Matthew 28:16-20 · The Great Commission
Therefore Go
Matthew 28:16-20
Sermon
by King Duncan & Angela Akers
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If you’ve ever worked as a team, then you know there are certain behaviors and attitudes that increase productivity, and just as many behaviors and attitudes that decrease it too. Good managers, good coaches, good leaders know how to correct unproductive behaviors and improve the performance of their whole team.

But what if your aim is to make your team less productive? Some of you might be muttering to yourself, “I’ve worked with folks like that before.” During World War II, the U.S. Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the CIA, created and distributed a secret pamphlet titled “The Simple Sabotage Field Manual” to citizens living in Germany, Italy and Japan. They hoped to reach those citizens who were sympathetic to the cause of defeating the Nazis and ending the war. The manual, which is available on the CIA’s website, offered instructions on how to sabotage productivity on the job in order to “reduce production in factories, offices, and transportation lines.”

Here are some of the instructions for employees: Work slowly. Find reasons to frequently interrupt the flow of work. Blame your shoddy work on your tools or equipment.

Some of the instructions for managers include: To lower morale, give extra attention and undeserved promotions to the less-effective employees. When there is vital work to accomplish, hold a conference to avoid accomplishing it.

For organizations, the pamphlet offered the following instructions for sabotaging productivity: When possible, refer all matters to a committee for further study and consideration. Make these committees as large as possible. Bring up irrelevant matters as much as possible. Urge caution instead of action. (1)

If we know one thing for certain, it’s that Jesus wanted his followers to be productive. He wanted them to take action. So let’s compare these instructions on how to sabotage productivity to Jesus’ instructions to his disciples in Matthew 28: 16-20. This encounter takes place just after Jesus’ resurrection from the tomb. His disciples are waiting for him on the mountain in Galilee. And when he appears to them, he gets right to the point: “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” Jesus could very easily spread the message of God throughout the whole universe without any help. He could perform miracles far beyond the simple acts of feeding people, calming a storm, or raising the dead. All the power to accomplish his purposes was in his hands. And he was using this power to send us out to do his work. What an amazing privilege it is to be used by God to do God’s work!

There are three components to this work that I want us to look at this morning. First, Jesus is sending us out to create a universal Church. Second, Jesus is sending us out to share in a universal experience. Finally, Jesus is sending us out to live by a universal ethic. When we understand these three components, then we will understand our calling in the world. And that will definitely make us more productive as followers of Jesus.  

Beginning in verse 19, Jesus says, “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations . . .” With just these few words, Jesus sends us out to create a universal Church. Go beyond your own communities, beyond your own comfort zone. Go and make disciples of all nations. In Revelation 7, John sees a vision of the throne of God, and this is what it looked like: “. . . there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb.” God’s church is a universal church, open to every single person of any race, nation, tribe, language, culture, gender.

The 1999 Guinness Book of Records credits an Indonesian man named Bungkas with setting the record for “the longest time living in a tree.” In 1970, Bungkas climbed up a tree in his hometown of Benkes, Indonesia, built a human-sized nest there, and he settled into that nest and refused to come down. As of 1999, he was still living there, even though numerous people had tried to persuade him to come down. (2)

Followers of Jesus were never meant to withdraw from the world. We were never meant to stay inside our churches and keep the news of Jesus to ourselves. With this command, Jesus sends us out to accomplish God’s plan for the salvation of humanity.

Historian Will Durant once wrote about Christianity, “All in all, no more attractive religion has ever been presented to mankind . . . It offered itself without restrictions to all individuals, classes, and nations; it was not limited to one people, like Judaism, nor to the free-men of one state, like the official cults of Greece and Rome. By making all men heirs of Christ’s victory over death, Christianity announced the basic equality of men . . . To even the greatest sinners it promised forgiveness, and their full acceptance into the community of the saved.” (3)

Christianity announced the basic equality of all people. Everyone is valued by God. Everyone is offered salvation through Jesus Christ. “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” (John 3: 16, emphasis mine)  

Second, Jesus commands us to share in a universal sacrament. “Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit . . .” (Matthew 28: 19) A sacrament means a holy ritual. It comes from an Old French word that means “solemn oath.” All over the world, the act of baptism may look different depending on one’s culture or traditions. But the meaning of baptism is the same, no matter if it happened 1800 years ago in Ethiopia, 500 years ago in Venezuela, or last week in Hinton, West Virginia.

In baptism, we die to our old life and take on the life of Jesus Christ. We enter into a covenant relationship with God. And we become members of the universal Church.

The Rev. William Campbell tells of baptizing a woman in his church named Carolyn. Carolyn had a moderate intellectual disability, and she had a hard time fitting in with others. It’s a sad situation. In a society like ours that values externals, like looks and brains and money and connections, Carolyn just wasn’t valued by many people. Through no fault of her own, she just didn’t fit in. But she found great joy in attending church. One day, Carolyn called up Rev. Campbell and asked to be baptized. She didn’t know how much longer she had to live, so she wanted to get baptized the following week in a local river.

