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f-Warren-PeaceOn AlexGarcia-SaddlebackChurchIf you think the church can’t solve the world’s problems, think again. We were made to bring the good news—and Jesus modeled exactly how we can.

The greatest need in the world today is to release the latent energy bottled up in believers who are doing nothing for the kingdom of God. It’s time for the church to rise up and be the church. The church is the body of Christ, but it seems like our hands and feet have been amputated, and most of the time we’re just a big mouth. It’s time for the church to stop being known for what we’re against and start being known for what we stand for: grace, compassion, mercy, forgiveness, salvation and new life in Jesus Christ.

That’s why we began rethinking our mission strategy at Saddleback. Jesus tells us to “go everywhere in the world, and tell the Good News to everyone” (Mark 16:15, NCV). Go is a key word for believers. You can’t spell gospel without “go.” You can’t spell good news without “go.” You can’t spell God without “go.”

Jesus commands us to go, meaning missions is not about sending out professional missionaries, organization leaders or aid workers to do the work for us; although we need them and the valuable work they do. 

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Jesus said, “You shall be witnesses to Me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth” (Acts 1:8, NKJV, emphasis added). 

What is a witness? Simple. A witness is somebody who tells his or her story. A witness just says: “This is what I saw. This is what I heard. This is what happened to me.” Nobody else can tell your story. You don’t need any special training to do it. Just tell people what Jesus has done in your life. 

When Jesus said His disciples would be His witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and the ends of the earth, how did He mean for that to apply to us? The answer is, He was laying out a plan of ever-increasing influence. 

When He said to go to Jerusalem, He was saying: “Start with your family, your friends, your co-workers.” It means start in your own city and neighborhood. 

Then He said to go to Judea and Samaria. Your Judea is the region where you live. For me, that’s Southern California. What state, district, province or prefecture do you live in? That’s your Judea.

Then Jesus said go to Samaria. This means people who live in your area but who are culturally different from you. Do you know anybody like that? Sure you do. They might even live next door to you. Jesus was saying, “Just go to people who are different from you.” 

And then He said, “Go to the ends of the earth.” That means go to everybody else. Love demands that we move beyond our comfort zone. Love demands that we go to people of different backgrounds, languages and cultures. Jesus said, “Go and make disciples of all nations” (Matt. 28:19,  NIV).  

What are we supposed to do when we go for Jesus? We’re supposed to do what Jesus did. He gave us the model. What did He do? Jesus didn’t just preach. He also cared for the oppressed, the poor, the sick, the aged, the blind and the lepers. He cared about the mentally ill, the orphans, the widows, the imprisoned and the homeless. Jesus cares about the people the world wants to forget.  

The biggest problems the world faced in Jesus’ day are still the biggest problems today: spiritual emptiness, egocentric leadership, poverty, disease and illiteracy. I call these the five global giants. They affect billions of people. 

And how did Jesus take on these giants? He did five things: He planted the church to reconcile people to God and to one another. He equipped servant leaders by training His disciples to serve rather than be served. He assisted the poor. He cared for the sick. And He educated the next generation.

I believe these are the five things Jesus wants us to do today as His followers. He wants us to go into all the world and:

Plant faith communities

Equip servant leaders

Assist the poor

Care for the sick

Educate the next generation

These five things make up what I call the PEACE Plan.

The PEACE Plan

The PEACE Plan is a grassroots, church-to-church strategy. It’s a lay movement designed to mobilize ordinary church members in small groups, empowered by God, to do normal tasks that can make a difference in the world.

The PEACE Plan is about all believers in every church doing all the things Jesus told us to do. It’s about churches partnering with churches to take on the global giants in their communities. It’s about turning an audience into an army, turning consumers into contributors and turning spectators into participators. 

P stands for Plant faith communities.If we’re going to share the love of God with billions of people, we must help congregations in their ministries to the disaffected and overlooked. We must also help start new faith communities around the world. 

Romans 10:14 says: “Before people can ask the Lord for help, they must believe in him; and before they can believe in him, they must hear about him; and for them to hear about the Lord, someone must tell them” (NCV). 

E stands for Equip leaders.All around the world there are leaders who abuse their power. Amazingly, many of these leaders refuse to use their power for the good of their own people—using it instead only for themselves. This has created chaos in the world. 

Zechariah 10:2 says: “People wander around like lost sheep. They are in trouble because they have no leader” (TEV). Proverbs 11:14 says, “Without wise leadership, a nation falls” (NLT). We must teach leaders at all levels that sound leadership requires “a moral foundation” (see Prov. 16:12, The Message).

