PREACHING-WORD
If Jesus
Christ is the head of the church and hence the source and goal of its entire
life, true growth is only possible in obedience to Him. Conversely, if the
church becomes detached from Jesus Christ and His Word, it cannot grow however
active and successful it may seem to be.
Dining with the Devil, Baker, 1993, p.
39.
When the
minister of the gospel faces the Lord God as judge, there will be many
questions addressed to him. There will be many standards of accountability.
There will be many criteria of judgment, but in the end the most essential
criterion of judgment for the minister of God is, “Did you preach the Word? Did
you fully carry out the ministry of the Word? In season and out of season, was
the priority of ministry the preaching of the Word?”… There is one central,
non-negotiable, immovable, essential priority, and that is the preaching of the
Word of God.
R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
Feed My Sheep, ed. Don Kistler,
Soli Deo Gloria Ministries, 2002, p. 16.
Where the
authentic preaching of the Word takes place, the church is there. And where
that is absent, there is no church. No
matter how high the steeple, no matter how large the budget, no matter how impressive
the ministry, it is something else.
R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
Feed My Sheep, ed. Don Kistler,
Soli Deo Gloria Ministries, 2002, p. 18.
There is only
one authority that is the preacher’s authority, and there is only one authority
that undergirds and justifies his teaching ministry, and that is the authority
of the Word of God. This Word is inerrant, infallible, authoritative, and
trustworthy. It is that Word, and that Word alone, that is our authority; and
it is not only the foundation, but the substance, the content of our teaching
and preaching.
R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
Feed My Sheep, ed. Don Kistler,
Soli Deo Gloria Ministries, 2002, p. 28.
It is no
secret that Christ’s Church is not in good health in many places of the world.
She has been languishing because she has been fed, as the current line has it,
“junk food;” all kinds of artificial preservatives and all sorts of unnatural
substitutes have been served up to her. As a result, theological and biblical
malnutrition has afflicted the very generation that has taken such giant steps
to make sure its physical health is not damaged by using foods or products that
are harmful to their bodies. Simultaneously a worldwide spiritual famine
resulting from the absence of any genuine publication of the Word of God (Amos
8:11) continues to run wild and almost unabated in most quarters of the Church.
Walter Kaiser
Toward an Exegetical Theology, Baker,
1981, p. 7-8.
The Church
and the Scripture stand or fall together. Either the Church will be nourished
and strengthened by the bold proclamation of her Biblical texts or her health
will be severely impaired.
Walter Kaiser
A man may
have a charismatic personality; he may be a gifted administrator and a silken
orator; he may be armed with an impressive program; he may even have the people
skills of a politician and the empathic listening skills of a counselor; but he
will starve the sheep if he cannot feed the people of God on the Word of God.
Programs and personalities are dispensable. But without food, sheep die. Feeding
the flock is therefore the pastor’s first priority. “Feed my lambs” (John
21:15, ESV).
Mark Dever and Paul
Alexander
The
Role of the Pastor, taken from The Deliberate Church, © 2005, Crossway Books, a
division of Good News Publishers, Wheaton Illinois 60187, p. 94, www.crosswaybooks.org.
God’s Word is
His supernatural power for accomplishing His supernatural work. That’s why our
eloquence, innovations, and programs are so much less important than we think;
that’s why we as pastors must give ourselves to preaching, not programs; and
that’s why we need to be teaching our congregations to value God’s Word over
programs. Preaching the content and intent of God’s Word is what unleashes the
power of God on the people of God, because God’s power for building His people
is in His Word, particularly as we find it in the Gospel (Rom. 1:16). God’s
Word builds His church. So preaching His Gospel is primary.
Mark Dever and Paul
Alexander
The
Four P’s, taken from The Deliberate Church, © 2005, Crossway Books, a division
of Good News Publishers, Wheaton Illinois 60187, p. 35, www.crosswaybooks.org.
When there is
a famine of the word of God in the land the spiritual nutrients that enable the
eye to spot sin as sin is gone. And the spiritual protein that gives strength the
moral muscle of the soul to do what is right is missing. The spiritual eye
becomes diseased through malnutrition, and the clear lines between sin and
righteousness begin to blur. The moral muscle of the will atrophies, and
weakens, and the result is that the beckoning of the world wins because there
is no strength to stand against it. When the ministry of the word goes wrong,
many are caused to stumble.
