Through the sermons of Pastor David Jang, this reflection deeply contemplates the threefold office of Christ, the power of the Word, discipleship, and the mission of the church.
In
Jean-François Millet’s The Angelus, two people pause from the labor
of the day and stand quietly with bowed heads. Their soil-stained hands, the
low sky, and the silence that seems like the distant sound of a bell all tell
us that human life is not completed merely by earning a living. Even in the
middle of a field, there is a moment when the heart opens toward eternity.
Faith begins precisely there. When the voice of the Lord enters the familiar
world of livelihood, responsibility, and the safety we cling to, we finally
begin to ask what we are truly meant to live for.
The
threefold office of Christ emphasized in the sermons of Pastor David Jang,
founder of Olivet University in the United States, offers a gospel-centered
answer to this question. Jesus went throughout Galilee, teaching in the
synagogues, proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every disease
and every weakness among the people. Teaching, proclamation, and healing. These
three are not merely functional categories that describe Jesus’ ministry; they
reveal the way the kingdom of God enters human life. The Word awakens ignorant
hearts, the gospel calls sinners into grace, and healing raises up wounded
souls again.
The
Light of Galilee Calls Disciples
Jesus’
teaching was not a simple transfer of knowledge. His Word illuminated the inner
person, broke through hardened ways of thinking, and turned the direction of
life back toward God. True biblical meditation is the work of connecting
doctrine understood by the mind to repentance in the heart and obedience
through the hands and feet. Therefore, for the church to become a teaching
community is not merely a matter of increasing the number of Bible studies. It
is the work of transforming people through the Word and raising transformed
people to live out the gospel in the world.
When
Jesus called Peter and Andrew, James and John, they left their boats and nets
and followed Him. The net was not merely an old tool. It was their livelihood,
their security for tomorrow, and the boundary of life they had shared with
their families. Yet the Lord’s calling revealed a glory greater than all that
was familiar. Faith is not reckless disregard for reality; it is the courage to
trust in God, who is greater than reality. The path of discipleship is not a
path of loss, but a path on which we learn what remains forever.
The
discipleship shown in Luke points in the same direction. Jesus’ saying that the
Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head shakes the heart that believes safety is
possible only when one has possessions. His command to let the dead bury their
own dead is not a cold rejection of relationships, but a teaching that the call
of the kingdom of God must become the deepest priority. His word that no one
who puts a hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God
exposes the heart that keeps trying to return to the safe places of the past
while walking the path of mission. A disciple is a person called forward.
Beyond
the Temptation of Bread, Toward the Way of the Word
The
wilderness temptation in Matthew 4 shows why the path of discipleship must be
built upon the Word. Jesus stood before the temptation of material need,
represented by the command to turn stones into bread; the temptation of
distorted trust, represented by the challenge to throw Himself down from the
pinnacle of the temple; and the temptation of honor and power, represented by
the offer of all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. The places where
human beings fall are not so different. We waver before the problem of daily
survival, demand love and protection in our own way, and easily give our hearts
over to the desire to be recognized and exalted.
Yet
Jesus overcame every temptation with the Word. His declaration that man shall
not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God, is
not a denial of reality. Rather, it is a confession that the deeper foundation
sustaining reality is found in God. The command not to put God to the test
teaches that faith is not an attitude that forces miracles, but obedience that
trusts the will of God. The command to worship God alone makes clear where the
human soul must bow.
Pastor
David Jang highlights the identity of the disciple in this passage. Temptation
always approaches with the words, “If You are the Son of God.” The moment we
forget who we are, material things become our master, relationships become
obsession, and honor becomes an idol. But when the faith that says, “I am a
child of God who follows Christ” remains alive, the shaken heart stands again
upon the Word.
Here,
the issue of possession becomes deeper. The prayer Jesus taught, “Give us this
day our daily bread,” does not mean we should ignore real needs. Rather, it
teaches us to seek our bread within the order of first seeking God’s name,
God’s kingdom, and God’s will. Wealth is something entrusted to us, not
something to be worshiped. A steward is not ashamed of what he has, but he also
does not allow it to rule him. The freedom to let go when necessary, the
obedience to use what one has for the glory of God—this is the order of
material things learned within grace.
