Passion for the Unreached and Unengaged
David Platt post at DG:
Living for the Joy of All Peoples — Wherever You Live
One important question that I've been asked is why I — with a passion
for the unreached and unengaged peoples of the earth — serve as a
pastor in Birmingham, Alabama, one of the most churched cities in
America. It's a great question and one that often perplexes me. Here are
three conclusions that I have come to in my own personal wrestling with
this question.
God Called Me to Birmingham
First and foremost, I am a pastor in Birmingham because I believe
this is where God has specifically called and ordained me to pastor.
Years ago, my wife, Heather, and I said that if there are nearly two
billion people in the world who have little to no access to the gospel —
and most of them live overseas — then the only way we can stay here
instead of moving there is if we're convinced we can do more to affect
them from living here than living there. And whenever that is not the
case, we want to take a one-way ticket overseas.
We have given God a “blank check” with our lives. Wherever he wants
us to go, we will go. And I trust that he has used and will use that
blank check according to his wisdom. Five years ago, I was living in New
Orleans, teaching seminary, and traveling around the world. I had no
desire to pastor a church in Birmingham. But in God's sovereign wisdom
and by his boundless grace, he led me here. And I trust— I pray! — that
he is using me here for the sake of the unreached and unengaged.
Leading God's People for God's Purpose
Second, my heart’s desire is to shepherd, equip, and mobilize the
people of God for the purpose of God. I believe God’s purpose for his
people is for them to enjoy his grace and extend his glory to the ends
of the earth (this is obviously all over Scripture; see particularly the
bookends in Genesis 12 and Revelation 7).
This God-given desire fits well with the people among whom God has
placed me. God has been gracious to people in Birmingham. He has given
us abundant gospel access. Not everyone in Birmingham is saved, but
people in Birmingham have access to the gospel. And many have been
saved. By God’s grace, many have been born into families where they have
heard and received the gospel at an early age. This is evidence of the
mercy of God!
And God gives mercy for the sake of mission. He has given us the
gospel in Birmingham for his glory among all nations. And I absolutely
love shepherding, equipping, and mobilizing people who are overwhelmed
by God’s grace to live for God’s glory among all peoples. And I rejoice
that this is happening as we send out people from our church throughout
Birmingham and around the world.
Undo the Hidden Assumption
Finally, when I contemplate this question — why someone with a
passion for the unreached and unengaged peoples of the world lives in
Birmingham, Alabama — I conclude that the question itself contains a
hidden assumption that, with all due respect, I am not comfortable
with. This question almost assumes that those who have a passion for the
“unreached and unengaged” should live among the “unreached and
unengaged,” and those who have a passion for the “reached and engaged”
should live among the “reached and engaged.” But I am convinced by God’s
Word that every follower of Christ should have a passion for the
“unreached and unengaged.”
Together, we have all been given a command to make disciples of all nations (i.e., panta ta ethne,
among all the people groups of the world). Obedience to the Great
Commission, therefore, requires commitment to taking the gospel to all
the people groups of the world.
This is a command for all of us, and it
is not an option for any of us. How God calls us to carry out that
command obviously varies from person to person and church to church. But
whether someone is a pastor (or Christian, for that matter) in
Birmingham, Minnesota, Seoul, Beijing, Delhi, or London, we are all commanded to make disciples among all the people groups. Therefore, we all need a passion for the unreached and unengaged.
Like every other follower of Christ, I want to live — wherever I am —
with a God-given, Christ-centered, gospel-saturated, world-embracing
longing to see every people group on the planet reached with the gospel
so that our life-giving, grave-conquering, all-satisfying King receives
the praise that he is due. That’s the primary motivation that drives me
as a pastor in, of all places, Birmingham, Alabama.
David Platt is the pastor of The Church at Brook Hills in Birmingham, AL, and author of Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream (Multnomah, 2010). He and his wife, Heather, have two sons, Caleb and Joshua.
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