“The preacher’s task is to declare what God has said, explain the meaning, and establish the implications so that no one will mistake its relevance.” Alistair Begg
Once after the famous French preacher,
Jean Baptiste Massillon had preached, a listener exclaimed, “What an eloquent
sermon! How gloriously he preached!” When that comment was reported to
Massillon, he replied, “Then he did not understand me. Another sermon has been
thrown away!”
God has not called preachers to entertain or be eloquent. He’s called us
to something so much higher and so much greater. We are to “preach the Word”
(2 Timothy 4:2). That’s our commitment at Grace Church. We are not attempting to
please people but a Person, the Lord Jesus Christ. It’s His Book and we want to
honor Him.
Humanly
speaking, particularly in our media saturated culture, preaching doesn’t make
sense. It never has. It’s why 1 Corinthians 1:21 refers to “the foolishness of preaching.” The pulpit and preaching are not
to be a bully pulpit or a place for our opinions. It must be the message from
God’s Word that the Holy Spirit anoints and applies to our lives.
After
I’m done preaching, my heart’s desire is that you can look at your Bible and
understand what Scripture is saying and how it applies to your life. One day we
will all stand before our Sovereign, Jesus Christ the Judge of the living and
the dead. In view of that solemn day, it’s essential preachers preach God’s
Word. It’s essential that you listen to the preaching of God’s Word with a view
to obedience. It’s frightening when someone is goofing off, whispering or
scanning their phone during a sermon. Some day they will give account for ignoring
the Word of God. On that great coming day when we stand before Christ, we want
to hear, “Well done, good and faithful servant!” Preaching and hearing the Word
are of utmost importance in view of eternity. Then, how do we accomplish this?
We must preach God’s Word. Our
preaching must be resolutely Biblical. The task of the preacher is to expound
or bring out of the biblical text what is already there. The preacher’s responsibility
is to open up the passage in such a way the message is communicated clearly, accurately,
relevantly, without addition, subtraction, or falsification. Preaching is not a
dull lecture. God’s Word is alive and powerful. Nothing is boring about His Word.
It’s a sin to be boring with Scripture. We enter the pulpit with confidence
that God has spoken, that He’s caused what He has spoken to be written and we have
this inspired text in our hands. It’s astounding that we have God’s Word in our
hands and on our lips. It’s God’s grace. Understanding what God has written is
hard and serious work.
We
must preach to our contemporary world. God’s Word is relevant. It intersects
with cultural and social issues: racism, civil liberties, morality, poverty, government,
ethics, marriage, family…to name a few. As Scripture speaks to these issues,
the preacher must not be silent or he has failed the Lord and his God-given
mandate. Wise preachers are to equip the congregation with biblical convictions
through expository preaching. It’s our responsibility to open up scriptural principles
which relate to the problems of our culture in such a way as to help everybody
to develop a biblical worldview. The pulpit must help listeners develop Christian
thinking so they can penetrate their segment of the community more deeply for Christ.
We’re not to sacrifice truth to relevance or relevance to truth, yet resolve to
be faithful to Scripture and pertinent to today.
We
must listen before we preach. How
do we learn to build bridges from the ancient biblical text to our contemporary
world? The wise preacher listens carefully both to the ancient Word and the
modern world to be able to relate the one to the other with faithfulness to the
Word and sensitivity. We must listen to
the voice of God in the Scriptures above all. It’s the first and most important
act of listening. Yet, God has called us to share His message with real people
so we must listen to the voices of those in the world around us. It means listening,
knowing and caring about both those in the congregation and those outside the
church. Faithful preachers need to ask questions and listen to the answers. It
means listening to those from varied generations, ethnic and economic groups.
We
must practice what we preach. It’s not enough to preach well, we must
live well. The message that breaks the heart of the listeners must first break
the preacher’s heart. I don’t know what other preachers do, yet I find that I’m
often broken and humbled before the light of God’s Word as I work through the
text. Wise is the preacher who is cognizant that his actions before and after
speaking will speak louder than his words. A preacher must be a person of deep
convictions and commitment. He must live to serve and please King Jesus and to
bring glory to His name.
Dr.
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones pastored Westminster Chapel in London during World War
II. London suffered, with tens of thousands killed or injured. One Sunday, a
bomb fell a short distance away while Lloyd-Jones prayed during a service. The
sound was tremendous. Windows rattled. Plaster fell. Lloyd-Jones paused for a
moment and then continued to pray.
The man who gave announcements came up when the
prayer was over. After he’d completed his task, he dusted Lloyd-Jones off, and
then Lloyd-Jones started preaching. Why would he do this? Because D. Martyn
Lloyd-Jones knew that preaching was the main thing.
Wise are D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones words: “I
would say without any hesitation that the most urgent need in the Christian
Church today is true preaching; and as it is the greatest and the most urgent
need in the Church, it is obviously the greatest need of the world also.”
With
bombs falling, and the future of England in question, Lloyd-Jones kept
preaching. Our world desperately needs the message from God. We need that focus
today. God’s preachers dare not abandon their post!
Can
we help you spiritually? Can we help you know Jesus better? Please check out
more resources on our church's web page, Gracechurchwi.org. Or, call us at
262.763.3021. If you'd like to know more about how Jesus can change your life,
I'd love to mail you a copy of how Jesus changed my life in "My
Story." E-mail me at Carson@gracechurchwi.org to request a free copy.
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