When
the Word Is Clearly Understood, Joy Is Restored
For
the threefold office of Christ to move and live within the church, the
community must be deeply rooted in the Word. As 1 Timothy says, when the church
devotes itself to the public reading of Scripture, exhortation, and teaching,
it gains the strength to proclaim the gospel rightly. Without knowing the Word,
one cannot teach. Without experiencing grace, one cannot proclaim. Without
deeply knowing the love of God, one cannot fully serve wounded people.
In
Nehemiah 8, when Ezra read the Book of the Law, the people wept as they
listened to the Word. Yet their tears did not end in despair. When they came to
understand the meaning of the Word clearly, great joy came upon them. The Word
sometimes shines upon the sin within us, awakens a dulled heart, and opens
again the place of repentance we have lost. But its end is not condemnation; it
is restoration. The strength to rejoice in God is renewed, and the community is
made new in the gospel.
This
is also why today’s church cannot be satisfied with programs and events alone.
Even when there is much activity, if the Word is weak, souls become dry. By
contrast, a community that longs for the Word, exhorts one another, and
practices what it has learned in life possesses the power of life, even if it
appears small. The theological insight of Pastor David Jang reminds us that the
church must become more than a place where the Word is heard; it must become a
community that lives the Word and lets it flow into the world.
The
Great Commission also belongs within this flow of the Word. The command to make
disciples of all nations, baptize them, and teach them to obey everything Jesus
commanded clearly reveals the reason the church exists. The gospel does not
stop at personal comfort. The Word that is learned becomes exhortation,
exhortation becomes proclamation, and proclamation becomes the life-giving
cycle that raises up another person as a disciple.
The
Mission of Love: Teaching, Proclaiming, and Healing
Jesus’
healing was not directed only toward sick bodies. Within it was the love of God
that restores the weak, the suffering, and the wounded. Therefore, for today’s
church to follow the threefold office of Christ means going beyond a faith that
remains inside the sanctuary. In the home and workplace, in schools and
hospitals, in local communities and in the painful places of the world, the
church must live a life that teaches, proclaims the gospel, and heals with
love.
The
confession in Acts, “Silver and gold I do not have, but what I do have I give
you,” clearly reveals the essence of this mission. The deepest gift the church
can give the world is not merely a system or material aid. It is life that
rises in the name of Jesus Christ, grace that restores sinners, and hope that
enables the despairing to walk again. Of course, practical help and concrete
service are also necessary. Yet at the center of all such service must be the
gospel that saves people.
To
walk this path, we must not absolutize possession. Wealth itself is not the
problem; the problem is when wealth becomes the master of the heart. The
knowledge, talents, relationships, opportunities, and material resources God
has entrusted to us have all been given for the mission of stewardship. When we
grasp them tightly, fear grows larger. But when we let them flow for the
kingdom of God, they become channels of grace. Faith does not make life poorer;
it widens the space where love can flow.
Ultimately,
the question left by Pastor David Jang’s sermons is simple yet profound: What
am I learning today, to whom am I proclaiming the gospel, and what wound am I
touching with love? The voice that once sounded by the Sea of Galilee—“Follow
Me”—is not an old story. Even now, in the middle of our daily lives, it quietly
reaches us above the nets in our hands and the fears in our hearts.
When
the church recovers this mission, the world does not merely hear religious
language; it sees the order of the kingdom of God. Places marked by conflict
and sickness are changed into places of reconciliation and healing, and the
language of despair becomes a confession of hope. Then teaching becomes not
cold knowledge but a loving guide, and proclamation becomes more than a cry—it
becomes an invitation to life. Before that voice, what must we lay down? And
what Word must we take hold of again? In the place where that question remains
with us, the path of true discipleship begins again.