John Piper
Let None be
Faithless to the Wife of his Youth, Sermon, Nov. 22, 1987, www.DesiringGod.org, Used by
Permission.
The
Bible-oriented preacher wants the congregation to know that his words, if they
have any abiding worth, are in accord with God’s words. He wants this to be
obvious to them. That is part of his humility and his authority. Therefore, he
constantly tries to show the people that his ideas are coming from the Bible.
He is hesitant to go too far toward points that are not demonstrable from the
Bible.
John Piper
In Honor of Tethered Preaching, September 17, 2008, www.DesiringGod.org. Used by Permission.
Even when preaching the Word of God does not
soften and save and heal, it is not necessarily ineffective. This preaching of
the Word may be doing God’s terrible work of judgment. It may be hardening
people, and making their ears so dull that they will never want to hear again.
There is a judgment in this world – not just in the world to come (Romans 1:24)
– and oh, how we should flee from it.
John Piper
From
the Sermon: Take Care How You Listen – Part 1, Luke 8:4-18, February 15, 1998, www.DesiringGod.org, Used by
Permission.
For the
Christian church (even in its recently popular seeker services) to ignore,
euphemize, or otherwise mute the lethal reality of sin is to cut the nerve of
the gospel. For the sober truth is that without full disclosure on sin, the
gospel of grace becomes impertinent, unnecessary, and finally uninteresting.
Cornelius Plantinga
Jr.
Quoted in: This We Believe, Zondervan,
2000, p. 44.
May I beg you
carefully to judge every preacher, not by his gifts, not by his elocutionary
powers, not by his status in society, not by the respectability of his
congregation, not by the prettiness of his church, but by this – does he preach
the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation? If he does, your sitting under his ministry may prove to you the means
of begetting faith in you. But if he does not, you cannot expect God's
blessing.
C.H. Spurgeon
God gave me
this great book to preach from, and if He has put anything in it you think is
not fit, go and complain to Him, not to me. I am simply his servant, and if His
errand that I am to tell is objectionable, I cannot help it. Let me tell you,
the reason why many of our churches are declining is just because this doctrine
has not been preached.
C.H. Spurgeon
Sermons, 4.340.
Some of you
have never preached on election since you were ordained. “These things,” you
say, “are offensive.” And so you would rather offend God than offend man. But
you replay, “These things will not be practical.” I do think that the climax of
all man’s blasphemy is centered in that utterance. Tell me that God put a thing
in the Bible that I am not to preach! You are finding fault with my God. But
you say, “It will be dangerous.” What! God’s truth dangerous?
I should not like to stand in your shoes when you have to face your Maker on
the Day of Judgment after such an utterance as that.
C.H. Spurgeon
Sermons, 3.432.
“But some
truths ought to be kept back from the people,” you will say, “lest they should
make an ill use thereof.” That is Popish doctrine It was upon that very theory that the
priests kept back the Bible from the people. They did not give it to them lest
they should misuse it. Besides all this, remember that men do read the
Scriptures and think about these doctrines and often make mistakes about them.
Who then, shall set them right if we who preach the Word hold our tongues about
the matter?
C.H. Spurgeon
Sermons, 51.49.
I am the
messenger. I tell you the Masters message; if you do not like the message
quarrel with the Bible, not with me; so long as I have Scripture on my side I
will dare and defy you to do anything against me.
C.H. Spurgeon
Salvation
is of the Lord.
Our eyes
should never be on the size of our church, the success of our programs, our
budget, our salaries, but on speaking the truth of our Lord. Our concern must
be the repentance, salvation, and spiritual growth of our hearers. To fear men
is to hold God’s Word up for contempt; to fear God is to speak His message
truthfully and faithfully.
Curtis C. Thomas
Practical Wisdom for Pastors, Crossway Books,
2001, p. 130. Used by Permission.
We must do
God’s work in God’s way, declaring God’s truth on His terms. That calls for
trust – an absolute reliance upon God! The modern church often is afflicted by fear
– fear of the members, fear of the world, fear of the unknown, fear of trying
to do things God’s way. But it is His church, and His Word tells us how to feed
His church with His truth and to leave the results in His sovereign hands.
