Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Why I love church 3

On a continuing theme, this is another reason why I love our church. After Pastor John went through all of this in his intro to last Sunday's sermon, Amanda leaned over to me and said, "Exactly."



QUOTED FROM THE DESIRING GOD BLOG

Some of you may have little or no experience with what I mean by preaching. I think it will help you listen to my messages if I say a word about it.

What I mean by preaching is expository exultation.

Preaching Is Expository

Expository means that preaching aims to exposit, or explain and apply, the meaning of the Bible. The reason for this is that the Bible is God's word, inspired, infallible, profitable—all 66 books of it.

The preacher's job is to minimize his own opinions and deliver the truth of God. Every sermon should explain the Bible and then apply it to people's lives.

The preacher should do that in a way that enables you to see that the points he is making actually come from the Bible. If you can't see that they come from the Bible, your faith will end up resting on a man and not on God's word.

The aim of this exposition is to help you eat and digest biblical truth that will

  • make your spiritual bones more like steel,
  • double the capacity of your spiritual lungs,
  • make the eyes of your heart dazzled with the brightness of the glory of God,
  • and awaken the capacity of your soul for kinds of spiritual enjoyment you didn't even know existed.

Preaching Is Exultation

Preaching is also exultation. This means that the preacher does not just explain what's in the Bible, and the people do not simply try understand what he explains. Rather, the preacher and the people exult over what is in the Bible as it is being explained and applied.

Preaching does not come after worship in the order of the service. Preaching is worship. The preacher worships—exults—over the word, trying his best to draw you into a worshipful response by the power of the Holy Spirit.

My job is not simply to see truth and show it to you. (The devil could do that for his own devious reasons.) My job is to see the glory of the truth and to savor it and exult over it as I explain it to you and apply it for you. That's one of the differences between a sermon and a lecture.

Preaching Isn't Church, but It Serves the Church

Preaching is not the totality of the church. And if all you have is preaching, you don't have the church. A church is a body of people who minister to each other.

One of the purposes of preaching is to equip us for that and inspire us to love each other better.

But God has created the church so that she flourishes through preaching. That's why Paul gave young pastor Timothy one of the most serious, exalted charges in all the Bible in 2 Timothy 4:1-2:

I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by his appearing and his kingdom: preach the word.

What to Expect from My Preaching and Why

If you're used to a twenty-minute, immediately practical, relaxed talk, you won't find that from what I've just described.

  • I preach twice that long;
  • I do not aim to be immediately practical but eternally helpful;
  • and I am not relaxed.

I standing vigilantly on the precipice of eternity speaking to people who this week could go over the edge whether they are ready to or not. I will be called to account for what I said there.

That's what I mean by preaching.

5 comments:

Sharon said...

I cut my teeth as a new Christian on expository preaching by Pastor Whisenhunt. I will be eternally grateful for that. You are blessed to be in a church where your pastor isn't trying to please, but rather just give the Word of God out and leave the rest to God Himself.

Abigail said...

Pretty cool that we posted the same thing on the same day... we must have the same pastor or something.. :)

Andrea said...

Hi-
So this is completely unrelated to this post, but...

I've been following your blog as I used to be friends with Amanda when we were neighbors. It's been great to see how your family continues to grow. :)

I'm considering homeschooling our children (3 soon to be 4, 5 1/2 yrs and under) and would love Amanda's thoughts on the curriculum she's been using and how she balancing teaching with meeting the needs for the rest of the family.

My email is bea813@cox.net.

Faithfully,
Andrea

Anonymous said...

Love it, love it, love it. I think we're going to kind of miss the hubbub of construction---in an odd sort of way. It all turned out so well! I especially loved seeing the grins on the boys faces as they "moved up" to their new sleeping arrangements. Caleb clearly loves being top-bunk guy, Matty loves being on the lower bunk, and Ben loves his private nook! Couldn't be better!
Shube

Anonymous said...

Can you tell I'm swamped? I put my construction post on the preaching blog. YOU know what I mean. I DO also love Pastor John's preaching!
Shube