27:articles-category&Itemid=72.
[4] Samuel M. Zwemer, Raymund Lull: First Missionary to the Moslems (Diggory Press, 2008) Kindle Edition, Preface.
[5] See Acts 19
[6] The Traveling Team (website), accessed October 2011, http://www.thetravelingteam.org/node/186/generalstatistics.
[7] Dr. and Mrs. Howard Taylor, Hudson Taylor’s Spiritual Secret, (Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 1955), 81.
More insight on Missions from John Stott:
“Incentives are important in every sphere. Being rational
human beings, we need to know not only what we should be
doing, but why we should be doing it. And motivation for
mission is especially important, not least in our day in
which the comparative study of religions has led many to
deny finality and uniqueness to Jesus Christ and to reject
the very concept of evangelizing and converting people.
How then, in the face of growing opposition to it, can
Christians justify the continuance of world evangelization?
The commonest answer is to point to the Great Commission,
and indeed obedience to it provides a strong stimulus.
Compassion is higher than obedience, however, namely love
for people who do not know Jesus Christ, and who on that
account are alienated, disorientated, and indeed lost. But
the highest incentive of all is zeal or jealousy for the
glory of Jesus Christ. God has promoted him to the supreme
place of honor, in order that every knee and tongue should
acknowledge his lordship. Whenever he is denied his
rightful place in people’s lives, therefore, we should feel
inwardly wounded, and jealous for his name.”
John Stott
(Emphasis JL)
“If God desires every knee to bow to Jesus and every tongue
to confess him, so should we. We should be ‘jealous’ (as
Scripture sometimes puts it) for the honor of his name —
troubled when it remains unknown, hurt when it is ignored,
indignant when it is blasphemed, and all the time anxious
and determined that it shall be given the honor and glory
which are due to it. The highest of all missionary motives
is neither obedience to the Great Commission (important as
that is), nor love for sinners who are alienated and
perishing (strong as that incentive is, especially when we
contemplate the wrath of God) but rather zeal — burning
and passionate zeal — for the glory of Jesus Christ.
Some evangelism, to be sure, is no better than a thinly
disguised form of imperialism, whenever our real ambition
is for the honor of our nation, church, organization, or
ourselves. Only one imperialism is Christian, however, and
that is concern for His Imperial Majesty Jesus Christ, and
for the glory of his empire or kingdom. The earliest
Christians, John tells us, went out ‘for the sake of the
Name’ (3 Jn. 7). He does not even specify to which name he
is referring. But we know. And Paul tells us. It is the
incomparable name of Jesus. Before this supreme goal of
the Christian mission, all unworthy motives wither and die.”