Why Preach in Regions Beyond?
By Norm Lewis
The Apostle Paul was never content to keep
the gospel within the Christian community.
In the gospel Paul had something the world
needed, and he knew it. He expressed his
desire to the Corinthian Christians in this
way. “Having hope,” he wrote, “to
preach the gospel in the regions beyond you.” Why
did Paul say that? Why did Paul strive to
carry the gospel to regions beyond? Why did
he want to get God’s message past the
Christian frontier? This is the question
I would like to consider with you. For it
has to do with us. There are still regions
beyond, areas where Christ is little known
or unknown. Why should we preach the gospel
there?
1. CHRIST’S MISSIONARY COMMAND INCLUDES
THE REGIONS BEYOND
This missionary command was given several
times by the risen Lord. Just what did He
command His followers to do before He should
return? The Bible answers this question in
final chapters of the Gospels and the first
chapter of Acts. Five chapters of the New
Testament contain the plainest information
in the world about Christ’s missionary
command. In Matthew, He says, “Disciple
all nations.” In Mark, He says, “Go
ye into all the world, and preach the gospel
to every creature.” In Luke, He says, “That
repentance and remission of sins should be
preached in his name among all nations.” In
John, He says, “As my Father hath sent
me, even so send I you.” In Acts, He
says, “Ye shall be witnesses unto me
... unto the uttermost part of the earth.” Yes,
Christ commanded His Church to carry the
gospel to the whole world. This includes
the regions beyond. These are our orders.
Years ago there was a bad train wreck in
the east. Two trains came together head-on.
As one of the dying engineers was lifted
from the smashed cab of his overturned engine,
his fumbling fingers drew a yellow paper
from an inner pocket of his work jacket. “Take
this,” he said weakly, “it will
show you I was given wrong orders.” The
engineer in-sisted he was not to blame for
the tragic wreck. His orders were wrong.
But no Christian at the judg-ment will be
able to defend his missionary failure with
such an argument. The Bible will shut his
mouth. Christ said, “Go, make disciples
among all nations. Preach the gospel to every
creature. Be witnesses unto me unto the uttermost
part of the earth.” Our orders are
clear. They include the regions beyond.
2. OUR LORD’S ILLUSTRATIONS
INCLUDE THE REGIONS BEYOND
He said, “The field is the world.” Our
Lord here compares the missionary task to
the work of a farmer. The farmer prepares
the soil, sows the seed, fights the weeds,
and finally reaps the harvest. Re-member,
the field is the world. Have we sown the
gospel seed everywhere in the world? Have
we shared the good news equally in all lands?
No, we have not. We have been selfish. We
have repeatedly sown the gospel seed in a
few favored parts of the world. We have desired
its benefits for ourselves and for our children.
We have almost forgotten the people in far-off
lands. In this we have done wrong. We have
not obeyed our Master’s command.
In Argentina I had a plot of some five acres
of ground. An Argentine, Manuel Burgeno,
asked if he could cultivate the land. I told
him to go ahead. Burgeno did a good job on
the part of the field he cultivated. But
he left more than an acre untouched by the
plow. I asked him why he left that ground
uncultivated. He said, “Too hard.” Is
that our atti-tude toward world evangelization?
We favor the easy places. Are the unreached
places too hard?
STARVED
I remind you of a metaphor Christ used.
He said, “I am the bread of life.” Christ
declares that He is essential food. Without
Him no man can live. He said again, “For
the bread of God is he which comes down from
heaven and gives life to the world.” We
Americans do not understand the mean-ing
of physical hunger. Millions of people in
other lands suffer hunger pangs by day and
by night. They never have enough to eat.
Ray Davis, Associate Director of the Sudan
In-terior Mission, has spent many years in
drought that had afflicted a great section
of that land. He said, “As we sat down
to eat our modest meal, we could see groups
of famished, emaciated people out-side our
home. Hungry little children were crying
for food their starving parents were unable
to give them.” Said Davis, “Often
it was simply impossible for us to eat our
own food.”
Oh that we might feel compassion for multitudes
that starve spiritually. They lack the gospel
we have failed to give them. Christ is the
bread of life with-out which no man can live.
Men unreached by the gospel are dead. Unless
the gospel reaches them they must remain
forever dead. Jesus said, “Except ye
eat the flesh of the Son of Man ... ye have
no life in you.” Remember, we need
not murder Afri-cans or Asians or Latin Americans
with machine guns or atom bombs to be guilty
of their blood. We need only withhold the
gospel from them.
LIGHT A LAMP
Another metaphor our Lord used was that
of light. He said, “I am the light
of the world.” Wicked men thought they
had put out that light when Jesus was crucified.
But the light had passed to other lives.
Jesus had said to His followers, “Ye
are the light of the world.” If the
light we have is for the world, dare we keep
it from part of the world? It is good to
have large beautiful lights in your living
room and dining room. But if you leave the
back entrance in utter darkness, someone
may fall down the cellar steps. So with gospel
light. Men out yonder grope in the blackness
and shadow of death. Every soul in the darkness
of heathendom is waiting on us. We must send
the light. We must light a gospel lamp within
sight of every man on earth.
JUST ONE WAY
Still another of Jesus’ metaphors
was that of the way. He said, “I am
the way ... no man cometh unto the Father
but by me.” There is one way that leads
men to God. Just one. Think of those who
do not know the way. Missionary Duane Stous
told me in Paraguay of the night he found
the way to life while others died. Stous
was in California with other Christian fellows
training for missionary service. They were
called out to fight forest fires. Divided
into five-man squads they battled the flames
all day. Darkness had fallen when
someone brought sand-wiches. They stood
eating ravenously. Suddenly a call came from
the ridge road above them. “The fire
has broken through! Run for your lives!”
