Pastor David Jang’s Sermon: The Life of the True Church Shaped by the Gospel of the Cross and Grace (Olivet University)

The French writer Antoine de Saint-Exupéry wrote in one of his works that if you want to build a ship, you should not merely have people gather wood or assign them tasks; rather, you must awaken in them a longing for the vast and endless sea. This is because beneath the skill of raising great sails and cutting through waves lies a fundamental yearning for the destination. The same is true when it comes to building the spiritual world and establishing the essence of the church. Pastor David Jang traces Paul’s urgent journey in Acts 17 through Thessalonica, Berea, and Athens, and brings before us the deepest essence that makes the church truly the church and enables mission that gives birth to life. This is not simply an attempt to recall history from the past, but a holy question that pierces the hearts of believers living and breathing here and now. It declares that the church’s only true starting point is not splendid ministry techniques or complex modern programs, but a longing for Jesus Christ and fervent love for one’s neighbor. In the blazing field where the gospel advanced and persecution surged at the same time, Paul’s heart beat only with love, and his steps moved forward unwaveringly upon the order of grace.

The Deepest Driving Force Beyond Strategy: Loving Relationships

The fact that Paul, despite suffering severe physical and emotional wounds after being brutally beaten and imprisoned in Philippi, did not make excuses but immediately set out for Thessalonica is an astonishing event that goes beyond a mere sense of religious duty. This sermon deeply illuminates that behind his unstoppable movement was not a cold custom, but a burning and earnest longing for relationship. His heart, which refused to give up on his own people even though they rejected, accused, and attacked him, and which went back to the synagogue to embrace them again, lies in a realm utterly impossible by human will alone. It is a miracle of love that can be shown only by those who have received the paradoxical heart of Jesus Christ flowing from the cross. The first foundation of the church as it reaches out to the world must be defined not by any other great ministry, but by this loving relationality. The profound challenge to learn the heart of Christ, who embraces even enemies, means that mission is not a kind of project, but a transformation of one’s very being.

Today, we often lose the patience and waiting required for souls under the name of efficiency, accuracy, or visible results. Truth proclaimed from a heart not fully filled with love can easily become a weapon that wounds another person’s soul. When the church boasts only of theological accuracy without love, or wields religious zeal without personal relationship, all of its missional cries collapse into empty noise. Excessive ministry only leaves behind spiritual fatigue. By contrast, when love becomes the first button and is fastened rightly, the entire spiritual order of the church finally finds its proper place. Gentle acceptance toward others, endless patience, and even painful exhortation and rebuke meant to save souls—all these actions gain true vitality only when they are rooted in the soil of love.

The Simplicity of the Cross and Resurrection That Pierces Through Truth

The message delivered to the audience in the precious vessel of love is also not complicated or ambiguous like human philosophy. The record in Acts shows that for three Sabbaths, Paul carefully explained and reasoned from the Scriptures, proving one single truth: that the Christ had to suffer and rise again from the dead. Pastor David Jang compares this process to a spiritual puzzle in which the scattered pieces of Old Testament law and prophecy finally find their place and are completed into one great picture. When the simple yet cosmic truth of the cross and resurrection is precisely fitted together, the closed hearts of the listeners are flooded like light with explosive understanding and grace poured out by the Holy Spirit. The reason devout Greek intellectuals and prominent women laid down their status and bowed before the gospel was not because of human rhetorical brilliance, but because of the irresistible power contained in the core of this truth.

This spiritual order remains equally valid and applicable to our pulpits and ministry fields today, thousands of years later. The heart of the gospel testified to in Acts is not philosophical speculation that satisfies human intellect, but the historical fact of the resurrection itself, which shattered the power of death. Various cultural contents and countless events are filling the empty spaces of the church, but we must painfully examine whether the wonder of the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ stands clearly at the center. The flow of the Word strongly warns against the paradox that as secondary programs increase, the radiance of the gospel can actually become blurred. A community that loses its essence, no matter how splendid its outward appearance may be, eventually becomes a ship that loses direction and drifts in violent waves. By contrast, if believers hold firmly to this simple and clear truth of the gospel even amid the tribulations of any era, they can continue to open a steadfast path of life even in the barren wilderness of the world.

