PREACHING-PURPOSE
The
point to be noted is that to preach is not to argue, reason, dispute, or
convince by intellectual proof, against all of which a keen intellect may bring
counterargument. We simply state in public or testify to all men the truth
which God bids us state. No argument can assail the truth presented in this
announcement or testimony. Men either believe the truth, as all sane men
should, or refuse to believe it, as only fools venture to do.
R.C.H.
Lenski
Interpretation of Saint Matthews Gospel by Richard C.
Lenski copyright © 1932 Augsburg Publishing House, p.168.
The object of the Christian ministry
is to convert sinners and to edify the body of Christ. No faithful minister can
possibly rest short of this. Applause, fame, popularity, honor, wealth – all
these are vain. If souls are not won, if saints are not matured, our ministry
itself is vain. The question, therefore, which each of us has to answer to his
own conscience is, “Has it been the end of my ministry, has it been the desire
of my heart to save the lost and guide the saved? Is this my aim in every sermon
I preach, in every visit I pay?”
Horatius Bonar
Words
to Winners of Souls, 1877.
The Puritans
believed that without perseverance in the obedience of faith the result would
be eternal destruction, not lesser sanctification. Therefore, since preaching
and the pastoral ministry in general are a great means to the saints’
perseverance, the goal of a pastor is not merely to edify the saints but to
save the saints. What is at stake on Sunday morning is not merely the upbuilding of the church but its eternal salvation. It is
not hard to see why the Puritans were so serious.
Brothers, We Are Not
Professionals, Bethlehem Baptist Church, 2002, p. 106.
My burden is
to plead for the supremacy of God in preaching – that the dominant note of
preaching be the freedom of God's sovereign grace, the unifying theme be the
zeal that God has for his own glory, the grand object of preaching be the
infinite and inexhaustible being of God, and the pervasive atmosphere of
preaching be the holiness of God.
John Piper
Preachers
must have a passion to produce people whose satisfaction in God is so solid, so
deep, and so unshakable that suffering and death – losing everything this world
can give – will not make people murmur or curse God, but rest in the promise,
“In His presence is fullness of joy, at His right hand are pleasures
forevermore” (Psm. 16:11).
John Piper
We must aim
to preach in such a way that we breed a kind of people who feel loved not when
they are made much of, but when they are patiently helped to enjoy making much
of God, even when they themselves are slandered, ridiculed, persecuted, and
killed.
John Piper
Feed My Sheep, ed. Don Kistler, Soli Deo Gloria
Ministries, 2002, p. 262.
The goal of
preaching is the glory of God reflected in the glad submission of his creation.
John Piper
The Supremacy of God in
Preaching, Baker, p. 27.
Preaching is
God's appointed means for the conversion of sinners, the awakening of the
church, and the preservation of the saints. If preaching fails in its task, the
consequences are infinitely terrible.
John Piper
The Supremacy of God in
Preaching, Baker, 1990, p. 54-55.
The ultimate
purpose of all preaching is to lead the listener to a whole-person encounter
with the truth of God. His mind should understand the truth, his heart should
be stirred to feel the claim of that truth, and his will should be moved to
respond to that truth. This whole-person encounter with the truth of God is,
finally, the means to a further end – an encounter with the God of truth
Himself.
Curtis C. Thomas
Practical Wisdom for
Pastors, Crossway Books, 2001, p. 243- 244. Used by Permission.
A sermon is
not like a Chinese firecracker to be fired off for the noise it makes. It is a
hunter’s gun, and at every discharge he should look to see his game fall.
Henry Ward Beecher
Quoted by Curtis C.
Thomas, Practical Wisdom for Pastors, Crossway Books, 2001, p. 239.
When a
minister goes into the pulpit, he is a shepherd in the act of feeding, and if
every minister had borne this in mind, many a sermon would have been other than
it has been. The curse of the pulpit is the superstition that a sermon is a
work or art and not a piece of bread or meat
Charles Jefferson
That is what
preaching [the Bible] is meant to do. It addresses us in such a manner as to
bring us under judgment; and it deals with us in such a way that we feel our
whole life is involved, and we go out saying, “I can never go back and live
just as I did before. This has done something to me; it has made a difference
to me. I am a different person as the result of listening to this.”
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
Preachers and Preaching,
Zondervan, 1971, p. 56.
What is the
chief end of preaching? I like to think it is this: It is to give men and women
a sense of God and His presence.
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
Quoted by Curtis C.
