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19 Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age."(Matthew 28:19-20 NRSV)
Happy Wednesday, dear Friend! May this be a day of new beginnings and blessings. May we pray for the blessing of health for those who have asked prayers from us. The Rev Stacey Evans, Valleyspring UMC has cancer and has been very sick. Please pray for her healing and wellbeing. Please also be in prayer for those pastors who have been notified of upcoming moves. May God bless them as they prepare to leave churches and homes to new settings. Prayers especaiily for spouses and children, as moves are never easy for them.
Well dear ones, this is the final and twelfth teaching of our Lord to His Disciples. They have been in chronological order and this final one is the deployment orders, or marching orders, to these men to go into the world and to transform it. It happens on a mountain spoken by the resurrected Jesus and He is very explicit in what it will take to win the world. Two verses. A command, a method, and a promise. This is the Great Commission — not an aspirational motto for the especially courageous, but an assignment given to ordinary, doubting, still-figuring-it-out followers of Jesus. It was theirs. And it is ours.
Before Jesus says go, He says something that reframes every word that follows. He says: all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. This is not a warm-up line. It is the entire foundation on which the commission stands.
A commission is only as weighty as the one who issues it. A general's orders carry the force of the army behind them. A sovereign's word carries the weight of the throne. When Jesus declares that all authority in heaven and on earth belongs to Him — not some authority, not authority in certain jurisdictions, but all of it — He is establishing that there is no place His disciples will ever go where He is not already Lord.
This changes everything about how we approach the mission. We do not go into the world hoping Jesus might have some influence there. We go into a world that already belongs to Him — a world for which He died and over which He reigns. The harvest field is not enemy-occupied territory from which we are trying to steal a few souls. It is the Father's field, and the risen Son is Lord of every square inch of it. We have His orders and for some, more importantly, we have His permission. For many of us, having permission is key to all things. I grew up in a home where we had to have permission to do this or that. So much so that on the very first night in college, a new friend asked me to go to the movies with him. I hesitated and said, "Let me go inside and get...." I stopped and laughed, I was going to say I needed to get permission.
So many followers of Jesus hesitate at the edge of the commission because they feel inadequate. They do not know enough theology. They have not resolved all their own questions. Their lives are messy enough that they wonder who they are to speak to anyone else about God. And so the commission stays at arm's length — admired, agreed with, and quietly ignored.
But Jesus does not say go because you are ready. He says go because I am Lord. The authority behind this mission is not yours to generate. It is His to grant — and He has granted it fully. The most uncertain disciple in that hillside crowd went forward on the same authority as the most confident one. What separated those who changed the world from those who faded into obscurity was not their qualifications. It was their willingness to lean on His. And please remember we are not sent because we have all the answers. We are sent because He has all authority.
In the original Greek, the Great Commission has one main verb and three supporting ones. The grammatical anchor of the entire sentence — the thing Jesus is most fundamentally commanding — is make disciples. Go, baptizing, and teaching all describe how disciplemaking happens. But the irreducible heart of the commission is this: make disciples.
Not make converts. Not make church attenders. Not make people who agree with a set of doctrinal propositions. Make disciples. The Greek word is matheteuein — to make learners, to apprentice someone into a way of life. A disciple in the ancient world was not simply someone who held certain beliefs. A disciple was someone whose entire manner of living was being shaped by a master's teaching and example.
To make a disciple is therefore a far richer, slower, more demanding undertaking than we often acknowledge. It is not a single conversation or a prayer prayed at an altar, though those moments can be sacred doorways. It is the sustained, relational investment of walking alongside someone as they learn to follow Jesus — answering their questions, modeling what obedience looks like, welcoming them into community, and staying with them through the long, uneven arc of growth.
Going. The word go carries within it an assumption that the people of God are a sent people — always moving outward, not waiting for the world to wander in. The church is not primarily a destination. It is a sending community, a people perpetually oriented toward those who have not yet heard. For some, that going crosses an ocean. For most, it crosses a street, a hallway, a lunch table, or a backyard fence, or cross the aisle in church on a Sunday morning.
The nations Jesus speaks of — panta ta ethne in Greek, all the people groups of the earth — are not only far away. They are often right next to us: the family from another country that moved in down the block, the coworker from a background entirely unlike ours, the neighbor whose language we do not share but whose loneliness we can see. The going begins wherever we already are.
Baptism in the name of the Trinity is the rite of welcome into the community of faith. It is the embodied, public declaration that a life now belongs to God and to God's people. Jesus includes it here as a reminder that discipleship is never a merely private matter between an individual and Jesus. To follow Christ is to be joined to His body. We are baptized into community — called, marked, and held together as the family of God.
