Pro-Life Activism Is Not a Mission of the Church
It Is THE Mission of the Church
By: Rolley Haggard
Now that I have your attention, permit me to explain.
There's an ongoing debate
in Reformed and Evangelical circles regarding the mission of the
church. That's good, because the Body of Christ needs to be clear on
what the Head expects the hands and feet to be doing.
But the way one frames the question can greatly affect the answer. So we need to make sure we're rightly framing the question.
Rightly Framing the Question
More often than not, the question “What is the mission of the church?” is framed so as to give either the exclusive mission, or the comprehensive mission, rather than the primary mission. As important as the first two are, the third is, by definition, the most important.
Exclusive mission means those things that the church and the church alone has responsibility for. There is no serious debate regarding the exclusive mission of the church. All parties are pretty much agreed that the church's exclusive mission is to minister the Word of God, particularly in fulfillment of the Great Commission. If the church doesn't do that, no one else will.
Comprehensive mission means all things the church has responsibility for. The comprehensive mission of the Church is what the aforementioned debate centers on. It involves determining what things are “official” church responsibilities and what things are not.
Primary mission means those things that are the church's most important responsibilities: the things she will be held most
accountable for by Christ. Unfortunately, neither side of the debate is
giving much consideration to this, and, incredibly, it is falling
through the cracks. Christ and His apostles laid it out so plainly it is
difficult to understand how we are overlooking it, but we are.
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