The Decline of Authoritative Preaching
Posted in: General, Teaching, CultureBrowsing around Seed Stories (link), which is already “out of the box” for me, I followed a link to a new ministry outside of Spokane (link). Lo and behold, I was confused. Why in the world would you have people unfamiliar with the Gospel and Story of Jesus Christ help you tell it? That’s like having a group of children who have never heard the story of Snow White try to tell the story just off of the title “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs”. There’s no telling where that story will end up. Get in the Bible yourself, repent over the Scripture because we never measure up, and then get in front of your people, teach the Scripture, and call them to repentance too. Then call them to live the Scripture out. Where in the world is authoritative preaching going?
This may seem overly confident, but whatever. I see myself as ‘old-school’. And those who I teach probably do too. I know Miranda does. She called me a ‘fire and brimstone’ preacher. And that was on a relatively calm day. Heh. I don’t get up and yell every week, per se, but I do teach with authority: only because God has dealt with me about the same Scripture during the week. I wrestle with it. I pray over it. I repent from sin brought up by it. I read to see what other people have thought of the Scripture. And then I outline it on a dry erase board, underline key words and verses in my teaching Bible, and then go at it without notes. I’m passionate. I’m well-read. I’m studied up. But most of all, those whom I teach listen. I preach Christ and Him crucified, because it’s throughout Scripture. And Christ brings the numbers and the fruit.
If you’re getting up in front of your people week after week and use some canned message from a megachurch, you’re screwing your people over. You’re shorting them. And you’re going to have be accountable to God for that (Hebrews 13:17). Get in the Scripture. Study over it yourself. Then get up in front of the people Christ has given you and let them know what God has taught you. Teach it entertainingly, so that they pay attention. Teach it in a relevant way, so that they understand. Teach it passionately, so they believe you. But most of all, teach it with the Spirit’s authority, so when they leave you, they’ll remember and implement the message.
Whatever you do, please don’t bring them into your study during the week to help form the message. That’s ludicrous. It’s your responsibility as leader to discern the needs of the people. They should not dictate the direction of the church. You should be able to tell which way the wind’s blowing. If you can’t, maybe you’re in the wrong profession.
Sorry, but someone needs to hear that. The decline of authoritative, Scripture-based teaching will be directly proportional to the decline of missionally effective, fruit-bearing churches. I promise you that.

hey man,
did you communicate your “disgust” with the pastor in spokane? I’m not disagreeing with your content, I’m just hoping you spoke with that person, to try and understand their heart and vision. maybe you won’t agree…but, who knows.
shalom
Actually, I have emailed him, simply questioning his reasoning behind it. I’ve yet to get a reply. I hope, for some reason, that it the idea least outreach oriented instead of church-leading. Thank you for making sure I’m accountable, Chris.
Sweet
I sometimes wonder why we “ministers” are so afraid to preach the Bible. I dunno, to me it’s what gives me confidence…I don’t think people get this.
Chris, I agree with you. There is no possible way I could teach without relying solely on Scripture. I think ministers are afraid of teaching all of Scripture. I don’t like some parts of Scripture, but I fear the consequences of not teaching Scripture greater than I do of teaching it.
Isaac, the leader of the ministry in Spokane, and I did have a conversation via email. It caused me to look at what he was doing in a new light, but it also caused him to take a step back and look at why he was doing it. We’ve both learned something from this, but I’m still standing by my post: authoritative, Biblical preaching is always necessary in the church. Dialogue is only a way to discern the needs of the people, not to distribute truth.
Did God ever use “non-believers” to speak a message to the “people of God”?
I think there are a few Bible stories up that alley.
Also wasn’t there a prophet, I believe it was Jonah, who preached God’s message (eventually and reluctantly) and the community- the non believers repented. So though Jonah had completely “got it”- the community heard from God and repented. So who speaks louder from that story, the slick speaking, well studied prophet, who “allowed” God to use him- OR- the community where God’s Spirit was preparing their hearts to hear the Word (despite Jonah’s bad attitude) and they heard and repented. Sometimes God speaks through the newly repentant-seeking community and not the prepared speaker who thinks he is “too good” for that particular sinful community.
just some thoughts-
I did actually agree with most of your post.
Corey:
First of all, thank you so much for using Scripture to bring up your concerns. That’s so respectable and honorable. I’ve recently had to deal with people (away from the blog) that have brought accusations with no Scriptural basis. It just ticks me off when “tradition” overrules Scripture.
On your concerns, you are right on. But Jonah was the point-man. Jonah just didn’t go into Nineveh and say “well, what’s wrong?” and then they talked about it. He brought forth a God-given message first, but he didn’t like the results. I’ve preached and taught plenty of those messages…where I hated how the people responded (good or bad). But it started with the point man. In that case, the prepared speaker who thinks he is “too good” is just as much in need of repenting as the people to whom he brought God’s message. The point is this: God uses an individual, not a community to bring awareness of and a message to. The community then deals with it together. But the message starts with an individual.
Thanks for the comment!
Post a Comment