Stous and a companion started upward toward
the road. The other men ran down the canyon.
Desperately the two men climbed. The billowing
heat, the hellish flames came closer. It
was awful. Death was at their backs. More
than once strength seemed gone. Finally they
staggered on to the road. A car came. They
circled around to the mouth of the canyon
where they hoped to meet the other fel-lows.
Through the long night they searched.
They called and called. In vain they listened.
No reply. Daylight brought the awful answer.
Fourteen charred bodies lay on the canyon
floor. Fiery death had overtaken the fleeing
men. Jesus Christ is the only way for men
to reach heaven. His solemn meaning is clear
beyond question. “No man,” He
said, “cometh unto the Father but by
me.”
3. CHRIST’S ILLUSTRATIONS AND COMMANDS
SHOW THAT TO PREACH THE GOSPEL IN THE REGIONS
BEYOND IS BASIC TO GOD’S PLAN
Let us imagine ourselves standing on a distant
star, looking back at our globe. God had
a lost world on His hands. The Bible says
that “By one man sin entered into the
world, and death by sin; and so death passed
upon all men, for that all have sinned” (Rom.
5:12).
Again we read concerning mankind, “For
all have sinned and come short of the glory
of God.” The Bible removes any doubt
we may have about men being lost. It is not
a question of how many sins a person must
commit in order to be lost.
LOST ALREADY
The truth is that Jesus Christ came into
the world to face the horror of Calvary because
men were lost already. The Bible says, “He
that believeth not [on Christ] is condemned
already, because he hath not believed” (John
3:18). Christ himself puts this fact beyond
all argument. He says God provided one way
to save lost men. He was willing to send
His Son. And God’s Son was willing
to come as the “Lamb slain from the
founda-tion of the world.” For this
we praise God.
But is praise our whole business? No. It
is not enough. We must obey God. We must
reach the un-reached with the gospel. If
not, we leave them to die never knowing.
They cannot know of Christ un-less we tell
them. Unless they know, they cannot live.
We must tell them. This is man’s part
of redemption’s plan. God’s part
is the death and resur-rection of Christ.
Man’s part is the preaching of repentance
and forgiveness of sins in Christ’s
name among all nations.
4. THE CONDEMNED MILLIONS IN REGIONS BEYOND
HAVE HIGHEST PRIORITY FOR GOSPEL PREACHING
It is not just that the unreached millions
are lost. That alone is worse than we can
understand. It is not simply that those millions,
as the Bible says, re-main “dead in
trespasses and sins.” It is not alone
the fact that they are “without hope
and without God.” These facts are true
of unsaved people every-where. They apply
to men and women of privileged intellect
among the most enlightened nations. To remain
unsaved anywhere is dreadful.
But the unreached of earth cannot help them-selves
without our help. This fact should underlie
our Christian activity. The Word of God is
very plain. It says, “Whosoever shall
call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved” (Rom.
10:13). If that statement were not qualified,
we might take it to mean that any pagan without
gospel light could cry to God and be saved.
But the Bible qualifies that statement. It
goes on, “How then shall they call
on him in whom they have not believed? And
how shall they believe in him of whom they
have not heard? And how shall they hear without
a preacher? And how shall they preach, except
they be sent?” There, bold and plain,
the task of the Church is set forth: bear
the gospel to all men. Which unsaved man
most deserves your help? The one who can
hear the gospel or the one who cannot? What
group most needs your help? Those who can
hear the gospel, or those who cannot? To
ask the question is to answer it. Hundreds
of tribes still wait for their first portion
of God’s Word to be translated into
their language. Who are the young people
willing to make those translations? Who are
the men and women who will pray them out
to the field? Who will work to support them?
Who, Christian, if not you? Great metropolitan
areas in many lands are unevangelized. Who
will go do that job? Who will support those
who go? Who will give them power through
prayer? Who, Christian, if not you?
World evangelization means to offer Christ
to all men everywhere. We cannot justify
the neglect of unreached areas. To be sure
there are many worthy causes. But no other
cause occupies first place with God. This
one does. God has spoken on this matter.
He commands us to finish this work. It is
wrong for us to pour large efforts into other
things simply because they are good. The
good may be the enemy of the best. If Christians
would give all to get the gospel to the regions
beyond, the world task could soon be finished.
GOOD OR BEST
Weigh carefully the difference between doing
things which are good and doing that which
is best. The difference is illustrated by
the tragic experience of a drawbridge operator.
This man, years ago, op-erated the drawbridge
at Passaic, New Jersey. One afternoon he
had opened the bridge to let a boat pass.
His boy was playing nearby. Suddenly from
a dis-tance sounded the whistle of an oncoming
express train. The operator realized in a
flash he had blund-ered. The bridge should
have been closed. Instantly he threw the
levers. At that moment he was horri-fied
to see his boy slip and fall into the river.
The father faced a hard choice. His boy
was drowning. Every instinct urged him to
leap to the rescue. But another duty came
first. Hundreds of passengers’ lives
were at stake. The man knew it. He stayed
at his post. The bridge slammed into po-sition.
Seconds later the train thundered safely
across. Only then did the father leap to
save his boy. But he was too late. Life had
gone when the body was recovered. Did that
father do right? Yes, he did. He faced a
difficult choice. To have saved his boy would
have been good. But to save the passen-gers
was his first responsibility. That father,
under awful pressure, chose what was best.
Christian, your choice may not be so difficult
as that. But it is similar. Do good wherever
you can. But make the main thrust of your
life that of taking Christ to earth’s
unreached masses. Many kinds of help are
needed. Keep your vision clear. Make your
commitment to Christ real. God will show
you what to do.
(Reprinted from “Go Ye” Means
You! by Norman Lewis.)
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