Do the Work of an Evangelist:
Exhorting the Church, and Recovering the Great Commission
2 Timothy 4:5
"But you, keep your head in all situations, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, discharge all the duties of your ministry."
Christ gave these gifts to the church (Ephesians 4:11):
Apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors (shepherds), and teachers.
The Evangelist, focuses on proclaiming the gospel to those who haven’t heard or believed it. Overlapping that ministry is the Exhortation of the Church. The primary focus is reaching those outside the faith; sharing Christ's gospel so people hear, understand, and respond in repentance and belief. It’s outward-oriented, often with a sense of urgency. Meanwhile the gift of Exhortation involves urging, comforting, strengthening, and motivating others, especially believers, to live out their faith, persevere through trials, obey God, and grow in maturity. It's the ongoing ministry of the evangelist.
The evangelist’s work doesn’t end the moment someone believes. Proclamation leads naturally into exhortation as the ongoing, nurturing side of the same gospel ministry. This person is one who wants to walk along-side the new believers and guide their growth. Once people respond to the call of the gospel, the work continues.
This pattern is all over the New Testament. Paul would plant churches through evangelism, then spend weeks, months, or years exhorting them.
Why is this important in the life of the church?
Hebrews tells us to "exhort one another every day, as long as it is called 'today,' that none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin" (Hebrews 3:13).
The job of "the church" is to regularly stir up and keep its evangelistic fire alive. There is no other job more important than this. Certainly the care ministries are imperative for the people of God, but the mission is maintaining the reach of the gospel. The health, faithfulness, and very existence of the local church depend on keeping the gospel advancing outward while the church itself stays spiritually soft and alive inwardly. The church is not primarily a self-help club, a social service agency, or a spiritual hospital (though it does all those things). The church exists for the mission of the gospel.
"Go and make disciples of all nations…" (Matthew 28:19)
"You will be my witnesses…" (Acts 1:8)
Without regular, Spirit-empowered exhortation, even genuine believers drift. The same deceitfulness that keeps outsiders from believing can slowly harden those already inside. Daily encouragement, warning, and stirring are God’s appointed means to keep the church tender, repentant, and useful.
Every other ministry (care, counseling, mercy, worship, teaching) finds its ultimate purpose in supporting this evangelical gospel mission.
Do you think your church home is holding this view in regard to its mission? Or do you sense a spirit of drift, a holy huddle that cares for its own but has no impact outside the church property?
Care ministries are vital to the life of the church; feeding the hungry, comforting the grieving, discipling the young, but they must never replace or overshadow the Great Commission. The best care ministries are actually done with the gospel on its lips, not instead of it.
Kindness and good works are essential, but they are not the gospel. They prepare the soil; they do not plant the seed. It is unfortunate that many congregations have adopted an attitude that the gospel is best proclaimed by their care ministries. And many lean hard on the idea, even quoting, "preach the gospel, and when necessary use words". This popular saying is often attributed to St. Francis of Assisi, but historical and Catholic scholars widely agree he never said it. It’s a later invention that has been used to justify a "lifestyle only" approach to evangelism. While the sentiment contains a half-truth, (our lives must back up our words), it becomes dangerous when it silences the actual message. People cannot be saved by observing Christian kindness alone. They must hear the gospel, and be encouraged in the ways of the Spirit.
The mission of EVERY Christian church is making disciples.
And...
"Faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ." (Romans 10:17)
The content is non-negotiable.
Knowing and taking to heart, who Jesus is, what He has done, and what He requires, is critical to this process. Without this message, even the most beautiful acts of service leave people spiritually unchanged. The believers must walk by the Spirit and not the flesh (Galatians 5:16-25). Pursuing holiness, persevering when trials come, and boldly share their new faith with others.
The fact is, the modern Christian world has been completely diluted by pluralistic ideas ("all paths lead to God" or "different truths for different people" ) and has compromised its mission with relativism ("your truth, my truth, who are we to judge?" ), rendering it incapable of preaching the gospel to anyone other than themselves. And then it's a watered down story about self-improvement. A consumer-driven, therapeutic model that prioritizes felt needs over biblical truth. They may still do good deeds, run excellent care ministries, and use Christian language, but the sharp saving edges of the gospel have been sanded down, smoothed over, and varnished with a message that cannot offend.
The mission of the church is not managing programs, not building impressive campuses, not becoming a respected community organization; but intentionally leading people to hear the gospel, believe it, obey it, and reproduce it in others.
This is where our sense of calling becomes so important. Whether the Lord shapes us as an evangelist-teacher, pastor-teacher, or a strong teacher/exhorter, the church desperately needs men and women who will hold the gospel content as non-negotiable. Someone who will exhort believers daily so they don’t drift into the surrounding relativism. And someone who will equip the saints to make more disciples, not just maintain the status quo.
The mission has not changed, even if much of the visible church has.