The Ends of the Earth Today

In the previous essay, I discussed where the Gentile mission really started and concluded that it began in Syrian Antioch when some unnamed believers began evangelizing Gentiles, walking through the door that had been opened with Cornelius. This helps us understand the Acts 1:8 sequence a little better, but leaves open the question of how to apply this today.

Jesus’ sequence of Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria, and the ends of the Earth is sometimes applied physically to us today by starting with our local neighborhoods as our “Jerusalem”, and continuing out until we get to distant lands. Other times, the sequence is used as a picture to describe people instead of location, so that we start with those who are like us, but strive to reach those who are very different from us. These differences may be economic, racial, cultural, and so on.

In either case, these modern applications tend to place ourselves in the center.

However, I think that Jesus’ sequence hints at another way to think about this, by looking at Cornelius. First, recall that the term “ends of the Earth” was closely associated with Gentiles, and physically would have been beyond Samaria, the last region on Jesus’ list.

Now, Cornelius is clearly highlighted as the first Gentile believer, but he was physically in Samaria, not even beyond Jesus’ own travels.1 Also, he was familiar with God, in fact he was explicitly described as a God-fearer — someone who worshipped God, prayed to Him, and gave alms.

Thus, Cornelius was something of a spiritual mixture, just as Samaria (where Cornelius was located) was a religious mixture.2 This suggests another way to look at the Acts 1:8 sequence — as a spiritual sequence from nearness to God, to complete separation from Him.

Importantly, this approach places God at the center rather than ourselves. A spiritual perspective like this can be applied directly today.

For example, just as Jerusalem was the center of religious activity, perhaps we can think of our Jerusalem as those places filled with people who are in close relationship to God. Church services, Christian charity and service, Bible studies and prayer meetings, and so on.

Judea was the land of the Jews, but not explicitly religious. It was where Judaism was lived out in the rest of life, so perhaps today we can think of this as places where Christianity is practiced outside of church — festivals and concerts, non-profit organizations, Christian businesses, and so on. Still primarily populated by Christians, but not church-centered environments.

Samaria was a land of mixture, where some Jewish beliefs, practices and ethnicity were mixed with Gentile influences. Today this might look like places where Christian beliefs are practiced in non-Christian environments. Secular workplaces where Christians live out their beliefs but are not the majority, families that include a mixture of believers and unbelievers, and so on.

The ends of the Earth represented those places where recognition of God was minimized, that were completely dominated by secular Gentile belief. Such places would exist today wherever secular influences dominate, especially where Christian influences are deliberately ignored or even rejected. This may include many businesses, universities, cultural events, and so on.

In a sense, we can think of such places as populated by “spiritual Gentiles”. Gentile, not in the original sense of non-Jewish, but in the sense of being separated from God.

The idea of using the Acts 1:8 sequence to represent spiritual realities can probably be applied in several ways; the descriptions above are just one possibility. My primary focus is the last stage — how do we bring light to those places that are spiritually dark, that are the furthest from God?

People in these modern “ends of the Earth” are right around us — our neighbors, co-workers, civic leaders, teachers, and so on. They may live near us or far away, be like us or very different, but spiritually they are Gentiles in the sense of being far from God. This group is growing, partly because our culture is growing more secular, but also because people who are spiritually seeking often don’t see Christianity as a good path. In addition, there is a steady stream of people leaving the faith.

Because of this group’s spiritual perspectives, they are often unaware and even uninterested in church, in going to Jerusalem. As such, they are less likely to respond to things like invitations to religious or church activities. They need to be reached by Christians going to them, just as Jesus originally said.

My interest here is to seek the Lord about reaching this growing population of spiritual Gentiles. Given the growth of this darkness and the related struggles of current evangelism, it seems that there is something missing. By studying how the Spirit worked in Scripture to reach those furthest from Jerusalem, I hope to learn principles that can make a difference today.

  1. Cornelius was in Cesarea, in Samaria. Jesus went beyond Samaria, to Tyre and Sidon (Mark 7:24).
  2. Samaria was populated largely by Jews who had mixed with Gentiles. Their religion was based on only the first five books of the OT, and had many differences from Judaism. See, for example, John 4:19-22.

One thought on “The Ends of the Earth Today

  1. Reading in Ephesians recently, I realized that the terms Paul used to describe Jews and Gentiles parallel this interpretation of “ends of the Earth”. He referred to Gentiles as those who were “far off” in verse 2:13, and repeats this terminology in verse 2:17 when he refers to “you who were far off” and “those who were near”. It seems clear that Paul is not talking about physical distance, but rather distance from God.

    There are other places where this type of terminology is used. It may refer to distant Jews in some cases, but may also refer to Gentiles, depending on the contexts. Further consideration is needed. (See, for example, Acts 2:39, 22:21, and Isa 57:19.)

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