The Great Commission Starts at Your Front Door — Stop Ignoring It

2,504 words, 13 minutes read time.

The Great Commission is not a suggestion, not a gentle invitation for the spiritually ambitious, and certainly not an optional add-on for Christians who happen to have free time. Matthew 28:18-20 records the risen Christ issuing a direct command to make disciples of all nations, baptizing them and teaching them to observe everything He commanded. This is a marching order from the King of Kings, and it applies to every man who claims the name of Christ. The problem is that most Christian men have conveniently reinterpreted this command to mean “support missionaries financially” or “hope the pastor handles it.” The result is neighborhoods filled with lost souls, communities decaying under the weight of godlessness, and Christian men sitting in comfortable pews congratulating themselves for their attendance record while doing absolutely nothing to bring the gospel to the people within walking distance of their own front doors. The Great Commission begins at home, in the community, among the neighbors and coworkers and strangers encountered daily — and the failure to execute it there is a damning indictment of modern masculine faith.

This article confronts the epidemic of Great Commission neglect among Christian men, exposes the theological bankruptcy of outsourcing evangelism and discipleship, and lays out the non-negotiable biblical mandate to actively make disciples within arm’s reach. There is no escaping this responsibility. The mission field is not some distant land requiring a passport — it is the cul-de-sac, the workplace, the gym, the school pickup line. Every Christian man stands accountable for whether he carried the gospel to the people God placed in his path or whether he buried his talent in the ground like the worthless servant condemned in Matthew 25.

The Great Commission: A Direct Command for Local Evangelism and Disciple-Making

The Great Commission in Matthew 28:18-20 opens with Christ declaring that all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Him, establishing the foundation upon which the command rests — this is not a request from a peer but a directive from the One who holds absolute sovereignty over every realm of existence. The command itself is structured around one main verb in the original Greek: “mathēteusate,” meaning “make disciples.” The participles “going,” “baptizing,” and “teaching” describe how this disciple-making happens, but the imperative force lands squarely on the creation of disciples. This linguistic reality demolishes the excuse that evangelism is merely about sharing information or planting seeds with no responsibility for the outcome. Christ commandsams the production of disciples — people who follow Him, learn from Him, and obey Him — and He assigns this task to His followers without exception or escape clause. According to research published by the Barna Group, only 52% of churchgoing Christians say they have shared their faith even once in the past six months, and among men, the numbers are often worse due to cultural pressures against religious conversation. This is not a minor shortfall; it is wholesale desertion of the mission.

The phrase “all nations” in the Great Commission does not exclude the local community; it includes it as the starting point. Acts 1:8 clarifies the geographic expansion of the gospel mission: “You will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” Jerusalem came first. The apostles did not skip their immediate context to pursue more exotic mission fields. They started where they were, with the people they knew, in the language they spoke, and they built outward from that foundation. Modern Christian men have inverted this pattern, often showing more enthusiasm for supporting distant mission efforts than for speaking a single word of the gospel to the neighbor they have known for a decade. The Pew Research Center’s Religious Landscape Study consistently shows that a significant percentage of Americans claim no religious affiliation, with the “nones” rising to nearly 30% of the adult population in recent surveys. These are not people hiding in remote jungles — they are coworkers, neighbors, family members, and friends living in the same zip code. The mission field is not far away; it is dangerously close, and the failure to engage it is a failure of obedience.

Discipleship as defined by the Great Commission is not a one-time conversation or a gospel presentation delivered and then forgotten. The command includes “teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you,” which implies an ongoing relationship of instruction, correction, and modeling. This is the work of spiritual fatherhood, of investment over time, of pouring truth into another human being until they are equipped to do the same for others. The early church understood this model, as seen in Paul’s relationship with Timothy, Barnabas’s investment in Mark, and the pattern of elder-to-younger transmission described throughout the pastoral epistles. LifeWay Research has found that personal relationships remain the most effective pathway for people coming to faith, with friends and family cited far more often than programs, events, or media as the primary influence. The relational nature of discipleship cannot be outsourced to a church program or a podcast. It demands personal presence, consistent effort, and a willingness to be inconvenienced for the sake of another soul.

