Luke 10:1-24 · Jesus Sends Out the Seventy-two
A Mission and a Message
Luke 10:1-24
Sermon
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A rather well-known evangelist used to send a team of workers to visit the cities included on his tour to prepare for his arrival and the subsequent revival meeting in advance. These people were well trained; they knew exactly what to do. One of them was in charge of publicity, and as soon as he was on the scene he would call a press conference, arrange for interviews with the local radio and television stations, and contact leaders of churches that intended to sponsor the evangelistic crusade. Another would begin to work on programs and the printing of the various posters and publicity pieces necessary to the success of the effort. Still another person called for and worked with local volunteers who would usher, counsel, and assist in other ways. One person checked on the site and arrangements; yet another arranged for music and choirs. And, of course, there was a coordinator who pulled all the pieces together so that the stage was all set for the evangelist when he arrived to conduct his religious meetings. Nothing was left to chance; it was extremely well-organized and, therefore, well attended.

Jesus, at a critical point in his three-year ministry, put on a program that was primitive in its conception and execution, according to the information St. Luke gives us. "He appointed seventy others," Luke informs us, without telling us how Jesus recruited these people that he sent out two-by-two. Where did they come from? Up to this point, all we know is that Christ had chosen the twelve and that his mission was apparently being subsidized by Mary Magdalene, Joanna, the wife of Herod’s steward, who today would probably have been a spy who had infiltrated the little group, and Susanna. People followed the Christ, but they couldn’t have followed him as he criss-crossed the lake during his Galilean campaign. Just how did he suddenly have seventy others men, I suppose - whom he could appoint to undertake a mission for him?

There has to be something that we don’t know, don’t you think? Jesus couldn’t simply conjure up a group of that size out of nowhere. Even he couldn’t clone the twelve and turn them into seventy, or more likely, seventy-two, if he could clone each one of them six times. All we dare do is conclude that numerous people not mentioned in the gospels had declared their faith in the Christ and had asserted, "Lord, we are ready to follow you. Tell us what you want us to do and we will do it." So, he did. He chose seventy persons, one to represent symbolically all the nations of the world at that time, and sent them forth in his name.

Now, anyone who has read this passage should not be surprised that Luke would write another account - the Acts of the Apostles - to chronicle how Jesus’ mission to the Jews had blossomed into a mission to the whole world. Jesus, by appointing seventy persons to this brief mission, was - before his death and resurrection - announcing God’s intention to take the news to the entire world. His earthly ministry would come to an end only a few miles from where he was born; he would never - in his earthly life - leave the environs of Palestine, but what he said and what he did would be taken and told to the ends of the earth. And right from the beginning, there were people so moved by his words and deeds that they were there - and ready - when Jesus needed them for this early mission and ministry.

Jesus still has the power to inspire people to believe in him as Lord and to devote their lives to his work, doesn’t he? A young man, wearing a clerical collar, took an elevator to a level where he was working in a hospital during his seminary internship-year. A woman entered the elevator and, noticing his clerical attire - and his youth - stared at him, finally blurting out, "Are you a priest or something?" He explained to her that he was completing part of his

third-year internship in a hospital setting, and that another portion was to be done in a parish. She was silent until she reached her floor, but as she was about to leave the elevator, she stopped, held the door open, and said to him, "I didn’t know that people your age did that sort of thing anymore." And she went her way. But people of all ages and both sexes still follow Jesus today - as they always have; when he says, "Come, follow me!" they do, you know.

And that bodes well for Jesus’ larger intention - to take the good news to all people all over the world. There are never enough people for that evangelism enterprise, are there? At least three quarters of the people who live on the earth are not Christian; many don’t even know the name of Christ, let alone having heard and been taught the gospel. In some cases, nations who once believed that Jesus is the Christ have to be told again, "Jesus is Lord. Repent and believe in him." Mainland China, since Christianity has been permitted to function publicly the last couple of years, seems to represent - since there are so many Chinese - the field where "the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few." But what happened to Christianity in China is not at all unique; the Christian faith has been suppressed in many lands where Christ once was confessed and worshiped and served by faithful followers of the Lord.

The apostle Paul would be horrified if he could return to this life and visit Asia Minor, now Turkey, where he was born and where he conducted successful missions on behalf of Christ. He would hear the Muslims being called to prayer - and he might marvel at the minarets and mosques - but he would be hard-put to find a practicing Christian anywhere. If he visited Ephesus again, he might be fortunate enough to ascend the little mountain overlooking the ruins of that city that was the center of the Mediterranean world when he preached the gospel. There he might find a little chapel in a restored stone house purported to be the home of the Virgin Mary after Christ’s resurrection and ascension. There he would discover a solitary Christian priest keeping his lonely vigil on top of that mountain, poised - in a sense - for the day when he could descend from it, gather disciples, and preach to that nation once more.

