Constance Free Church Sunday Services
GO26
What if the primary aim of our lives wasn't about our personal success, comfort, or even retirement, but about something infinitely greater? This message confronts us with the radical reality that God's heart has always been for all nations and all peoples to know Him. From the Abrahamic covenant to Psalm 67's prayer that God's ways be known on earth and His salvation among all nations, we see that blessing was never meant to be hoarded but shared. The story of two young men in the 1700s who sold themselves into slavery to bring the gospel to an unreached island challenges our modern excuses of being too busy, too afraid, or too unprepared. The truth is, when we praise God, we're not feeding His ego—we're completing our joy in something that can never be lost, taken, or beaten. Unlike our favorite sports teams or concerts, God's salvation is eternal. Matthew 28's Great Commission isn't a suggestion but a declaration that all authority belongs to Jesus, and therefore we go. The vision of Revelation 7—a great multitude from every nation, tribe, and language standing before the throne—isn't just a future hope; it's the trajectory of all history. The question becomes: is our aim aligned with God's aim? Are we zealous goers, zealous senders, or disobedient? With billions still unreached, the urgency is real, and the invitation is clear—to connect with Jesus, grow in Jesus, and go in Jesus to reach the world with the gospel.