Building Disciples in the Neighborhood: The Mechanics of Community-Level Obedience

Executing the Great Commission in a local community requires intentionality, courage, and a willingness to be identified publicly as a follower of Christ. The days of cultural Christianity providing cover are over; the American religious landscape has shifted dramatically, and to speak openly about Jesus Christ is now to invite scrutiny, pushback, and potential social cost. Barna research indicates that practicing Christians often experience hesitation about evangelism due to fear of rejection, lack of confidence in their ability to answer questions, or uncertainty about how to start spiritual conversations. These fears are real, but they are not excuses. The apostles faced imprisonment, beatings, and execution for their witness, and they continued anyway because they understood that the eternal destiny of souls outweighed temporary discomfort. The man who cannot muster the courage to invite a neighbor to church or to explain why he follows Jesus has a faith problem, not a skill problem.

The practical mechanics of community-level discipleship begin with visibility and consistency. Neighbors notice patterns — they see who helps when there is trouble, who shows up when there is need, who lives differently in a world of chaos. The New Testament describes Christians as salt and light, preserving and illuminating their environments through their presence and conduct. This is not a passive process of hoping someone notices; it is an active pursuit of engagement, service, and conversation. Research from the Hartford Institute for Religion Research shows that churches with strong community engagement practices — food pantries, tutoring programs, crisis support — see higher rates of visitor retention and conversion, because people respond to demonstrated love before they respond to proclaimed truth. The man who claims to follow Christ but remains invisible in his community has removed his lamp from the stand and hidden it under a basket, directly violating the command of Matthew 5:14-16.

Disciple-making also requires verbal proclamation of the gospel, not merely good deeds performed in silence. Romans 10:14-17 establishes the necessity of preaching for faith to arise: “How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching?” The modern tendency to substitute “lifestyle evangelism” for actual gospel proclamation is a cowardly retreat from the full biblical mandate. Good works open doors and build credibility, but they do not save anyone. The gospel must be spoken — the reality of sin, the justice of God, the substitutionary death and resurrection of Christ, the call to repentance and faith. According to the Lausanne Movement’s Cape Town Commitment, integral mission includes both social action and gospel proclamation, and neither can replace the other. The man who serves his neighbor but never speaks the name of Jesus has given a cup of water while withholding the living water.

Reproducing disciples means identifying and investing in specific individuals who show spiritual hunger or openness. The pattern of Jesus choosing twelve from among many followers, and then investing most deeply in three within that twelve, demonstrates selective focus in discipleship. Not every contact will become a disciple, but every community contains people whom God has prepared for the message. Second Timothy 2:2 describes a multi-generational transmission model: “What you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses entrust to faithful men, who will be able to teach others also.” This is the exponential multiplication strategy that built the early church, and it remains the blueprint today. The Center for the Study of Global Christianity estimates that Christianity has grown from a handful of disciples to over 2.5 billion adherents through this person-to-person transmission across two millennia. Every man who makes one disciple who makes another disciple participates in this unbroken chain, and every man who neglects the task breaks the chain in his section of the world.

The Cost of Commission Neglect: Spiritual Consequences and Community Decay

The failure to live out the Great Commission carries consequences that extend beyond personal disobedience to systemic community decay. When Christian men retreat from evangelism and discipleship, they cede the moral and spiritual territory of their communities to competing worldviews and ideologies. The Pew Research Center has documented the rapid rise of secularism, the decline of religious affiliation, and the erosion of traditional moral frameworks in American society over the past several decades. This shift did not happen in a vacuum; it happened in part because those who knew the truth chose silence over proclamation, comfort over mission, and reputation over obedience. The neighborhood without active Christian witness becomes a neighborhood shaped entirely by secular values, media narratives, and the appetites of fallen humanity. Children grow up without ever hearing the gospel from a credible adult who lives it out. Marriages collapse without anyone offering the biblical framework for covenant love. Men spiral into addiction, despair, and purposelessness because no one told them about the Christ who transforms lives.

