Matthew 10:1-42 · Jesus Sends Out the Twelve
How to Motivate People
Matthew 10:1-42, Matthew 9:18-26
Sermon
by Stephen M. Crotts
Loading...

A few years ago a fellow took me on a tour of his sock manufacturing plant. He showed me the loading dock where raw materials were unloaded, the washing machines, fluffers, twisters, looms, finishers, and packagers. In all, I found out there were over 150 different steps taken to manufacture one pair of socks! Well, that set me to thinking about the church and the making of disciples. How many steps are there from conversion to discipleship? Let's look and see.

The text reports an incident near the beginning of Christ's ministry. It happened at Matthew's place of business. Jesus called him to follow. The text says that Matthew got up and followed him and that Jesus then had dinner at Matthew's house. The Pharisees chastised Jesus because he was eating "with tax collectors and sinners." Clearly, Jesus was setting his agenda of calling all people, not just a select few. Jesus showed Matthew and those gathered with him how important they were to God.

He Chose

Now here is a key principle to establish in discipling. Christ wouldn't allow people to choose him. Instead he chose them. He selected those "whom he desired." The question is, why?

Think for a moment. Aren't there a lot of people who want to be with you, people who constantly make demands on your time, but who aren't really all that interested in your gospel? Oh, they like you because you are a good listener, or because you have a Gameboy or because you're a fine softball player. But what they don't want from you is discipleship.

Jesus had people pulling on him all the time. "Bid my brother divide the inheritance with me." "My son is ill. Come and heal him." But he spent most of his time with the twelve he selected to be with him. They were the ones who wanted his gospel. They were the ones who asked, "Lord, teach us to pray." "Lord, explain again to us the parable."

Why Just Twelve?

Now the question might arise, why did Christ select only twelve men? Why didn't he select 24 or 100 or, better still, 1,000? Some say he selected twelve to symbolize the twelve tribes of Israel and to point to Christianity as being the new Israel. There is merit in such a notion.

Then, too, maybe Jesus couldn't find any more than twelve people who were interested in his gospel. Even today if you start a small group Bible study in your home, you're lucky to find twelve men who will come.

But I think there is a deeper reason here, and that is human limitations. Answer me this: which of you has more than twelve people in whose lives you are intimately involved, with whom you are directly available? Why, the most of us would be hard-pressed to point to six much less twelve. The fact is, life being what it is, and people being who they are, one man cannot disciple more than a dozen people at a time.

The principle here is this: We must narrow our focus to a dozen or less people or our energies will be dissipated to nothingness.

Why These Dozen Men?

Christ did the choosing. He narrowed it down to twelve men. But why these twelve? And in the case of our text, why Matthew as one of them?

James and John, so hot-tempered they were called the sons of thunder. Really! And Peter, that blustering big-mouthed backslider. Why him? Thomas, the doubter? Judas, a zealot terrorist who was to betray him? Why these twelve? They weren't rich. They weren't of high social standing. They weren't so well educated. Why, even their commitments varied! Matthew was a hated tax collector, one who, because he worked for the Roman overlords, was an outcast to his own people.

What were they then? Why were they acceptable to Jesus as disciples?

They were teachable. They could learn. They were willing to rethink Judaism.

Are you teachable? Can you learn? Or have you already made up your mind what you believe about God?

They were also available. Matthew left his tax office, James and John their fishing nets, and together they spent time with Jesus. The text says, "And he rose and followed."

Are you available? Will you leave your fun, your boat, your computer, your television set to follow him?

And another thing they were. These twelve were willing to assume responsibility for ministry. They were willing to get involved and stay involved with people. Matthew actually wrote a gospel book.

To Be With Him

So what have we seen so far?

Jesus did the choosing. He narrowed it to twelve. He chose the ones who were teachable, available, and willing to assume responsibility.

Okay, so what's the next step in the process of discipleship? What did Jesus do with them now? They spent time together. They lived together. They observed people. They weathered conflict. They ate and slept together. They succeeded some, failed some, asked questions, and heard sermon after parable after teaching! In the text they ministered in a sick room.

Here's the principle! Christianity is caught and not taught. A magnet cannot teach magnetism to a lump of iron. But if the two spend time together, if the magnet rubs up against the iron, very soon you will have two magnets. It's the same with disciple making. Choose a teachable, available, responsible person and spend time with him in Christ for three years, and you've got yourself a disciple.

