Ezra
Chong—Bercham, Malaysia
The redemption of all
nations was part of God’s salvation plan from the beginning of the ages (Eph
3:5–9). From of old, God had revealed to Abraham that he would become father of
many nations, and all the nations of the earth would be blessed in him (Gen
12:2; 17:4–6; 18:18). Indeed, it was through Abraham’s Seed—Jesus Christ—that
salvation was given to all nations (Gen 22:18; Acts 3:25b; Gal 3:8, 14, 16).
After accomplishing the work
of salvation, through His death and resurrection, Jesus commissioned His
apostles with an important task:
“Go therefore
and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them…” (Mt 28:19a)
As the revived apostolic
church in the end times, the True Jesus Church has inherited this commission,
and will see it fully realized:
“And this gospel of the kingdom will be
preached in all the world as a witness to all the nations, and then the end
will come.” (Mt 24:14)
In the Old Testament, “all
nations” denotes peoples of different lands, languages, families and nations
beyond God’s chosen people (see Gen 10:5, 20, 31–32). However, the redeemed
multitude in Revelation encompasses people “of all nations, tribes, peoples,
and tongues” (Rev 7:9; also Rev 5:9; 14:6–7). This reflects how Jesus, through
the church, shall call “a nation [we] do not know, and nations who do not know
[us] shall run to [us]” (Isa 55:4–5; Zech 8:22–23). All nations shall flow to
us because we have the truth (Isa 2:2–3).
To become the church of all
nations, we need to work on overcoming prejudices towards those from different
cultural and religious backgrounds, especially in relation to legalism, customs
and cultural practices. We must also ensure that our chosen status does not
feed into a sense of superiority, leading to narrow-mindedness towards and
disassociation from those we are sent to save (Acts 10:28a; 11:2–3; Gal
2:11–13).
The True Jesus Church makes
disciples of all nations through pioneering missionary trips to countries we
have yet to reach. But just as important is the preaching in our own backyard.
When we preach to migrants in our own country, the gospel can spread, through
them, to their family and friends in their native lands. Once the seed is
planted, our workers can organize a missionary trip to these places to carry on
the work.
Today, spreading the gospel
is not just a face-to-face endeavor. As the internet’s reach and influence
expand, so does the scope of the church’s online evangelism, increasing the
rate at which the gospel is preached (Rev 14:6–7; 2 Thess 3:1). With this in
mind, we must utilize more community outreach volunteers in the internet
ministry.
In fact, volunteers are the
lifeblood of the church’s evangelism work. The Department of World Missions, in
both western and eastern hemispheres, must continue to recruit and train more
volunteers to serve on volunteer mission committees, as medical personnel on
medical missions, and as part of small, mobile evangelistic teams in pioneering
areas (Lk 8:1–3; 10:1–2).
The true church is adopting
many ways and means to reach out and make disciples of all nations; as members
of the church, we should play our part to fulfill this commission. By God’s
grace, we must, and will, expand and “inherit the nations” (Isa 43:1–3).