One of my students this year is to become a missionary to Japan. I hope he can travel by way of Rome so that he can visit the Church of Il Jesus, the prinicipal church of the Jesuits. In a

transept across from the one that contains an altar-chapel-tomb for Ignatius Loyola, he will be able to stand before the altar-tomb of Francis Xavier, who became the first missionary to Japan in 1549. Xavier is one of the world’s greatest missionaries, an intellectual who answered the call of Christ and gave himself to the work of witnessing and preaching in Portuguese India - Goa, in 1541 - and in the southern peninsula in 1544. There he baptized 1,000 Macua people in a month, and something like 30,000 during his ministry there. By the end of the sixteenth century there were over half a million Christians in Japan; their numbers grew by leaps and bounds, and they constituted a greater percentage of the population than at any time since. Here, too, the gospel has to be - and is being - proclaimed again, as part of the world-wide mission that our Lord began that day when he appointed seventy people to go out two by two. The mission begun then and there will continue until the day when he returns in glory to bring in the fullness of the kingdom.

But that first mission was only a preview, wasn’t it? The screening process by which the candidates were appointed doesn’t seem to have been rigorous at all, does it? Jesus appointed them; that’s all we know. And a paragraph in the beginning of the tenth chapter of Luke tells all we will ever know about their training. There must have been a master plan by which they were assigned specific towns and villages to visit; they must have been given the names of friends or relatives - or people who had heard Jesus preach or, perhaps, had been healed by him - where they might find accommodations. The message was specific: "Peace to this house." And when they healed people in the name of Christ, they were to declare, "The kingdom of God has come near to you." He told them to accept hospitality offered them, not to move from house to house, and to return to him - obviously - when their mission was concluded. They were to prepare the way for Christ; they apparently had great success in their venture.

The whole mission seems almost simplistic, doesn’t it, when we think of Christ’s mission in the world today. Jesus’ followers have to face the opposition of other faiths, the forces of government that try to exterminate it, and the influence of secularism that tends to erode the faith of the body of Christ. Despite the fact that people still answer the call of Christ and are ordained and commissioned to serve Christ as missionaries and pastors, the base of operations

- the church - seems to be growing smaller in size and influence. In his Grace Notes and Other Fragments (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1981), Joseph Sittler observes:

The church in the next several decades is going to be a smaller, leaner, tougher company. I am convinced that the way for the church now is to accept the shrinkage, to penetrate the meaning and the threat of the prevailing secularity, and to tighten its mind around the task given to

the critical cadre.

The sort of training program that Jesus put on for the seventy, according to Luke, would suffice for the task they were to do - mainly to announce Christ’s intention to visit their towns and homes - but it just won’t work today. Early in my own ministry, one of the two parishes I served engaged in a modest building program. It was before the era of building churches and educational buildings had picked up momentum in the 1950s. Fund-raising organizations were just taking shape; resources for guidance and assistance were very few. The financial phase of that operation was planned and executed - with limited success - in a single afternoon. Six years later, in another parish, I was involved in another building program in a different congregation; it was over twenty-five times as large - financially - as the first. This campaign lasted only one month, but it was directed by a professional fund-counselor, planned carefully so that all contingencies were planned for, and it was carried out with precision and urgency. It was a tremendous success, and it enabled a congregation to erect the facilities that were necessary to its program and - equally important - it facilitated the retirement of the debt on an almost half a million dollar plant in a matter of five years after it was completed. Basic to the entire operation was the thoroughness with which the campaign was planned and directed. Very little was left to chance.

When I look back at my parish experience, I have to face the fact that those things we did best often had to do with financing our local operations; we were not as efficient and effective in other areas of ministry, I’m afraid. And when I look at many congregations where I have preached or have come to know them in other ways, I realize that things haven’t changed much in the two-and-a-half decades since I last served full-time as a parish pastor. The average congregation seldom operates as effectively in evangelism, for example, as it does in financial stewardship, does it? A family - parents and two young children - moved from Germany to the United States. They lived some distance from a Lutheran congregation, but neighbors took them to church, got the children into Sunday Church School and choir, and involved them in various parish activities for over six months. The newcomers bought a home just a few blocks from the church, moved in and lived in that house for over six more months before anyone - pastors or evangelism committee members, or even neighbors who belonged to that congregation - ever visited them and invited them to join the congregation. The irony of the situation is that the people are wealthy, and I suspect would be quite generous in their financial response to the work of the congregation in that community and the world.

Thank God that we do a respectable job in the area of education and social missions today, and that our worship is becoming more dynamic and meaningful. And I thank God that there are people who are concerned enough about the mission of the church that they volunteer to serve, at least temporarily, in distant lands where the life-style is different and difficult and the work of Christ is complicated and confusing. I am grateful for those missionaries who have spent a lifetime far from home and families so that the world - the whole world - will ultimately hear the gospel and know that "the kingdom of God has come near to (them)." And I give thanks for those who make it possible for people in those distant lands, who are called by Christ, to receive training for ministry in our colleges and seminaries.

Years ago, a man and wife in a congregation I served, virtually adopted a young black man from Liberia. They gave him financial assistance, opened their home to him, and treated him like a son. He said to one of the pastors of that church, "You are one of the three preachers who have moved me since I have been in the United States. Come to my land and preach to my people." Today that man is bishop of the Lutheran Church in Liberia, Roland Payne, and he and people like him are saying to those of us in Christian congregations, "Pray for us. Send us messengers so that we can hear the gospel and grow in Christ." And the travail and suffering of the rest of the world seems to comprise a silent cry to find comfort and meaning and security through the Christ.

The Lord was aware of world-wide need to hear the good news and be healed. That’s why he initiated that "mission of the seventy" so long ago. Like it or not, it’s our mission now. With his help, we can undertake and complete it successfully. Amen.

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio,