It's is amazing how on little thing can make us forget how Jesus is so much more than enough for us. And this is why it is so important to have a high view of Jesus, to know Him deeply, and to always be in wonder of Him. Because when we really know how great Jesus is, we need nothing else but Him.
27.3.12
21.3.12
Essentials for Transformative Preaching
I was talking with one of my mentors the other day and we got on the topic of preaching. It seems pretty obvious to us that a lot of (maybe even most) preaching does not work. People and society are not being transformed but are getting worse. All too often, members of our congregations are sitting passively in our church services, leaving no closer to Jesus then when they walked in, and a hour later forgetting what was preached. What must be included for preaching to change lives? After talking about this we agreed that at least two things are essential (there may be more that are necessary for transformative preaching but these two things are required).
Biblical Centeredness The first thing we need is for Scripture to be central in all preaching. All of the power in preaching comes from God's Word and the degree of preaching's power is equal to the degree of its congruence to Scripture. When we preach, we must lift up the Word, share the Word, speak the Word, and make the Word known. Because God has promised to use His Word. It will accomplish His purpose (Isa 55:11); it penetrates hearts (Heb 4:12); it is useful for teaching and training in the way of God (2 Tim 3:16); and God reveals Himself through His Word (2 Sam 3:21).
But we do not make the Bible central. In most preaching the thoughts of the preacher are central. Modifying behavior is central. Jokes and stories are central. However, all of these other things lack the power to transform us into the image of Christ. People do not need good jokes, illustrations, applications, or thoughts, they need the Word. These other things only help when they point us deeper into the Word. In one sermon David Platt described this idea using the image of a pool. Many preachers treat the Word like the diving board, they use it to get into what they really want to say. Other preachers use the Word like pool furniture, occasionally swimming over to it. But we want the Word to be like the pool, we want to dive into it, explore it and spend most of our time in it.
Big Challenges Another thing that is necessary is for the preacher to call his listeners to radical commitments. This steams from being Biblically centered, because Jesus called those who heard to Him to radical lifestyles (see Luke 14:25-35). People are not interested in living in lukewarm Christianity; that's boring. People want to live for something that is bigger than themselves. They do not get excited about small dreams but about big dreams. And when they are challenged to do big things they realize the ways their lives fall short and they begin to make changes to their lives. Preaching is most effective when speakers challenge their audience to make big, huge, radical changes.
And this make us realize that relevance is overrated. I think that sometimes preachers are soft on either Biblical centeredness or big challenges because they feel like they need to make sure that their preaching is relevant to the lives of the people. But Scripture is not concerned with being relevant; it is concerned with making a new relevance. It wants to show us that what we have valued is not of value because there is something of so much more value that we have missed. Scripture is about changing our values to such a degree that even what we consider to be relevant to our lives changes (because our very lives have changed).
What do you think? Are these essential for transformative preaching? What else may be essential for transformative preaching?
15.3.12
The Gospel Part 1 - Royal
(We are going through a series on the Gospel in order to try to truly understand the whole Gospel and see how it counters prevalent false Gospels. See all the posts here.)
The gospel begins with God. This is appropriate, since it is a story that is about God. Too often, in our self-centeredness, we begin the story with ourselves. We want the story to be about us so we begin with us. But the truth is that if we do not understand who God is then we will never understand the gospel. If we do not understand who God is then we will not understand why Jesus had to die, how great is the privilege of relationship with Him, and whose renown we are compelled to spread. The gospel must begin with God.
The gospel begins with God. This is appropriate, since it is a story that is about God. Too often, in our self-centeredness, we begin the story with ourselves. We want the story to be about us so we begin with us. But the truth is that if we do not understand who God is then we will never understand the gospel. If we do not understand who God is then we will not understand why Jesus had to die, how great is the privilege of relationship with Him, and whose renown we are compelled to spread. The gospel must begin with God.
God begins the story. He ends the story. He is the center and the crux of the
story. He is the story. God is the gospel. It is a story about how He has shown Himself
to us and drawn us to Himself. Without
seeking to know God we will never know the true gospel.
Too often we have sacrificed a lofty idea of
God on the altar of ease and relevance.
Because when the gospel does not begin with God we do not have to think
deeply about His character nor do we have to measure up to His divine
standard. But, an easy gospel will never
be relevant, because it will never be true (think of all the time Jesus talks about the cost of following Him). And a
gospel that primarily seeks relevance will never transform us, because it will
look too much like us to change us. What
we must understand is that a noble picture of the Triune Godhead is of infinite
worth.
