Posts Tagged ‘Bible’

What is the Ultimate Key to Effective Preaching?

Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

John MacArthur’s answer to the question, “What is the ultimate key to effective preaching?” Worthy of reflection on what priorities we have for our pastor’s work.

    Very simply, stay in your study until you know that the Lord will gladly accept what you have prepared to preach because it rightly represents His Word. Let me close with an unforgettable plan suggested by an unknown parishioner as to how to accomplish this.

    Fling him into his office. Tear the “Office” sign from the door and nail on the sign, “Study.” Take him off the mailing list. Lock him up with his books and his typewriter and his Bible. Slam him down on his knees before texts and broken hearts and the flock of lives of a superficial flock and a holy God.

    Force him to be the one man in our surfeited communities who knows about God. Throw him into the ring to box with God until he learns how short his arms are. Engage him to wrestle with God all the night through. And let him come out only when he’s bruised and beaten into being a blessing.

    Shut his mouth forever spouting remarks, and stop his tongue forever tripping lightly over every nonessential. Require him to have something to say before he dares break the silence. Bend his knees in the lonesome valley.

    Burn his eyes with weary study. Wreck his emotional poise with worry for God. And make him exchange his pious stance for a humble walk with God and man. Make him spend and be spent for the glory of God. Rip out his telephone. Burn up his ecclesiastical success sheets.
    Put water in his gas tank. Give him a Bible and tie him to the pulpit. And make him preach the Word of the living God!

    Test him. Quiz him. Examine him. Humiliate him for his ignorance of things divine. Shame him for his good comprehension of finances, batting averages, and political in-fighting. Laugh at his frustrated effort to play psychiatrist. Form a choir and raise a chant and haunt him with it night and day—“Sir, we would see Jesus.”

    When at long last he dares assay the pulpit, ask him if he has a word from God. If he does not, then dismiss him. Tell him you can read the morning paper and digest the television commentaries, and think through the day’s superficial problems, and manage the community’s weary drives, and bless the sordid baked potatoes and green beans, ad infinitum, better than he can.

    Command him not to come back until he’s read and reread, written and rewritten, until he can stand up, worn and forlorn, and say, “Thus saith the Lord.”

    Break him across the board of his ill-gotten popularity. Smack him hard with his own prestige. Corner him with questions about God. Cover him with demands for celestial wisdom. And give him no escape until he’s back against the wall of the Word.

    And sit down before him and listen to the only word he has left—God’s Word. Let him be totally ignorant of the down-street gossip, but give him a chapter and order him to walk around it, camp on it, sup with it, and come at last to speak it backward and forward, until all he says about it rings with the truth of eternity.

    And when he’s burned out by the flaming Word, when he’s consumed at last by the fiery grace blazing through him, and when he’s privileged to translate the truth of God to man, finally transferred from earth to heaven, then bear him away gently and blow a muted trumpet and lay him down softly. Place a two-edged sword in his coffin, and raise the tomb triumphant. For he was a brave soldier of the Word. And ere he died, he had become a man of God.

(Rediscovering Expository Preaching, 1992)

10 Most Common Preaching Mistakes

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

This post may not be for everyone, but if it interests you take a look. Below are the top 10 mistakes Dave Murray (a pastor who trains many up and coming preachers) see in new (and sometimes old) preachers.

    1. CRAMMING: Squeezing all you have ever studied about the Bible over the years into 30 minutes.

    2. SKIMMING: Taking too many verses and simply skimming over the surface of the text, teaching nothing that someone with average intelligence would not themselves have got from the text.

    3. FLOATING: The preacher says many things that relate to the text, floating or hovering above the text, but fails to show how they are anchored in the text.

    4. PROOF-TEXTING: Including lots and lots of texts from all over the Bible, and sometimes diverting hearers by expounding the proof texts as much as the sermon text.

    5. QUOTING: Too many quotes from commentators, theologians, and other preachers from the past and the present.

    6. LECTURING:It’s difficult to define the difference between preaching and lecturing, but you know it when you see it/hear it. It’s about passion, eye-contact, persuasion, urgency, etc.

