According to the language experts, “send out” in this
passage could more literally be translated as “thrust out.” That has a more
forceful and energetic ring than merely sending
them. It sounds a bit random as well. Sometimes God’s “sending” does not appear
to be so orderly. From my home church, for instance, we have recently had
members who were called to Japan, Cambodia, and Africa. Why there? Why them? They
know they were called, but only God knows the “whys.”
Have you noticed that we don’t read that Jesus ever told
his disciples to pray for lost souls? Instead, he told them to pray for
laborers (and he told them to go be those laborers).* How many
prayer requests have you heard for someone’s lost loved one? How many requests
for workers in the field? Perhaps we need to change the focus of our prayers.
I
believe there is a natural progression from praying for laborers to developing
the willingness to be one. Our
willingness to serve may not result in a call to go away – after all, if we all
got up and went, who would pay the bills? God hasn’t gifted us all the same or
called us all to the same field; but whatever our gift or calling, Jesus asks
us to pray for workers in his harvest fields. Maybe he will send you!
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