Curtis C. Thomas
Practical Wisdom for Pastors, Crossway Books,
2001, p. 207. Used by Permission.
Preaching
means, “to cry out, herald, or exhort.” Preaching should so stir a man that he pours out the
message with passion and fervor. Not all passionate pleading from a pulpit,
however, possesses divine authority. When a preacher speaks as a herald, he
must cry out “the Word.” Anything less cannot legitimately pass for Christian
preaching.
Haddon W. Robinson
Biblical Preaching, Baker, 1980, p. 18.
Light
entertainment, easy familiarity and jocularity are not compatible with a realization
of the seriousness of the condition of the souls of all men by nature, the fact
that they are lost and in danger of eternal perdition, and their consequent
need of salvation. Not only that, such
methods cannot bring out the Truth; and our business is to preach the Truth.
These methods may affect people psychologically and in other respects, and they
may lead to “decisions”; but our object is not merely to get decisions, it is
to bring people to a knowledge of the Truth.
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
Preachers and Preaching, Zondervan,
1971, p. 140-141.
Preaching the
Word is the primary task of the Church, the primary task of the leaders of the
Church, the people who are set in this position of authority; and we must not
allow anything to deflect us from this, however good the cause, however great
the need.
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones
Preachers and Preaching, Zondervan,
1971, p. 23.
Strangely,
church leaders get caught up in all kinds of power for building their churches…
But does any power in the universe match God’s power to breathe out worlds or
dismiss death simply with words? “Let there be light!” and
“Lazarus, come forth!”? No there is nothing like it. Yet this same power
is available to the preacher through God’s Word.
Jonathan Leeman
Reverberation,
Moody Publishers, 2011, p. 73.
Men-fearing
preachers will treat (the Word) so lightly, touch it so gingerly, speak of it
so generally, plead it so weakly, believe it so loosely, that the truth is
neutralized down to nothing worth getting excited about. Snooze. And the
preacher says, “No more doctrinal sermons; they won’t hear them.” How a
preacher can use the same Bible that spawned the Protestant Reformation,
launched the modern missionary movement, and put his forbears on the block, and
never stir up anybody is a mystery to me.
Jim Elliff
Serious Preaching, Christian Communicators Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org. Used by Permission.
There are
many who have fought hard for the inerrancy of Scripture who don’t sufficiently
break open the Bible they fought for.
Jim Elliff
Serious Preaching, Christian Communicators Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org. Used by Permission.
When God’s
Word is being preached, you’re not merely receiving information about God. God
Himself is addressing you through His Word.
Jeff
Purswell
Quoted in: Stop Dating the Church by Joshua
Harris, p. 111.
We must learn
to trust the power of God’s Word to convince, convert, and change lives (Rom.
1:16; 1 Cor. 1:18; 1 Pet. 1:23)...without the help of our man-made systems… We
must be so convinced, or we will be tempted to add things to the preaching of
the Word to secure greater commitments… Here is the real question: How powerful
is the Word of God? Can it change men from sinners into saints without the use
of an altar call? Will it convict and convert (as God promises), or will we
need to add something that helps men “settle it”? You will never be able to do
without the invitation system until you are thoroughly convinced of the power
of God’s Word.
Jim Ehrhard
The Dangers of the Invitation
System, Christian Communications Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org, 1999, p. 18-19, 22.
What
a colossal failure it is for church shepherds to do everything but feed God’s
flock. The Bible is the believer’s food. Continual nourishment through the milk
and meat of God’s Word is what they need for protection and growth. Loving
leaders and teachers will labor diligently to meet that need.
Alexander Strauch
Leading With Love, Lewis and Roth, 2006, p. 127, Used by
Permission.
The great
need across evangelicalism is exposition of the Scriptures. I sense there is a
departure from that, even amongst some of our own grads who are entertaining
the people, giving the people what they want, whereas we are called to teach
the Word. It is the Word that is the power of God to salvation; it is the Word
that is the power for Christian living, and (the Word should be) the center of
their ministry. It may not be popular, it may not build mega-churches, but it
will fulfill that to which they are called upon to do in ministry.