    7. ASSUMING: Our own over-familiarity with the text results in us assuming that our hearers know the background of the text, the meaning of basic key words and concepts, etc. May also result in Mach 7 preaching speeds. And don’t assume your hearers are all converted either.

    8. CONFUSING: Hearers are left confused usually because of a lack of structure or too complicated a structure (main points, sub-points, etc.); or sometimes there is a good structure, but it’s not sufficiently highlighted and emphasized so that hearers know where they’ve been, where they are, and where they are going.

    9. SPRAYING: Lots and lots of data, but no single dominant thought; it’s the difference between a shotgun and a rifle.

    10. COMPLICATING: Instead of explaining the text, a preacher can actually make it more obscure. Usually involves words too big, sentences too long, concepts too abstract, language too philosophical/theological.

Read the whole thing here.

New Teaching Series: Living for Community

Sunday, September 4th, 2011

While the American psyche promotes the individual’s conquest over the masses, that is not how God designed us to live. The saddest feeling is the loneliness in a crowded room, the hunger to connect with someone in a meaningful way – only to leave wanting something more. Since God is the originator of Community, we will look at pictures of the community God desires for us to experience. Through this teaching series we will discover “living for community” is not just how God created us, but also that experiencing community is only possible because of Jesus Christ and He has expectations of you for those around you.

    September 1 – Celebrating the Community (Dave)

    September 7 – Created for Community (Dana)

    September 14 – Community of the Cross (Drew)

    September 21 - Called to serve (Dave)

    September 28 – Committed to One Another (Hannah)

Join us Thursday nights at 7pm!

Presidential Candidates and the Bible: How Much of It Do You Believe?

Saturday, August 20th, 2011

Stephen Prothero, a Boston University professor of religion, posted a blog concerning the two presidential candidates, Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry, who profess faith in Jesus and dependence on the Bible. He questions how far their belief in the Bible as God’s Word will go especially in the parts that are disdained by the general American public.

In the post he offers five scriptures he desires the candidates to give their position on. If you want to read the full post you can click here, but I will give a few thoughts here.

SUBMISSION AND THE PRESIDENCY

The first scripture is directed right at Bachmann (a woman). She is asked by Prothero (and many other Americans) where she stands on scriptures such as Colossians 3:18, “Wives, submit yourselves to your husbands.”

Prothero simply asks,

    I would like to know whether Bachmann will say the same about her evangelical Protestantism. If her husband tells her to veto a bill, will she submit to him? Is there any separation for her, as there was for Kennedy, between her private religious doctrines (in this case, that wives should be submissive to their husbands) and her public responsibilities (to act as “the decider”)?

Although this may seem like a cheap shot, I think it is a very important question to answer and to play it off as it isn’t is to deny the beauty in our God given roles in gender.

I believe full heartedly that the Bible says men and women are equal in value, but different in function. Men are not better than women, they’re different. Women are not better than men, they’re different. Where is the difference seen? In their function as man and woman. Men have bee given the privilege and responsibility to authoritatively shepherd their families, their churches and their communities. Men are responsible for those they have been given to care for. Women, on the other hand, have been given the beautiful role as “helper” (Genesis 1:18). This role is not just realized in a marriage context, but it is part and parcel to who women are as created beings. Now some of you may be exploding in anger toward me thinking I am playing fast and loose with the Bible. Before you set your lasers from stun to kill please read these articles (One, Two, Three, Four, Five) that address the doctrines of gender a bit more fully than I can here

My question is, with the view of gender roles in mind, how does Bachmann plan on being the leader of the United States when she is called to be submissive to her husband as to the Lord? How will she reconcile her call to joy-filled submission to her husband in everything when her husband must submit to her as Mrs. President? My tone is not not cynical in asking this, but it is curious question wanting to hear how this sister will be able to be the woman and wife she has the call and joy to be while taking on the lead role in the USA?