A stands for Assist the poor. More than half the world—that’s 3 billion people—live on less than $2 a day. One-sixth of the world’s population lives in slums. Research by the Christian relief organization World Vision suggests that about 600 million people worldwide could get out of poverty quickly if someone would simply give them a small loan—not a gift, but a loan—so they could start a small business and begin to pull themselves out of poverty. 

For instance, I have a friend in South Africa who teaches people how to plant gardens. From those vegetable gardens people are able to feed their own families, the AIDS orphans and other poor people in their churches, and still have a little left over to sell for income.

Another friend in Guinea helps prostitutes get off the street by teaching them how to style hair or sew, and then gives them a sewing machine. They’re usually able to pay back the cost of the sewing machine over 16 weeks, and none of these women have gone back into prostitution. 

Proverbs 29:7 says, “The righteous care about justice for the poor, but the wicked have no such concern” (NIV). 

C stands for Care for the sick. Tragically, hundreds of millions of people around the world are dying from preventable illnesses. Even though we found a cure for these diseases in the 19th and 20th centuries, people in the 21st century are still dying from them. 

Think about this: 11 million children die every year from preventable illnesses. That’s 27,000 every single day. The No. 1 reason children die from these diseases is unclean water. We know how to clean up water, yet millions of children die every year from diseases they get from drinking contaminated water. 

My prayer is that we can mobilize health care professionals in faith communities across our country. These professionals have knowledge, expertise and experience that can make life better for millions of people around our world. 

My wife is a breast cancer survivor. When she was diagnosed with the disease, we were able to get her the best treatment available anywhere. She had great doctors and received the needed medications. 

But so many in our world have no hope as they face disease and death. It grieves me greatly, knowing other husbands must watch their wives suffer, and die, because they cannot get the medical help they need.

E is for Educate the next generation.I once visited a school outside Johannesburg, South Africa, of about 1,500 kids who all had to sit on the ground. They had no building; there was no water, no electricity, and no books. Yet there is a waiting list of children who want to get into this school so they can sit in the dirt and learn, where they can be safe and off the street.

I also visited a little school in a church where they’d adopted 25 AIDS orphans. I asked the headmaster: “What is the greatest need for your school? Is it a building? Is it more students? Is it curriculum? What is it?” 

“Books,” he said. “We have no books.” 

How can you teach—and how can a country be strong—when its children are not educated? How can a country grow and be economically strong when its citizens can’t read or write and don’t know the fundamentals of math and science we take for granted? More than half the world is still illiterate. It’s no wonder these countries aren’t strong.

Only the church, through the power of the Holy Spirit, can take on these global giants. No government can do it. If they could, they would have by now. No organization can do it. Only the church can do it. 

Only the church has the manpower—nearly 2 billion volunteers in churches all over the globe waiting to be mobilized. Only the church has the willpower to rise up in the name of Jesus and for the glory of God. And most important, only the church has the Holy Spirit’s power to enable us to do what is otherwise impossible. 

Jesus has called us to do it, He has commanded us to do it and He has commissioned us to do it. The question is, will you do it? Will you do what Jesus said? His command to go is not just for clergy or missionaries or professional ministers. It is for every one of His followers. 

The rallying cry of the PEACE Plan is based on Psalm 67:2—that God would send us around the world with the news of His saving power and His eternal plan for all mankind.

The critical question of this hour is this: Will we, the church of God around the world, retreat in the face of these global giants or face them in faith, claiming the promises of God and the power of his Spirit, and defeat them for the glory of God? 

The Power of Ordinary People of Faith Working Together

These problems are gigantic, but ordinary people of faith working together can chip away the chaos and bring hope back to the hopeless. We’ve trained thousands of Saddleback members how to go on missions trips around the world.

They often take with them what we call “Clinics in a Box.” We take a box and fill it with common medicine—everyday things we take for granted that are like gold in many places where there’s no health care. Small groups of our members deliver these boxes. They also plant faith communities, train leaders, help the poor, care for the sick and educate the next generation.

Our mission has eternal consequences. Heaven and hell are in the balance. God wants to use the people in my congregation and yours to reach the world for Jesus. We need to show our people that the greatest thrill and adventure in life is to be used by God. 

Jesus put it this way: “Only those who throw their lives away for my sake and for the sake of the Good News will ever know what it means to really live” (Mark 8:35, TLB).


Rick Warren is a global strategist, philanthropist, pastor and author. His most recent book, The Purpose Driven Life (Zondervan), has sold more than 30 million copies in English and is published in more than 50 languages. In 1980 Warren founded Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif. Today it may be America’s most influential congregation, with more than 100,000 names on the church roll, a 120-acre campus and more than 300 ministries.

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