The spiritual consequences for the disobedient believer are equally severe. The parable of the talents in Matthew 25:14-30 describes a servant who buried his master’s money rather than putting it to work; the master’s judgment is devastating: “You wicked and slothful servant… cast the worthless servant into the outer darkness.” The talent given was not merely for personal safekeeping but for active investment that produced a return. The gospel entrusted to every believer is meant to be deployed, not buried under layers of fear, comfort, and distraction. James 4:17 states plainly: “So whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin.” The man who knows his neighbor is lost and does nothing, who understands the commission and ignores it, who possesses the truth and hoards it — that man is in sin, and no amount of church attendance, theological knowledge, or religious activity erases that failure.

The corporate witness of the church also suffers when individual men abdicate their responsibility. The Barna Group’s research on church perception shows that non-Christians often view the church as judgmental, hypocritical, and irrelevant — perceptions formed not primarily by official church statements but by personal encounters (or lack thereof) with individual Christians. When Christian men in a community are known only for what they oppose and never for the love and truth they extend to their neighbors, the gospel itself becomes associated with negativity rather than hope. Conversely, research from Alpha International and other evangelistic ministries consistently shows that personal invitation remains the most effective way to bring people into contact with the gospel, with most participants in evangelistic courses arriving because a friend, family member, or colleague invited them. The man who invites, who shares, who speaks truth in love becomes the doorway through which others enter the kingdom. The man who remains silent becomes a locked gate.

The Great Commission is not merely about saving souls in the abstract; it is about the concrete transformation of communities as the gospel takes root and produces fruit. The early church described in Acts did not exist in isolation from its surrounding culture; it impacted that culture through generosity, mutual care, and bold proclamation, such that “the Lord added to their number day by day those who were being saved” (Acts 2:47). Historical research on the spread of Christianity, including sociologist Rodney Stark’s work on the rise of Christianity in the Roman Empire, demonstrates that the faith grew through personal networks, community care during plagues, and the remarkable willingness of believers to risk themselves for others. These were not professional clergy operating programs; they were ordinary believers living out the commission in their neighborhoods, workplaces, and households. The same pattern applies today, and the same choice confronts every Christian man: participate in the mission or watch the community decay.

The Great Commission stands as the defining mission of every follower of Jesus Christ, and there is no exemption for comfort, fear, or cultural resistance. The command to make disciples applies locally and immediately, starting with the people God has placed within reach. Evangelism and discipleship are not optional programs for the especially gifted or called; they are baseline obedience for anyone who names Christ as Lord. The cost of neglect is measured in lost souls, decaying communities, personal spiritual rot, and a worthless-servant judgment that no man should want to face. The mission field is not across the ocean — it is across the street, across the office, across the dinner table. Every man who claims to follow Christ will either take up this commission or stand accountable for abandoning it.

Call to Action

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D. Bryan King

Sources

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

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EmpTunes - Gospel Galore Part Two

Stream Gospel Galore Part Two song from EmpTunes. Producer: EmpTunes. Album: emptunes.jimdofree.com. Release Date: October 7, 2024.

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Jerome translated the Bible into Latin. Here he praises a noblewoman, Fabiola, who converted, sold her property, and founded a hospital. Gathered sufferers out of the streets.

Today would we, instead, expect someone who’s cleaned up their act to give a speaking tour to inspire kids on how to keep their wives in line? Or at least stage photo ops handing out things to kids?

What would saints say about you after you’ve gone?

#christian #evangelicals #churchplanting #syria #feelathome

#ChurchPlanting. Neue Ideen....

Mit einer Gruppe des Kirchenkreises #Erfurt waren vier Menschen aus unserer Gemeinde in #Bradford, um dort zu lernen, wie die Church of England mit der Situation in einer sehr diversen und sekularisierten Welt umgeht.