THIS PROFESSOR WOULD FAIL MY BIBLE CLASSES

One thing that struck me in this post by Prof. Prothero was his apparent lack of understanding of the Bible and basic skills of interpretation. For example, he quotes Matthew 6 where Jesus speaks about praying in your room in private and interprets that as a command to never pray in public. Really? A professor on religion? He fails to see the obvious intent of Jesus’ teaching in this passage is against hypocritical and self-seeking prayers and not about praying in public. Another mark of embarrassment for the professor is found when he quotes Exodus 20:13 and then says this posses a problem for the two candidates on their position of capitol punishment. He fails to recognize that this commandment has to do with pre-meditated, unjust murder and not killing; especially that of the state. The other two scriptures he brings us are also laughable, but the take home on this point is this: just because a dude is supposed to be an “expert” on something doesn’t mean he is.

IS THE BIBLE YOUR PILOT OR YOUR POLISH?

Although I am very disappointed in this professor of religion’s gross mishandling of the Bible, I mean seriously man my high school students would laugh at you, his conclusion is worth some reflection:

    I understand the impulse to draft Jesus into your political campaign. At least in U.S. politics, Jesus is good for business. But if you are going to call Jesus to your side, you need to let voters know how that affects your politics. Might you change your mind if you saw that a political position of yours was contradicted by the Bible? Or is the Bible a dead letter, useful for invoking divine authority but never for correction or reprove?

The relevance of this paragraph for our presidential candidates is obvious, but we shouldn’t let the question apply to them alone. We must ask ourselves the question that is asked in this paragraph: Is the Bible our inerrant (all-true in everything) and authoritative guide of our lives or is it just something we use to adorn our opinions, thoughts and actions to make them more attractive? Is God’s Word your Pilot, which directs you in every aspect of word, thought and deed? Or is the Bible your polish? That is, is it something you use to make everything else you decide to do and think look good?

Don’t let this question go on without examination.

How much of the Bible determines your life?

Being a Noble Berean

Thursday, May 12th, 2011



This is a post, about a post that was meant to be a supplement for a post.

Trevin Wax posted a great piece about common, yet untrue, stories or insights that preachers speak of from time to time. Some examples are the eye of the needle was a small gate in Jerusalem’s wall (false), Gehenna (which Jesus used for teaching on hell) was a trash dump (false), or how the high priest would were a rope around his waist just in case he dropped dead in God’s presence on the day of atonement (I’ve used this one; also false). To be brief, it was a great piece that I encourage you to take a look at.

But, as generally happens, another blogger, Kevin DeYoung, posted a supplement piece for Trevin’s post. Kevin DeYoung asked the question, “So how can we be better Bereans?” Bereans were the folk who heard the apostle Paul preach about Jesus and then went home to check their Bibles to make sure what he was saying was legit (Acts 17:11). Therefore, the title of Berean is used for Christians who check all incoming information with God’s Word to see if it matches up. So what are ways that we can make sure not to become bamfoozled by the untrue?

Here are three of Kevin’s points:

    Ask yourself, “how do I know this is so?” True, we all take a lot on faith, trusting the books we read and the people we listen to. But if you come across a new insight you’ve never heard, examine what primary source evidence there is for this new claim.

    Be concerned when you start to feel like you can’t possibly understand the Bible without multiple degrees. It does take skill to interpret many parts of the Bible, and background information can help. But if all the exciting things you’re learning fall in the category of “insights from ancient languages” or “insights from ancient culture” you could be heading down the wrong path.

    Realize that we all make mistakes. We hear things and read things that we later find out aren’t true. Be open to correction and ready to admit when you make a mistake. The goal is simply to know the Bible better. What have Bereans got to lose?

I encourage you to check out the full post. It is short and well worth your time. Strive to be a Berean.

YouTube Tuesday

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in life, in love, in faith and in purity. I Timothy 4:12

What Does It Look Like to Recieve the New Testament for the First Time?

Friday, March 4th, 2011

May we cherish the Bibles we hold day in and day out as we remember what an amazing gift it is to us.

I urge you to watch this. Have tissues at hand and be ready to weep along with these dear brothers and sisters who we will meet in Paradise with Him.