This is where the church is failing today. Many church leaders aren't discipled themselves. If they are, the people won't allow them to do their jobs as disciple makers. All their time is spent doing chaplaincy ministry to the unteachable, unavailable, and irresponsible members who somehow got on the church roll.

Dear people, I'm here to make disciples. I'm not here to coddle you. If you will be teachable, responsible, available, then rise, take up your cross and follow Jesus.

He chose twelve to be with him. That means they experienced life together. Their lives were prioritized around Jesus.

Is yours? Socially? Mentally? Spiritually? Physically? Too many prioritize their lives around making money and having a fine time. But these twelve spent time with Jesus. They were "with him."

It's interesting. In Matthew 10:11 following, Jesus told his disciples, "And whatever town or village you enter, find out who is worthy in it and stay with him until you depart." We don't do this today. Instead, we buy our own home, or rent one, and live to ourselves and get together with people on Sundays at 11 a.m. The result is that we don't spend enough time together for thorough discipling to take place.

One place we do live together with teachable, available people who are willing to assume responsibility is in our families. Your most disciple-able people will forever be your children and your mate!

Another insight into this portion of the text is the fact that the gospel is a person, not a theology. Christ didn't just give Matthew and the others the facts. He also gave them a living experience of himself morning, noon, and night. It's the same here in this church. For instance, prayer is more than a theology, a sermon, a book. It is getting down on our knees together regularly and experiencing life together in Christ. Do that for three years and you'll learn how to live in prayer!

Responsibility

Be careful to notice the next step in the process. After Christ gave himself to Matthew. He began to see to it that Matthew gave himself to others. Those who were ministered to became ministers. Takers became givers. Verse 19 in our text says that Jesus went to touch a child who had just died, and the disciples went with him, Matthew included. They went to share in the ministry.

Here again is where we run afoul of the discipleship process in today's Christianity. People don't want to assume responsibility today. We'd rather pass it off on someone else. We are afraid to get involved in ministry like evangelism or preaching or comfort calls. So we set up barriers like "Ministry is not authentic unless a Reverend does it" or "I can't! I haven't been to seminary." Listen, Jesus was the only seminary these twelve ever attended. And Jesus can be your seminary, too. And it is Christ's Holy Spirit who makes one a minister - not an educational degree or position or clerical collar.

Are you willing to assume responsibility for the love of people? Are you willing to get involved in ministry? Are you willing to receive from Jesus and pass ministry on to another twelve or so people? If you are, you can become both a disciple of Jesus and a disciple maker. If not, well frankly, you just washed out of Chris-tendom's boot camp! So why pretend?

Accountability

There is one final step in the process of disciple making. Those whom Christ sent out to minister, he held accountable for their duties. You can see this in Luke 10:17 following. The disciples "returned with joy, saying, 'Lord, even the demons are subject to us in your name!' " There you have the exciting results of ministry. "They returned with joy!" It wasn't boring or fearful, but joyful. Was their ministry authentic? "Even the demons" were subject to them. But notice the further accountability and evaluation Christ offered. "I saw Satan fall!" Christ said in triumph. Satan still falls when people assume responsibility to go out and minister! But then Jesus sobers his disciples. "Do not rejoice in this, that the spirits are subject to you, but rejoice that your names are written in heaven." You see, there would come a time, and there still comes a time, in the lives of disciples when ministry wasn't always successful or easy or necessarily triumphant. Christ was pointing them to heaven where it will all come right in God's plan.

It is amazing how many of Christ's parables deal with responsibility and accountability. A steward given a sum of money to work with while the master is away and a master who returns to say, "Okay, now what have you been doing?" Or a servant put in charge of a household who gets drunk and squanders his time while the boss is away, but who gets fired when he returns. Accountability. We are held accountable to God for what we do with what we have.

Conclusion

Are you a disciple? If not, do you want to be? Are you available? Teachable? Are you willing to abandon preconceived notions and learn from Christ's own words? Are you willing to spend time with other Christians who can disciple you? Are you willing to accept responsibility, to minister, and to be held accountable?

Beyond the question of your personal discipleship is the question, "Are you making any disciples of other people?" How about your mate? What about your children? What about others around you in the Body of Christ? Maybe you're not up to discipling twelve people like the Master did, but what about starting with yourself and one other person? Love demands as much!

Suggested Prayer: Lord, I would follow thee. Help me, Lord, help me! For Christ's sake. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons For Sundays: After Pentecost (First Third): Hidden In Plain View, by Stephen M. Crotts