
John 20:19-21 On the evening of that first day of the week, when the disciples were together, with the doors locked for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood among them and said, ‘Peace be with you!’ After he said this, he showed them his hands and side. The disciples were overjoyed when they saw the Lord. Again Jesus said, ‘Peace be with you!’ As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.’”
Each of the gospel writers includes a “Great Commission” statement in his gospel. We are most familiar with Matthew’s. “Go and make disciples of all nations.” Mark records another time when Jesus said to his disciples, “Go into all the world and preach the good news to all creation.” In the book of Acts, Luke gives us the words Jesus’ spoke right before he ascended, “You will be my witnesses.” And right here, in the book of John, we find that already on Easter evening Jesus was giving his disciples their marching orders. He was sending them out to forgive people’s sins. As the Father sent him, he was sending his disciples.
Does this look like a well-organized, confident, motivated little band of Christian soldiers ready to go out and conquer the world to you? Does this group look like the people Jesus should be entrusting with the task of converting the whole world to the true faith? Not at all! Consider how loyal they had been to Jesus over the last few days. One of them had denied he ever knew him. All of them had deserted him. They had disbelieved his promise that he would rise again. They were hiding in a room behind locked doors afraid of being arrested for their connection to him. They were in crying need of the forgiveness Jesus had just won for them.
And so, did Jesus disown them? Not at all! He came to them and promised them peace. He revealed that he had risen and why. He forgave their cowardice and made them his messengers of forgiveness to the world. In a strange twist, they were just the kind of missionaries he needed.
They wouldn’t talk about forgiveness with any air of superiority, as if it were something they stooped to give to others. They had needed it and experienced all too deeply themselves.
They wouldn’t make any mistakes about who’s strength and whose power was turning people to faith as they spread the message. They had been timid little men too afraid to even go outside their room. Do you see the priority Jesus places on his gospel of grace? He makes sure the messengers he sends to preach it have experienced it personally themselves.
That hasn’t changed, has it. I’m not speaking only about the pastors and missionaries. Of course, we are all sinners saved by grace and forgiven by Jesus, too. But the modern-day messenger list is bigger than the clergy, much bigger. Sometimes rank and file Christians are inclined to excuse themselves from delivering Jesus’ message because they feel unqualified. They don’t feel very holy. They don’t see themselves as Bible experts. They don’t believe they are very knowledgeable about matters of faith. They question their their qualifications for the task.
Let’s be honest. They are right. From the standpoint of our godliness and Bible knowledge, we are not worthy, your pastor included. We have plenty of repenting to do for our less-than-shining moral choices and inattention to Bible study and reading, much because our own priorities are often skewed. How much time have we wasted filling our minds with garbage from TV or the internet? But unprepared and unworthy as we might be, Jesus has placed such a high priority on delivering forgiveness to a dying world that he doesn’t wait for someone better to come along. He gives the task to you and me.
And in a strange twist, our own need for forgiveness, our own experience of forgiveness, makes us just the kind of messengers he wants. By God’s grace we have found forgiveness for our sins. We have seen the cross. We have received the gift. We are the satisfied customers whose personal experience with grace makes our testimony authentic, even if it might otherwise be a little shaky.
A recurring question I see on customer satisfaction surveys today is: “How likely are you to recommend XYZ to a friend or colleague?” I may not know the first thing about how XYZ works, but if I like how it works, they want me as a spokesman. I like how grace works. I sin. Jesus pays for it, all. God forgives it, completely. Don’t you like it, too? That’s why we are messengers.







