Sometimes, when we are working on a project with several other people, when the workload is large, and we have a specific deadline to get this work done, it helps to split up into groups, each one handling a specific area. Jesus and His disciples had the goal of reaching the people of Israel with His message of salvation. Jesus also had a limited amount of time, as He knew that the time of His sacrifice upon the Cross was getting closer. So for a short period of time, He would send out His disciples, two by two, to go separately to various communities in Galilee and Judea, bringing His message. Our Gospel passage today speaks of this, as this is the first time that Jesus sends out the twelve on a preaching mission. As we read our Scripture, we will see Jesus’ compassion for lost sinners, His calling of laborers, His commissioning of the disciples, and His warning that the Gospel ministry will bring both divine power and earthly opposition.
As we begin our Scripture passage, we read of Jesus going about the villages of Galilee, teaching the Gospel, preaching, and healing the sick (vs. 35-36). Large crowds, multitudes, would gather around Him wherever He went. Rather than getting irritated and worn out with their constant neediness, Jesus had compassion on them. The Greek word here is splagchnizomai, which means having a deep, gut-level compassion. The people were weary and scattered. They were like sheep with no shepherd. A sheep without a shepherd is in constant danger. They can be victims of predators, disease, hunger, and an unshorn sheep quickly becomes a mess. They were in this shape because Israel’s spiritual leaders had failed them. People today, all across our communities are in the same spiritual shape. Jesus had compassion on the people then, and He does today, as well. Lost humanity is helpless without the Good Shepherd.
Looking out at the people Jesus saw that they were like a field of grain, ready for the spiritual harvest (vs. 37-38). However there were few workers. After His resurrection, when He would send the disciples out into the world, not just locally, the fields would be larger, and even more workers would be needed, so He told the disciples that they were to pray for more workers. The fields are ripe now. The harvest is ready now. We are to be His laborers now, going out into the fields of our communities, country, and world, to bring in the harvest of souls for His kingdom.
Responding to the compassion He felt for these lost sheep, Jesus commissioned His twelve disciples to go out and bring His message throughout Galilee and Judea (vs. 1-4). These twelve were not the only disciples that Jesus had. There were others who followed Him closely. These twelve were His core inner circle, and among the twelve there were three (Peter, James, and John), who were even closer, and witnessed some things the others didn’t. However, these twelve were ordinary men - some were fishermen, there was a tax collector, and also a zealot. God delights in using unlikely people to accomplish great things for Him.
Jesus instructed the twelve that at this time they were not to preach to Gentiles or to Samaritans, but to only go “to the lost sheep of the house of Israel” (vs. 5-6). We might wonder why He was excluding Gentiles and Samaritans. Weren’t they worthy of salvation? Of course they were/are, however this was a temporary, mission-specific restriction. Israel must receive the kingdom offer first, and then later the Gospel would expand to all nations (Matthew 28:19). The message to be preached was that “the kingdom of heaven is at hand” (vs. 7). It is a call to repentance and to be ready to accept God’s chosen Messiah.
Jesus gave the disciples the ability to perform some miracles, such as healing, casting out demons, and even raising the dead (vs. 8). These miracles would authenticate their message, and demonstrate the arrival of the Messiah. God freely gave them and us salvation and spiritual gifts, so they were to freely offer them to others. We are not to commercialize God’s ministry. They were also instructed to be dependent upon God for their needs by not taking excessive money or extra supplies with them (vs. 9-10). This would teach them to have faith in God for their needs, and prevent any accusations of greed. The disciples were to find in each community a household that was receptive to their message and stay with them (vs. 11-13).
As we know, when we share the Gospel with others, some will accept and others will reject us. Jesus instructed that if a town rejected the twelve, they were to shake off the dust of their feet as a symbolic act of testimony against them (vs. 14-15). This would underscore the seriousness of rejecting the Gospel truth. People will be held accountable before God for when they hear the Gospel message. For those who reject the Gospel, judgment is real, it is certain, and it will be severe.
In closing, we see that Jesus has compassion on the lost, the unsaved. He so dearly wants them to hear His message and come to Him for salvation. As Jesus said, the harvest is ready now, it remains plentiful. Laborers need to go out bringing His message. We are those laborers, and we need to bring the Gospel to the lost. God will provide for our needs to do this. He still provides for those who obey His call. Faithfulness to Jesus will bring both fruit and resistance. Those who hear the Gospel are accountable for their response. As believers we need to pray, to go, to trust, and to proclaim the Lord Jesus with boldness and compassion.