Rev. Campbell tried to talk Carolyn out of getting baptized so soon, or getting immersed in the river in October, when the water might be really chilly. But she was determined to be baptized the following week. Rev. Campbell says that as he and another pastor brought Carolyn up out of the river water, she was coughing and laughing and smiling.

Rev. Campbell wrote that in that moment as he looked at Carolyn’s smiling face he realized, “In baptism she stood on equal footing with the saints and the martyrs; she was one with kings and queens, one with popes and paupers alike; in her baptism she was united with the Lord Jesus Christ. She belonged as you belong and as I belong. At last.”

Carolyn died a year later. Rev. Campbell went on to serve in other churches. But he credits Carolyn with teaching him something about “mind-boggling inclusiveness of God’s family.” (4)

Through one universal sacrament—baptism—people of every color and ethnicity and culture and socioeconomic class belong to God’s family. We all belong. At last.  

Finally, Jesus sends us out to live by a universal ethic, the ethic of love for God and love for others. Let’s focus on the last part of Jesus’ instructions: “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

“. . . and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.” Not “everything in the Law.” Not “everything in our history and traditions.” “Everything I have commanded you.” In his three years of earthly ministry, Jesus taught his disciples so many vital things about God and how to live out God’s kingdom. But he only gave us three primary commands.

In Matthew 22, an expert in the law tested Jesus by asking him to name the greatest commandment.

Jesus replied, “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’”

And in John 13, just before Jesus’ arrest and crucifixion, he takes the role of servant and washes his disciples’ feet, then he challenges them with these words: “A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”

Every single follower of Jesus should be known by our love for God and for others. That’s what Jesus commanded us to do: love others in the same way that he loves us. That’s the primary way we prove that we are Jesus’ disciples: if we love one another with the love of Jesus. And that’s the primary way we make disciples of Jesus too—by loving others enough to go and share the truth of Jesus in our words and our actions. By baptizing believers into a covenant relationship with God and membership in the universal Church. And by teaching them by example to obey Jesus’ commands to love God and love one another.

When Bob Pierce was a teenager, a woman named Elizabeth Hunter served as his Sunday school teacher. Ms. Hunter had a gift for making Bible stories come alive for her students. She made the Bible relevant to their lives. Bob credits Ms. Hunter with inspiring him to go into the ministry.

In 1947, Bob traveled to China on a preaching mission with Youth for Christ. He saw incredible suffering in China, but he also saw Christian missionaries addressing that suffering in life-changing ways. When Bob Pierce returned home from China, he began a mission organization that eventually grew into World Vision, one of the largest international aid agencies in the world. They provide food, clean water, education, disaster assistance, health care and education to millions of people in the poorest nations on earth. Imagine if Ms. Hunter had never challenged Bob Pierce to follow God’s call into ministry? Imagine if he had never gone to China and seen the great needs there?

A few years ago, Bob Pierce’s daughter, Marilee, was going through some books in her father’s library and she found a biography of the famous missionary James Hudson Taylor. According to an inscription on the inner flyleaf, the book was a Christmas gift to young Bob from Ms. Hunter. Next to the date “Christmas 1928,” she had written the words, “To Bob from Miss Hunter. My prayer and deepest desire for you is Matthew 28:18-20: ‘Therefore go and make disciples of all nations . . .’”

Jesus’ prayer and deepest desire for us is to “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.” He sends us out to create a universal Church that shares a universal sacrament—baptism—and lives by a universal ethic—love.  

And he would not send us out to do his work unless he equipped us with the power of his Spirit. So we can trust the promise he gave his disciples then and he gives to us now: “And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”


1.    “The 16 best ways to sabotage your organization's productivity, from a CIA manual published in 1944” by Richard Feloni, BusinessInsider.com, November 5, 2015. https://www.businessinsider.com/oss-manual-sabotage-productivity-2015-11?utm_source=ForTheInterestedNewsletter.

2.    Michael Shannon.

3.    Francis Schaeffer, The Mark of the Christian (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 1970), foreword. Joseph M. Stowell, The Trouble With Jesus (Chicago: Moody Publishers, 2003).

4.    “My Beloved Daughter” by The Rev. William (Scott) Campbell, Pastor, Harvard Epworth United Methodist Church. http://www.gbgm umc.org/harepumc/sermons/Matthew%203 13.ser.htm. Cited by R. Charles Grant, D.Min., Bon Air Presbyterian Church Richmond, Virginia. http://www.bonairpc.org/Sermons/Sermons9899/sermon11099.htm.

5.    “Women who inspired World Vision’s founding father” by Marilee Pierce Dunker, WorldVision.org, https://www.worldvision.org/christian-faith-news-stories/women-inspired-bob-pierce.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Second Quarter Sermons, by King Duncan & Angela Akers