J. Dwight Pentecost
When the fire
is stirred up and discovered it giveth more heat than when it is not, so the
Word of God by preaching and interpreting maketh a
greater flame in the hearts of the hearers than when it is read.
Thomas Cartwright
A Puritan Golden Treasury,
compiled by I.D.E. Thomas, by permission of Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA. 2000, p. 222.
Whenever the
true message of the cross is abolished, the anger of hypocrites and heretics
eases…and all things are in peace. This is a sure token that the devil is
guarding the entry of that house, and that the pure doctrine of God's Word has
been taken away. The church, then, is in the BEST state when Satan assaileth it on every side…both with subtle sleights, and
outright violence. And [likewise] it is in the WORST state, when it is most at
peace!
Martin Luther
Certainly God
could with His Spirit instruct and justify those whom He would, but it has
pleased His wisdom more to instruct and justify those who believe through the
foolishness of preaching. The Word is the channel through which the Holy Spirit
is given. [There are biblical passages] against those who hold the spoken word
in contempt. The lips are the public reservoirs of the church. In them alone is
kept the Word of God... Unless the Word is preached publicly, it slips away.
The more it is preached, the more firmly it is retained. Reading it is not as
profitable as hearing it, for the live voice teaches, exhorts, defends, and
resists the spirit of error. Satan does not care a hoot for the written Word of
God, but he flees at the speaking of the Word... This penetrates hearts and
leads back those who stray.
Martin Luther
Works, v. 18, Lectures on the Minor Prophets:
I, p. 401.
Now, wherever
you hear or see this Word preached, believed, professed, and lived, do not
doubt that the true ecclesia sancta catholica (Christian
holy people) must be there… And even if there were no other sign than this
alone, it would still suffice to prove that a Christian, holy people must exist
there, for God’s Word cannot be without God’s people and, conversely, God’s
people cannot be without God’s Word.
Martin Luther
On the Councils and the Church, Works,
Fortress Press, 1966, vol. 41, p. 150.
I simply
taught, preached, wrote God’s Word: otherwise I did nothing. And then when I
slept or drank Wittenberg beer with my friend Philip of Amsdorf,
the Word so greatly weakened the papacy that never a prince or emperor did such
damage to it. I did nothing: the Word of God did it all.
All in the
church may hear the Word of Christ, but few hear Christ in the Word.
George Swinnock
A Puritan Golden Treasury,
compiled by I.D.E. Thomas, by permission of Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA. 2000, p. 317.
Wherever we
see the Word of God purely preached and heard, there a church of God exists,
even if it swarms with many faults.
John Calvin
John Broadus
(one of the founders of the Southern Baptist Seminary and the author of the
most influential book on preaching ever written in America) was lecturing his
class just nine days before he died when he paused and said: “Gentlemen, if
this were the last time I should ever be permitted to address you, I would feel
amply repaid for consuming the whole hour endeavoring to impress upon you these
two things: true piety, and, like Apollos, to be men ‘mighty in the
Scriptures.’” Broadus then paused and stood for a moment with his piercing eyes
fixed upon the class. Over and over he repeated in that slow but wonderfully
impressive style that was distinctively his, “Mighty in the Scriptures, mighty
in the Scriptures.”
Kent Hughes
Acts: The Church Afire, Crossway Books, 1996,
p. 247.
[If]
preachers wish to preach with divine authority, they must proclaim this message
of the inspired Scriptures, for the Scriptures alone have divine authority. If
preachers wish to preach with divine authority, they must submit themselves and
echo the Word of God. Preachers are literally to be ministers of the Word.
Sidney Greidanus
The greatest
awakening in the history of the church took place when…(preachers)
were bold enough to proclaim the Word of God and saw their task to be presenting
the unembellished, undiluted, unvarnished Word of God. That is why they pored
over the texts of Scripture, being careful of their exegesis before they
entered the pulpit. Because that was the center of their task, they were
fearless. Their fearlessness, their boldness, their courage came from the
conviction that what they were preaching and teaching was the Word of God.
R.C. Sproul
Feed My Sheep, ed. Don Kistler,
Soli Deo Gloria Ministries, 2002, p. 142-143.