Es ist ein interessanter, subjektiver Bericht entstanden:
https://predigercloud.de/s/EjSCARYSZmKjr9m

#CoE #FediKirche

KK_EF - Studienreise_Diözese_Leeds - Erfahrungsbericht.pdf

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Predigercloud
I left the #PCA because my #Presbytery ignored the #BCO concerning abuse, but conceptually, the Book of Church Order is great. Helps avoid inventing rules to handle situations as they arise. For a church plant like @LittleHillsC, I've been thinking about how to fill that void. #churchorder #churchplanting 🧵1/2

Otto Theleman was a Reformed pastor in Germany who wrote on the Heidelberg Catechism. He says to not covet also means to advance well-being of all believers. At least in his day, Theleman saw need 2B “constantly admonished”.

Today it’s more like conservatives constantly admonish the rest of us that Christians or rich people give more, so everyone hush up about how much suffering there is. Need more reminders?

#reformed #christianity #liberation #churchplanting #regeneration #classicalliberal

By the opening of the Season 2018-2019

After a marvellous great Summer we are looking forward with renewed energy for this new season.

Entrance of the Servicestation E40 – Texaco – Heverlee-Leuven where we had our breaking of bread service and biblestudy meetings with our ecclesia.

It was to good to have the opportunity to meet in a very beautiful space, designed by Abscis Architectsin which they anchored from a future-oriented social commitment in the social, economic, historical and cultural context of the environment and created a place where travellers could come at ease.

We could count on the Cuiz’Inn restaurant where on the menu fresh and authentic dishes from all over the world could be found. That is why their motto was ‘Taste the world’. From Oriental wok dishes to Belgian classics: every recipe was given as much attention and care that made it possible to say that Cuiz’Inn was not just a roadside restaurant. In the open kitchen products were prepared fresh and on the spot. But that is now a thing of the past.

The interior of our ecclesia meeting room we now have to remember as a nice place we could use for such a short time.

We shall have to look for a new meeting room, having our ecclesia meeting space being changed in a Starbuks Coffee saloon and a Burger King snackbar.

Brother Marcus Ampe shall be in the South of France until the 13th of October, after which he shall continue the search for an other meeting room. For a few weeks he shall take less time to think about the ecclesia work, taking some more time to walk in la douce France. After his Summer holiday he shall be once again all ears for those who need some help.

From mid October he will be back to work for one another’s welfare. Then he will encourage others again to be ready for each other, to forgive one another, to bear one another’s burden, to encourage and edify one another, and serve one another. Because that is what we should do at all times.

Whatever may happen, how much we may stay in the darkness concerning a meeting place around Brussels and Leuven, we shall try to look positive and shall keep the good spirit. Since the Facebook profiles timelines do not receive an update of the printed articles any more, we do hope people shall follow us on the Facebook pages: Christadelphia and Christadelphians.

For 2018-2019 we hope to continue with regular publications on this site and on the Brethren site Broeders in Christus, where you shall be able to find more articles in Dutch. From January 2019 you shall be able to find more regularly a devotion or a “Thought for the day” which shall follow our Daily Readings.

Our eyes shall also look at this world and give an eye from Christadelphian perspective on “Our World“. We also hope you shall find that blog of Brother Marcus, who by being very busy with some new bible translations and writing for some other Christian magazines, has somewhat neglected his own personal blog “Marcus Ampe’s space“.

Helping hands for the working of the Christadelphians in Belgium shall be very welcome. For sure we can use many hands and could also use some funds as well, having to face several costs which brings the ecclesia further in the red. Even when all the work is done voluntary, nobody receiving a payment for the preaching or work for the ecclesia, we have many costs, like internet-charges, publication and copyrights, postage fees, etc.. Doing no collections in the church service and not demanding a tenth of income, we depend on free gifts.

With much hope we look forward to find more readers, but also to find some people who would not mind meeting us in real life. We reach out our hand to find more people who would love to meet us. Like every believer in Christ, we need to feel that we are united in fellowship with one another, in the assurance that we are cleansed by the blood of Jesus Christ.

Do you hunger to fellowship with others?

Remember, you cannot claim to walk with God and not walk with His people. Christ Jesus remembered his followers to come together regularly. He wanted that, after his death, they would continue to gather to praise his heavenly Father. But he also wanted them to meet each other at regular times to make sure they would feel united and willing to encourage each other.