So we begin the story of the Gospel
with the simple statement that God is Royal.
He is Lord. He is King. His is mighty and sovereign over all things. In the beginning He was. He is infinite and eternal, timeless and everlasting, faithful and true. He loves justice and hates sin. He has mercy on His people and judges wickedness. He is greater than we could ever imagine and more glorious than we could ever describe.
There are over 100 billion trillion stars in the universe, and He made each one. He calls them each by name and it is because of His great power and might strength that not one of them is missing. The universe is about 40 billion light-years across and He can measure that with the breadth of His sovereign hand. Every single living creature depends on His for life and substance. When he open His hand they are feed and life prospers, but when He closes His hand there is death. He controls ever mountain, volcano, river, ocean, continent, and cloud.
And He is holy. He is righteous and pure, perfect and true. Everything about His is wonderful, good, and deserving of praise. Simply because of who He is He deserves all the glory, the honor, and the praise that is in all the universe. And all of this is but a glimpse of the God who begins the gospel.
6.3.12
What is the Gospel?
(We are going through a series on the Gospel in order to try to truly understand the whole Gospel and see how it counters prevalent false Gospels. See all the posts here.)
Most Christians know that the Gospel is at the center of the Christian life and faith. After all, Jesus came to preach the Gospel ("good news" - Lk 4:18), Paul's life centered around preaching the Gospel (Col 1:23), and the Gospel saves us (1 Cor 15:2). But while many may know that the Gospel is important, many do not know what the Gospel is. And way too often we may know one part of it but not the other, or focus so much on one part we forget about another. But, as A.W. Tozer said, "it might be demonstrated that almost every heresy that has afflicted the church through the years has arisen from believing about God things that are not true, or from overemphasizing certain true things so as to obscure other things equally true." We must know the Gospel, the whole Gospel. And we must know what is not the Gospel, so that we do not make nonessentials essentials and divide the Church even more.
Most Christians know that the Gospel is at the center of the Christian life and faith. After all, Jesus came to preach the Gospel ("good news" - Lk 4:18), Paul's life centered around preaching the Gospel (Col 1:23), and the Gospel saves us (1 Cor 15:2). But while many may know that the Gospel is important, many do not know what the Gospel is. And way too often we may know one part of it but not the other, or focus so much on one part we forget about another. But, as A.W. Tozer said, "it might be demonstrated that almost every heresy that has afflicted the church through the years has arisen from believing about God things that are not true, or from overemphasizing certain true things so as to obscure other things equally true." We must know the Gospel, the whole Gospel. And we must know what is not the Gospel, so that we do not make nonessentials essentials and divide the Church even more.
So, for the next few blog posts we will dive into the Gospel and try to discover what the true, complete Gospel is. We will see the Gospel with five parts as follows:
Royal (Eph 1:19-23; Col 1:15-20): The Gospel is a story that begins with God (Gen 1:1). He is the royal king who rules and reigns over the whole universe and deserves all the glory in all the universe (Job 38). He is majestic in holiness, awesome in glory, and working wonders (Ex 14:11). He is righteous and holy, perfect and pure, and hates sin with all of His infinite being. Everything in all creation is obedient to Him, every bird, wave, and mountain.
Rebel (Eph 2:1-3; Col 1:21): Except for us. We have rebelled against this holy God and sinned. Instead of giving God the glory He deserves, we tried to exult ourselves (Rom 1:21). Instead of being obedient to the Creator, we insisted on creating our own way.
Reconcile (Eph 2:4-5; Col 1:22a): Even though we rebelled against this royal God, He loved us so much that He wanted to be with us. So, out of His mercy, God became a man, lived among us, and died to take the punishment for our rebellion. In doing so, Jesus reconciled (made peace) between God and us and destroyed the sin barrier that prevented us from being with God.
Relationship (Eph 2:6; Col 1:22b-23a): Now, since Jesus has reconciled us to God, we get the unbelievable gift of being in relationship with the King of the Universe (Matt 27:51). The Gospel is not primarily about us getting to go to heaven, or being loved, or given purpose, but it is primarily about us getting God (Phil 3:7). We love and are grateful for these gifts because they lead us deeper into relationship with Jesus.
Renown (Eph 2:7; Col 1:23b): But, this relationship is not primarily for us (Eze 36:22-23). God has a purpose for this relationship, that we would go and spread His renown in all the earth (Isa 26:8). In all things we are to make disciples of Jesus (Matt 28:19) and glorify God in all we do (1 Cor 10:31).
May this Gospel transform us, our churches, our neighborhoods, and the world for His renown!
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