The Breath of the Word and the Community Blooming Through Tribulation

Where the light of life shines intensely, the shadow of Satan’s subtle jealousy and rage inevitably falls darkly. It was no coincidence that troublemakers from the marketplace were stirred up to violently attack Jason’s house, and that fearful accusations rang out, saying that those who had turned the world upside down had now come here as well. This is the reality of jealousy, the oldest and most deadly spiritual weapon used to destroy God’s creative work of salvation and divide the community. Yet the history of the early church proudly proves that persecution became a gateway of advance, pushing the gospel into an even wider world. Tribulation never managed to shrink or weaken the believers; rather, it became a powerful spiritual catalyst that expanded the reach of the gospel beyond Berea and toward the ends of the earth. In the face of external misunderstanding and internal persecution, we must not become discouraged and choose defense or escape. Instead, we must willingly choose spiritual purification and bold advancement.

The Bereans, who moved beyond severe persecution, examined the Scriptures every day with eager hearts and displayed a burning thirst for truth. The sermon presents the spiritual attitude of these Berean believers through three powerful and organic links: the Word, the Holy Spirit, and the community. When the Word meditated upon in one’s private room is illuminated by the Holy Spirit and becomes the guidepost of life, and when it is then shared in the refining furnace of a small-group community, the true life of discipleship finally begins. Not only grand events, but also the great power contained in a single brief and sincere line of faith reflection posted in everyday life on a Naver café, or in a Bible study gathering, is deeply connected to this essence. The more thoroughly humble we become before the living Word, the more clearly the work of the Holy Spirit appears, and the trust and love among believers grow into a firm spiritual immunity that cannot be shaken by any tribulation.

A Faith in Which Sunday’s Confession Becomes Monday’s Faithfulness

The dynamism of the gospel has an eternal quality that never evaporates into a single moment of hot tears or the emotion of a one-time religious gathering. In Paul’s letters to the church in Thessalonica, there is firm and solemn rebuke against the attitude of using a vague hope for the coming return of Christ as an excuse to neglect one’s present daily life and responsibilities. Paul’s noble life—laboring day and night with his own hands, taking responsibility for his livelihood, making tents without growing weary, and proclaiming the gospel—vividly proves that true faith is not escapism or asceticism that turns away from the pain of reality. Rather, it is a holy ethic of responsibility that works faithfully and serves one’s neighbor fiercely in the place of life called today. Our faith does not end the moment we step out of the heavy doors of the sanctuary on Sunday. It must begin again, intensely and beautifully, in the real fields of life: at home and in the workplace.

If the holy confession of faith made in Sunday worship does not spread into the sweat, honesty, and faithfulness of the workplace on Monday morning, such empty faith can never transform the world. The ministry landscape of the community, which has remarkably expanded to 161 countries around the world as it marks its thirtieth anniversary, was not completed by outstanding individual talent or coincidence. It was made possible because someone packed their bags and left for an unfamiliar land, someone else sent them with material support and prayer so that they could fully carry out ministry, and still others offered unseen dedication by learning local cultures and building bridges of language. Pastor David Jang powerfully declares that mission is not the cold achievement of an organization, but an organic life process in which some go ahead, some send from behind, and all support one another firmly as if supporting life itself. Ultimately, the most powerful apologetic toward the world is not a sophisticated and logical technique, but honest daily faithfulness in which the words of one’s lips and the path of one’s life are aligned.

Every great history of the church is not found in splendid buildings or numbers on statistical charts, but in the sincere stories of specific faces—people who tremble, suffer, and long for grace. Jason’s anxious gaze, the trembling heart of a new believer, and the warmth of the early church believers who cared for one another even amid persecution are no different from the faces of the neighbors beside us today. Even in the middle of a barren modern city overflowing with the roar of news, the cold speed of algorithms, and frames of division, the gospel still does not cease. It tenderly calls wounded souls and rebuilds a holy community. When we discern the world through the Word like the Berean believers, and when we continue advancing without stopping even amid persecution like the Thessalonian believers, the weighty grace of thirty years will become a radiant bridge gladly devoted to saving the souls of the next generation. When the deep and quiet truth of the cross pierces through the hardened places within me, whose burden will your steps of love move toward sharing today?

www.davidjang.org

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