Suffering as a Pathway to Gospel Mission

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I rejoice in my sufferings for you and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ. Christ died for the Nations at a point in history, and he rose from the dead and he is now at the father's right hand until he puts all of his enemies under his feet. [00:06:26]

Epaphroditus completed what was lacking. I'll read it here this is verse 30. He came close to death, Philippians 2:30. He came close to death for the work of Christ, risking his life to complete what was lacking in your service to me. So even if you don't know Greek you can hear the parallel. [00:04:02]

The Great Commission will only be finished by suffering. It will only be finished by suffering. Now you may ask, well that does not sound like gain, but most of you aren't saying that right now because you remember the context of yesterday's message to live is Christ and to what is gained, to die is gain. [00:08:38]

Poor itinerant evangelist came to a village, and he was tired and he had walked all day bare feet, and he thought I'd rest I could rest or I could go in and share the gospel, and so he went in and he stood in the Little Village Square and he preached the gospel for all he was worth, and they mocked him. [00:11:20]

This is the way God means for the Great Commission to be done. The Great Commission will only be finished by suffering. It will only be finished by suffering. Now you may ask, well that does not sound like gain, but most of you aren't saying that right now because you remember the context of yesterday's message. [00:08:38]

There is no such thing as a closed country if you believe what I'm just saying. Every January, in the international bulletin of missionary research there's this awesome page of statistics. In line 27, average Christian Martyrs per year, 1998. 163 thousand this year will die. [00:19:29]

I rejoice in my sufferings for you and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ. Christ died for the Nations at a point in history, and he rose from the dead and he is now at the father's right hand until he puts all of his enemies under his feet. [00:06:26]

The call to missions is a call to suffer, we complete the afflictions of Christ in our flesh by presenting the afflictions of Christ in our afflictions to those for whom he died. That's the strategy for the Muslim world, there is no such thing as a closed country. [00:19:29]

I rejoice in my sufferings for you and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ. Christ died for the Nations at a point in history, and he rose from the dead and he is now at the father's right hand until he puts all of his enemies under his feet. [00:06:26]

The Great Commission will only be finished by suffering. It will only be finished by suffering. Now you may ask, well that does not sound like gain, but most of you aren't saying that right now because you remember the context of yesterday's message to live is Christ and to what is gained, to die is gain. [00:08:38]

Poor itinerant evangelist came to a village, and he was tired and he had walked all day bare feet, and he thought I'd rest I could rest or I could go in and share the gospel, and so he went in and he stood in the Little Village Square and he preached the gospel for all he was worth, and they mocked him. [00:11:20]

There is no such thing as a closed country if you believe what I'm just saying. Every January, in the international bulletin of missionary research there's this awesome page of statistics. In line 27, average Christian Martyrs per year, 1998. 163 thousand this year will die. [00:19:29]

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