Notice the precise language: teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. Not teaching them to memorize everything. Not teaching them to be able to debate everything. Teaching them to obey. The goal of all Christian formation — every sermon, every small group, every one-on-one conversation over coffee — is ultimately a life increasingly shaped by the character and commands of Jesus.
This is patient work that does not end. There is no graduation from discipleship this side of eternity. We are always learners, always being formed, always being conformed more deeply to the image of the One who called us. And so the teaching church is also always a learning church — humble enough to keep growing even as it reaches outward. Disciplemaking is not a program to launch. It is a life to give away.
All nations — panta ta ethne. Every people group, every language, every culture, every corner of human experience on the face of the earth. The scope of Jesus's vision is breathtaking, and in its original context it was nothing short of revolutionary.
The disciples who heard these words had been raised within a tradition that understood God's covenant as centered in Israel. The idea that the good news of Jesus was for all nations — not as an afterthought, not as an extension program, but as the very heartbeat of God's redemptive purpose — was staggering. The circle of welcome was wider than anyone had dared imagine.
For us today, the vision of all nations carries a built-in challenge to our comfort. A church that reaches only the people who already look, think, and live like its current members is not yet living fully into the commission. The picture of the kingdom that Jesus points toward is a great multitude from every nation, tribe, people, and language — and the work of the church is to pursue that vision, even when it requires crossing distances we would rather not cross.
Acts describes the spread of the gospel in expanding circles — Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. The disciples did not begin by booking passage to Rome. They began in the city where they already stood, with the people already around them. The all-nations vision never excuses us from the immediate neighbor. The Great Commission always begins with the person right in front of you.
Who is in your Jerusalem today? The coworker who has been quietly asking questions that sound a lot like spiritual thirst. The family member who has wandered far from faith and might not know how to find their way back. The new neighbor who does not yet know anyone in this city. The all-nations mission starts at your front door and moves outward from there.
Jesus closes the Great Commission not with another command but with a promise — and it is the promise that makes all the commands livable.
“And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” — Matthew 28:20
Remember. As if He knew we would forget. As if He understood that the weight of the mission, the vastness of the need, and the reality of our own smallness would cause us, sooner or later, to lose sight of the most critical fact of all: He has not sent us alone.
I am with you always. Not when your faith is strong. Not when the conversation goes well. Not when the results are visible and the work feels rewarding. Always — including in the long seasons of sowing when nothing seems to be growing, in the awkward exchange about faith that ends in silence, in the grief of watching someone you love walk away from God, in the weariness of showing up again and again for people who may not yet see what you see.
To the end of the age. This promise has no expiration date. Every generation of disciples who has taken this commission seriously has gone forward on the strength of these words. The early church went into a hostile empire with this promise. The martyrs faced their deaths with this promise. The missionaries who crossed unknown oceans held this promise. And we carry it still — the same risen Lord, the same unbroken word, the same presence that has never once failed.
The commission and the comfort are bound together in a single breath. Go — and I am with you. Make disciples — and I will never leave you. Baptize and teach — and I am there in every moment of it, with all authority in heaven and on earth sustaining every faithful step you take.
Go back to that mountain one more time. Eleven people. Some worshiping, some doubting. Fishermen and a former tax collector. People who had failed Him, fled from Him, and needed to be forgiven by Him. And the risen Lord gives them a commission that will, within a single generation, carry the gospel from Galilee to Rome.
They did not accomplish this because they were exceptional. They accomplished it because they were obedient to an exceptional Lord, and because they went in the power of His presence rather than the meager power of their own ability.
You are standing on that mountain today. The same commission. The same presence. The same promise stretching out before you to the end of the age. You do not need to have it all figured out before you step into this calling. You need only to go — and trust that the One who sends you has never stopped going with you. The Great Commission is not the calling of the exceptional few. It is the privilege of every baptized believer.
PRAYER: Lord Jesus, thank You for sending us not in our own strength but in Yours. Forgive us for holding the commission at a safe distance. Give us the courage to go, the patience to make disciples, and the faith to trust that You are always with us. We have major work to do, and we can only do it with Your presence and power with us; in Christ Jesus we pray, Amen.
Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Write down the name of one person in your life who does not yet know Jesus. Pray for them by name every day this week. Then take one simple step toward them — a conversation, a meal, or a note that lets them know you care. The Great Commission always begins with one name.
I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me!
Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.