Brown deer standing on grass beside river during daytime – wanting to cross the river

It can well be that you too have to learn to fellowship with others and grow your faith in Christ Jesus. It is a task given by Christ Jesus. We should remember that. We also should remember that we should help each other to walk on the right path. We should give each-other a hand so that we can cross the wildest rivers.

Each day of our life we should remember that we are on our way to a better place. But we do have to look for the right station to catch the right train. To do that we need also to go to the right platform, where we shall be able to find people who are also willing to go on the track of life, from the darkness to the light. There we shall also find a special storyteller willing to go with us as a mentor and companion.

As an ecclesia, a bunch of people gathering with the intention to share their faith, we love to reach out our hand and to help people to cross the river and to bring them to save grounds and pathways where we can go forwards to reach the goal set before us by our divine Creator.

Jesus requested his followers not to stop meeting each other. For this we are still looking for places in Belgium to be able to realize this. If you have a room where we could come together you can always contact us. A meeting place to study the Bible and to praise and worship God does not have to be that special. Even in a living room one can come together to pray to God and form a community of believers.

This year too, we will try to make people realize that a small community of faith does not have to be that bad, but rather can be an advantage. Once again we invite others to join us for singing praises to God, praying together, listening to a message from the Word of God.

Every church needs people to shape and colour the community. Every church desperately needs people who make public meetings a top priority. Today is the day to start prioritizing the importance of the activities of your church in your life. Where are you and what do you want? Do you want to be part of true believers who want to fully serve Jehovah God with their hearts?

Everyone will have to realize that he or she also needs a church. We must see that God has made us a part of the church. Nobody can do it alone. We must realize that we are not strong enough on our own. Likewise, we must dare to be humble enough to recognize that we are not wise enough, not mature enough, and sometimes not godly enough. Without the beautiful, usual remedy that you experience in the church, you will not be able to save it. Without the support of your brothers and sisters in Christ, you will not be able to save it.

Then you also need to know that we also need you. The church needs you. It is together that believers in Christ have to make Church to form the body of Christ. If you are a believer, God has made you a part of the Church for the benefit of others. (1 Peter 4:10) says:

“As everyone has received a gift, you must serve each other as good ministers of the multiple mercy of God.”

God gave you to be part of the church that you have to make as your own church. You have to realize that you have received a lot from God, but that those gifts must also be shared with others. Those gifts that you received from God must be used for good use, also for other people. So we as a church give priority as an expression of generosity towards others.

We will also not fail to testify this year for Jehovah and His sentient. Without that God-given cornerstone we are not many, not to say nothing. All the partners in Christ must anchor themselves in the port provided by Jesus.

In our ecclesiae there is no collection plate passed. We know it could help us a lot and for members of the ecclesia it could be an easy way of sharing some of their possessions. Depending on free gifts we are very limited, even when nobody working for the ecclesia receives any money. All work is done freely. We do not have a staff payroll, because every work for God has to be done freely. As in the early church example, we do hope church members would not mind supporting the needs of other church members and shall be willing also to provide the means of having an established community of believers. Facing some great urgency for funds we dare to ask you if you would not like to help us. All sort of help is welcome. If someone can offer us a room to get together, it would be fantastic. If someone can provide us with some money to cover our expenses, that would be very nice.

Most of all we would appreciate it if we could find more people in Belgium interested in meeting with each other. Do you know that when you give a day to God, you can put aside all the worries of life. Together you can discuss many things with each other. By coming together you can share in the happiness of others. Together you can serve as supporters and strengthen each other. There are even many of the pleasures of life that we as brothers and sisters in Christ want and can share with each other. It therefore does not have to be a whole day spend with each other, where you invest time to worship God, serve the community and others. But what is it like to set aside a time for God and for each other?

Ideally we would welcome you at a meeting of like-minded people. That is our biggest wish for the new season.

 

°°°

Financial support is always welcome at Argenta Bank: BE37 9730 6618 2528 with notification: “Operation Belgian Christadelphians” or “Support for Belgian Christadelphians“.

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Preceding

Why we do not have our worship-services in a church building

A marvellous Summer ending

When seeing a biblically sound church

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  • Contribution – Contributie, bijdrage
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