Committees
are necessary. Even more important is vision and the ability to move the
congregation toward the goals of the church. But when push comes to shove, it's
the ministry of the Word that gives us our greatest impact. A church can
usually put up with weak administration if it has effective preaching. But
there's nothing quite as pathetic as people coming to church and returning home
without any spiritual food.
Erwin Lutzer
Pastor to Pastor, Kregel, 1998, p. 104.
The Word of
God alone is to be preached, in its perfection and inner consistency. Scripture
is the exclusive subject of preaching, the only field in which the preacher is
to labour.
William Perkins
The Art of Prophesying, 1996, p. 9, by
permission Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA.
The purpose
of reading, explaining and applying a portion of Scripture is to obey the
command to “preach the Word.” In no other way may we expect to experience the
presence and power of the Holy Spirit in our preaching. He did not spend
thousands of years producing the Old and New Testaments…only to ignore it! What He “moved” men to write He now motivates
us to preach. He has not promised to bless our word; that promise extends only
to His own (Isa. 55:10, 11).
Jay Adams
Preaching with a Purpose, Zondervan,
1982, p. 19.
If Jesus, the
sinless and perfect Son of God, limited Himself to speaking nothing during His
incarnation except the truth He received from His Father, how much more should
those who have been called into ministry speak only on the authority of divine
Scripture.
John MacArthur
Titus, Moody, 1996, p. 127.
I
think it is the preacher's responsibility to get attention and comprehension.
It is the Hoy Spirit’s responsibility to produce yielding, retention, and
action – that's not my job. All the slick techniques, all the gospel marketing
packages, all the pulpit histrionics of jumping and stomping and flailing
around, and doing whatever they do to create the mood. All the sad stories, the
mood music, the endless invitations, the hand raising, the walking to the
front, all of that kind of pressure is not preaching the Word. It has nothing
to do with comprehension. The decision of yielding, surrendering and then
retaining and acting, is between the hearer and God, and not the hearer and the
preacher.
John MacArthur
Commitment
of a Powerful Leader, Sermon, 1992, Tape GC 56-3.
Strictly
speaking, it may be said that the true preaching of the Word and its
recognition as the standard of doctrine and life, is the one mark of the
Church. Without it there is no Church.
Louis Berkhof
Systematic Theology, by permission of
Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA. 1998,
p. 577.
I
count it my honor and happiness that I preach to a free people who have the Bible
in their hands. To your Bibles I appeal. I entreat, I charge you to receive
nothing upon my word any farther than I can prove it from the Word of God. And
bring every preacher and every sermon that you hear to the same standard.
John Newton
There are too
many “ball-park” interpreters and expositors today. The theological atmosphere
of evangelicalism is saturated with a dense fog of uncertainty and misplaced
emphases in handling the Word of God. Many churches are on the rocks because of
careless hermeneutics, ignorance of biblical languages, and unsystematic
theology. Rough estimates as to what this or that passage means will not do. We
need qualified expositors who will take the time and make the necessary
sacrifices to do their homework well and bring clarity to the minds of God’s
people as they read and study God’s holy Word.
Robert Thomas
Precision
as God’s Will for My Life, pamphlet, The Master’s Seminary, 1989.
They
therefore that ground what they preach upon the Scripture, and deliver nothing
but what is agreeable to it, preach the word of God.
Preaching God's Word, www.apuritansmind.com.
It is God's
word that does convert, quicken, comfort, and build up, or, on the other side,
wound and beat down. What is the reason that there was so great an alteration
made by the ministry of Christ and His disciples, by the apostles and others
after them, indeed, by Luther, and other ministers of reformed churches? They
did not preach traditions of elders like the scribes; nor men's inventions like
the Roman Catholics do. They preached the pure word of God. The more
purely God's word is preached, the more deeply it pierces and the more kindly
it works.
Preaching God's Word, www.apuritansmind.com.
It’s true
that [many] are praying for a worldwide revival. But it would be more timely, and more scriptural, for prayer to be made to
the Lord of the harvest, that He would raise up and thrust forth laborers who
would fearlessly and faithfully preach those truths which are calculated to
bring about a revival.
A.W. Pink