Saturday 5 November 2011

Preaching With Passion.


Lack of passion in our evangelistic preaching conveys the very clear message to our hearers, that (1) we don’t care – no compassion for the people we are preaching to; (2) God doesn’t care – because we are supposed to be his representatives, in a sense; and (3) the church does not care – that’s the message we are putting across!  Now this says a lot about us and about the church, but it says nothing about God, and it says nothing about my Saviour!  It says that we have lost a heart of compassion for perishing sinners.  It says that we are unlike our Saviour and his apostles!  It’s saying that the church has moved away from Christ and from the kind of person that he was, and from showing the love that he showed to the world when he was here.  Do you remember (and this was also alluded to earlier) the passion and emotion that arose in Jesus when he viewed unrepentant Jerusalem?[1]  John tells us that he wept over that city.  The Son of God wept!  Just imagine the eternal Son of God crying over what he sees before his eyes.  The Saviour of the world was broken-hearted at what he saw.  “’Tis mystery all, the immortal dies,” wrote Charles Wesley;[2] and it is also a great mystery when the Son of God cried when he saw men lost in their sins.  He wept over those who would eventually be lost because they rejected him and his Gospel, and the eternal salvation procured for them and offered therein.

Let me ask you this question, and I ask myself the same question:  When were you as preachers last broken to tears over the impenitence of your people?  When were you last moved so profoundly in your soul when you saw the world in which you live and for which our Lord Jesus Christ died, heading at breath-taking speed to a Christless eternity?  When did that last grip you and move you?


[1]    Lk.19:41.
[2]   C. Wesley’s hymn entitled, “And can it be.”

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