Now Reading
No, the Church Shouldn’t Just Care About Spiritual Things

No, the Church Shouldn’t Just Care About Spiritual Things

What do you think the primary mission of the church should be? Here are a few statements I’ve heard recently from church leaders. Maybe they sound familiar to you:

“Let the Church do what only the Church can do.”

“Our church focusses only on preaching the Gospel and church planting.”

“We don’t get distracted by things that any secular NGO can do.”

These statements sound so reasonable. The pity is they don’t line up with the teachings of Jesus.

When I was living in Vancouver, a local church was threatened with legal action by the city for feeding homeless people. As a registered church they were supposed to stick to the things the government thought churches should be doing: preaching, worshipping and having potlucks. In other words the church should stay in a little corner, not disrupting the status quo in the city.

Instead, this church took the city to court, and won with the argument that feeding the poor and advocating for their well-being is central to the mission of the Church. As central to the mission of the church as singing praise songs and eating potato salad made by lovely old ladies.

I’m glad they did because they stand on the side of Jesus and the early Church. In fact, in my understanding, caring for the poor is one beautiful way to worship Jesus, especially when we do it in His name. Didn’t He say whatever you do for the poor, you do unto me? (Matthew 25:40)

So, for those who are not yet fully convinced, here’s why the Church should never be suckered into reducing its mission to “spiritual” things alone.

Jesus didn’t stick to only “spiritual” things.

Jesus never limited his mission on earth to the “spiritual” realm. (I put the word “spiritual” in quotes, because everything has spiritual implications. But this is not the way many church leaders use the term.)

Jesus was deeply interested in transforming every aspect of people’s lives, from the relational, to the economic, to the deeply personal and the systemic. Here are a few examples (although there are many more):

– He called out church leaders for exploiting the poor. (Luke 20:47)

– He challenged societal and religious rules that excluded people. (John 5:8-10)

– He taught widely on the use of money and encouraged his followers to give generously to the poor. (Mark 10:21)

– He spoke frequently about welcoming the marginalized into our homes. (Luke 14:13)

– Jesus and His disciples even had a special Poverty Alleviation Fund, a purse in which they saved coins for the poor. (John 13:29)

In one infamous incident, not widely practiced by Christians today, Jesus tipped over the tables of sketchy money-changers in the temple because they were exploiting the poor. That doesn’t sound like someone who was limiting himself to merely “spiritual” things.

I mean, Jesus was passionate about justice. That’s why He told church leaders to stop neglecting justice and mercy towards the poor which He claimed were the more important aspects of the law. (Matthew 23:23)

The early church didn’t stick to “spiritual” things.

So Jesus didn’t limit Himself to spiritual things, but maybe He did those other things to get people’s attention for the main show—preaching the Word! And that’s what we, the Church, should do. Right?

Wrong.

Acts of mercy and justice should never be used as a manipulative way of getting people’s eyeballs to focus on our presentation of a spiritual message. Jesus doesn’t want to be reduced to Secretary of Afterlife Affairs. He wants to be King. Of everything. Here and now. I submit to you that the early church, the ones who had received their teaching directly from the Big Boss Himself, did not understand their mission in this limited “spiritual” way. In fact, they were so serious about their radical new way of life that they sold their possessions—their actual investment properties and townhouses to redistribute cold hard cash to the poor. (Acts 2:45)

They actually managed to eradicate economic poverty in their midst through this commitment to overcoming injustice (Acts 4:35). When the early church leaders sent Paul and Barnabas out to do cross-cultural church planting, they sternly reminded them NOT to neglect the poor, something Paul would never have done:

“They only asked us to be mindful of the poor, the very thing I was eager to do.” (Galatians 2:10) The first act of subversive redistribution started with some tuna sandwiches.

The Gospel is not merely “spiritual”

This is where I’m going to ask you to de-construct your theology a little bit. Jesus preached the Gospel throughout his ministry. But obviously, this preaching took place before his death and resurrection on the cross. So what Gospel was Jesus actually preaching? Come on. Think about it. If the Gospel is specifically that Jesus died on the cross for our sins and then rose again, how on earth did Jesus preach this?

Clearly, He didn’t. Not the way we do, anyway.

Guess what? Mainstream Christianity does not teach the same message that Jesus Christ taught when He walked the earth 2,000 years ago. If Jesus came only to die and take away our sins, why didn’t God just get it over with when Herod massacred all the babies under the age of two? Jesus could have died right then, and saved Himself 30 more years of crappy treatment. Or why didn’t Jesus allow the crowd to throw Him off the cliff at the start of his ministry? Why walk around in dusty sandals with 12 whining disciples for three more years?

The truth is, Jesus came to do more than die. He came to live, and to show us how to live. He came to preach the Gospel—the good news—of an incredible upside-down kingdom, a kingdom that would come on earth as it is in heaven. A Gospel that would be “good news for the poor.” (Luke 4:18) “Jesus came to Galilee preaching the Gospel of the kingdom of God.” (Mark 1:14)

“Then Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the Gospel of the kingdom.” (Matthew 9:35)

“I must preach the kingdom of God to the other cities also, because for this purpose I have been sent” (Luke 4:43)

The Gospel is about the Kingdom of God, which culminates in the death and resurrection of Jesus where things shifted in the heavenly realms, but is broader than that event. It’s a Kingdom that is truly good news, economically, physically, socially, politically and spiritually—for everyone, but especially for the poor.

That is what the full weight of Jesus’ teaching and life shows us. I’m passionate about the spiritual freedom that Jesus brings through His work on the cross. He overcame death and sin in that act. His actions on the cross also fulfilled everything He had been telling us about loving our enemies and laying down our lives for others.

That’s why it makes no sense to lay those teachings aside and claim we are “focusing on the Gospel alone.” Scott McKnight puts it like this, “The Gospel is more than the crucifixion—it is the announcement of Jesus as the world’s true king—His life, His teachings, His actions, His death, His resurrection and His ascension (and return).”

At the beginning of this post, I asked what the primary mission of the Church should be. Two thousand years ago, Jesus answered this question better than most of our Churches do today: Seek first the Kingdom of God. (Matthew 6:33) That’s our primary mission. Don’t let anyone tell you that doesn’t require everything.

A version of this article originally appeared on craiggreenfield.com. Used with permission.

View Comments (0)

Leave a Reply

© 2023 RELEVANT Media Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Scroll To Top

You’re reading our ad-supported experience

For our premium ad-free experience, including exclusive podcasts, issues and more, subscribe to

Plans start as low as $2.50/mo