Thomas, Practical Wisdom for Pastors, Crossway Books, 2001, p. 74.
The task of the preacher is to comfort the afflicted and afflict
the comfortable.
Vance Havner
This is
somewhat of the word which He now speaks unto you: Why will you die? Why will
you perish? Why will you not have compassion on your own souls? Can your hearts
endure, or can your hands be strong, in the day of wrath that is approaching?... Look unto Me, and be saved;
come unto Me, and I will ease you of all sins, sorrows, fears, burdens, and
give rest to your souls. Come, I entreat you; lay aside all procrastinations,
all delays; put me off no more; eternity lies at the door...do not so hate Me
as that you will rather perish than accept of deliverance by Me. These and the
like things does the Lord Christ continually declare, proclaim, plead and urge
upon the souls of sinners... He does it in the preaching of the Word, as if He
were present with you, stood amongst you, and spoke personally to every one of
you... He has appointed the ministers of the gospel to appear before you, and
to deal with you in His stead, avowing as His own the invitations which are
given you in His name.
John Owen
The purpose
of preaching, then, is to effect changes among the members of God’s
church that build them up individually and that build up the body as a whole. Individually,
good pastoral preaching helps each person in the congregation to grow in his
faith, conforming his life more and more to biblical
standards. Corporately, such preaching builds up the church as a body in
the relationship of the parts to the whole, and the whole to God and to the
world.
Jay Adams
Preaching with a Purpose,
Zondervan, 1982, p. 13.
I go out to
preach with two propositions in mind. First, everyone ought to give his life to
Christ. Second, whether or not anyone gives Him his life, I will give Him mine.
Jonathan Edwards
God,
trying to tell us that our current popular version of Christianity – comfortable,
humorous, superficial, entertaining, worldly-wise is exposed (by the lack of
power to transform lives) for the irreverent presentation of the Gospel of
Christ that it really is.
A preacher is commissioned to give the people not what they think they need. No
man has any business walking into the pulpit to entertain. He is there
[instead] to present Calvary in all its fullness of hope and glory.
Alan Redpath
Many of the pulpiteers of the past fifty years acted as though the
first and last object of their calling was the salvation of souls, everything
being made to bend to that aim. In consequence, the feeding of the sheep, the
maintaining of a Scriptural discipline in the church, and the inculcation of
practical piety, was crowded out; and only too often all sorts of worldly
devices and fleshly methods were employed under the plea that the end justified
the means; and thus the churches were filled with unregenerate members. In
reality, such men defeated their own aim. The hard heart must be ploughed and
harrowed before it can be receptive to the gospel seed. Doctrinal instruction
must be given on the character of God, the requirements of his Law, the nature
and heinousness of sin, if a foundation is to be laid for true evangelism. It
is useless to preach Christ unto souls until they see and feel their desperate
need of him.
A.W. Pink
The preacher
is not a chef; he’s a waiter. God doesn't want you to make the meal; He
just wants you to deliver it to the table without messing it up. That's
all.
John MacArthur
Principles for an Effective Missionary – Part 1, Matthew 10:5-7, code 2277 www.gty.org. © 1969-2008.
Grace to You. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
What the
church lacks today is not quantity but quality in her pulpits. A strong case
can be made that we presently have too many men in pastoral ministry; too many
who have taken the mantle of leadership upon themselves without having been
selected and formed by God for that purpose. They preach, but not with power
and often not with truth; they lead, but not from the platform of a life of
godliness, holiness, and prayer; and slowly these men are changing the face of
pastoral leadership. What once was a ministry of humble dependence upon God and
his Word is more and more becoming a position of power and influence dependent
upon marketing strategies, programming innovations, and an increasing
infatuation with technology and culture. The image of a pastor as a
servant-teacher is fast being replaced with that of a Chief Executive Officer
whose knowledge of modern organizational theory and communication technique is
more highly prized than his commitment to praying and preaching.
David W. Hegg
Appointed to Preach, Focus
Publications, 1999, p. 22.
The
herald-preacher has a three-fold responsibility: To be faithful to the one by
whom he has been appointed by keeping his character blameless and above
reproach; to be faithful in delivering the message as it has been entrusted to
him being careful to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
truth; and to be faithful in going out to the audience for whom the message
proclaimed is the only hope of eternal salvation.
David W. Hegg
Appointed to Preach,
Christian Focus Publications, 1999, p. 28.
Teach in thy church, not to get the applause of the
people, but to set in motion the groan; the tears of the hearers are thy
praises.
Jerome