CHRIST'S SPHERE OF ACTIVITY IN HIS
PROPHETIC OFFICE.
A good many unprejudiced, believing
Bible-readers have struggled with a feeling of offended surprise at the words of
Christ to the woman of Canaan: "I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the
house of Israel," Matt. 15, 24. It may seem strange, also, that Christ
commands His disciples: "Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and into any
city of the Samaritans enter ye not," Matt. 10, 5. 6. It is a matter of
record, furthermore, that Jesus spent His ministry within the boundaries of
Palestine, touching the adjacent heathen countries only by way of passing
through quickly, as in the story told above.
Over against these facts there
seems to stand the testimony of the prophets, whose predictions as to the sphere
of Christ's activity are such as to cause one to feel that the entire earth is
Christ's sphere of personal effort. The prophet says: "I will also give
Thee for a light to the Gentiles," Is. 49, 6. "And the Gentiles shall
come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising," Is. 60, 3.
"He will teach us of His ways," Is. 2, 3. "The nations shall be
blessed in Him, and in Him shall they glory," Jer. 4, 2. "All nations
whom Thou hast made shall worship before Thee," Ps. 86, 9.
The contradiction is only apparent,
however. St. Paul rightly says: "Is He the God of the Jews only? Is He not
also of the Gentiles? Yes, of the Gentiles also," Rom. 3, 29. The solution
is easy if we remember two points. In the first place, Christ, in the case of
the woman of Canaan, speaks of His own personal work. So far as His person was
concerned. His ministry was limited to His countrymen, the Jews. In the second
place, His instructions to His disciples indicate that it was God's will that
the work of the new covenant should begin at Jerusalem, Luke 24, 47. Throughout
the New Testament this fact, that God wanted to make the people of His choice
the recipients of the Gospel-message first among all nations, stands out very
strongly.
But the work was not to be confined
to the people of Judea or Palestine, Luke 24, 47; Acts 1, 8. Jesus Himself gave
evidence of that. The first persons to give Him homage from outside of Bethlehem
were the Magi from the East, Gentiles, by all accounts, Matt. 2, 1-12. He
Himself praised the faith of the centurion of Capernaum, Matt. 8, 10. He
converted the woman of Samaria and many of her townspeople, John 4. He was
overcome by the faith of the Syrophenician woman, Matt. 15, 28. He predicted the
coming of the Gentiles into the fold. Matt. 8, 11; Luke 13, 29. He, finally,
gave to His disciples the great command to go into all the world and preach the
Gospel to every creature. Matt. 28, 19; Mark 16, 15. All of which goes to show
that God wanted His work to be carried out in an orderly way, according to a
preconceived plan.
"Now He, the Light of the
world, is indeed come for the salvation of the whole world, but for the
establishment of the kingdom of light and life by the preaching of the Gospel
and by the working of miracles, wherein the coming of the kingdom of heaven is
indicated, He is sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, a minister
of the circumcision for the truth of God, to confirm the promises made unto the
fathers, Rom. 15, 8, in order that the Shepherd of Israel might become the
Shepherd of all nations in mercy. Salvation is of the Jews, John 4, 22, and
Simeon's prophecy of the Savior of all people and of the Light of the Gentiles,
to the glory of the people of Israel, must be fulfilled, Luke 2, 32. He says
indeed: 'Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold; them also must I
bring'; but the Prophet of Galilee would not be a teacher of the Gentiles, but
the voice of His calling should issue only through the mouths of the apostles,
after He had completed the redemption of the world, in order that all the
dispersed that by faith in Him would become children of God, might be brought
together, John 11, 52." 119)