
We
are told in the Bible, “It pleased God
by the foolishness of preaching to save
them that believe” (I Cor. 1:21). So God
cannot get along without preaching, if
He is to get men saved. All the Sunday
school organization, all the educational
and social work the church can do cannot
substitute for God’s plan. “It pleased
God by the foolishness of preaching to
save them that believe.”
Lost men cannot get along without preaching, because they cannot be saved without the preaching of the Word.
It is true that an individual may preach
to an individual. A Sunday school
teacher may preach to her pupil. A
father or mother may preach to a child.
But the Bible plan is also that there
shall be preaching of a God-appointed
and God-anointed man before
congregations. That is the example and
precept of the Bible, both in the Old
and New Testaments.
Preaching, then, is of surpassing
importance in God’s plan of saving men.
Nothing can take the place of preaching.
Hence, we need a revival of great
preaching. Christianity flourishes when
preaching flourishes. When men stand in
pulpits and give book reviews or moral
essays instead of preaching in the Bible
sense, then Christianity languishes.
When men, timid men, give little
sermonettes instead of bold and powerful
and commanding discourses, Christianity
is on the wane.
The individual soul winner is a preacher
too. The Great Commission command in
Mark 16:15 is that every Christian is to
have a part in going to all the world
and is to “preach the gospel to every
creature.” That means preaching to
individuals by individuals. So the soul
winner needs, in some degree, to preach
or teach the same Gospel and the same
warnings and press for decisions just
like the preacher in the pulpit. The
soul-winning preacher and the personal
soul winner need to know what kind of
preaching of the Gospel God wants.
Since preaching is of such momentous
importance in God’s plan, it is
worthwhile to study earnestly what kind
of preaching we need. And we can find
the kind of preaching we need by turning
to the Bible and considering the
precepts and the examples given by the
Word of God for preaching. What does the
Bible say men ought to preach? And how
did the Bible preachers preach? The
answer to these questions is sorely
needed today.
Let us turn to the Bible, then, and see the kind of preaching needed.
I. We Need Preaching of the Gospel of
Salvation by the Blood of Christ
Here is the first and strongest of all
requirements concerning preaching. Every
preacher is to preach the Gospel, for it
is the Gospel alone that saves. In
Romans 1:16 Paul tells us by divine
inspiration, “For I am not ashamed of
the gospel of Christ: for it is the
power of God unto salvation to every one
that believeth; to the Jew first, and
also to the Greek.”
And what is the Gospel? In I Corinthians
15:1–4 Paul tells us the Gospel he
preached and by which his converts were
saved: “Moreover, brethren, I
declare unto you the gospel which I
preached unto you, which also ye have
received, and wherein ye stand; By which
also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory
what I preached unto you, unless ye have
believed in vain. For I delivered unto
you first of all that which I also
received, how that Christ died for our
sins according to the scriptures; And
that he was buried, and that he rose
again the third day according to the
scriptures.”
Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures and was buried and rose again the third day according to the Scriptures. That is the Gospel. That is the Gospel Paul received, the Gospel he preached, the Gospel by which his converts were saved. It is the same Gospel that every preacher everywhere should preach today. No preaching is Christian preaching that does not preach salvation by the atoning death of Christ.
A horrible curse is pronounced on any who preach any other gospel than that of salvation by the blood of Christ. In Galatians 1:6–9 is this apostolic declaration in the inspired Word of God: “I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel: Which is not another; but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ. But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed. As we said before, so say I now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed.”
Even if an angel from Heaven should preach any other gospel, “let him be accursed”! Even if Paul the apostle himself should come and preach another gospel, “let him be accursed”! And again the curse is pronounced: “As we said before, so say I now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed.”
Any man who preaches salvation by character is a condemned, lost sinner with the curse of Almighty God upon him! Any man who preaches a so-called “social gospel,” which is no gospel at all, “let him be accursed,” let him be damned. He is a doomed, Christ-rejecting sinner. He is not even a Christian, and he has no right to preach. He is a blind leader of the blind. He is a wolf in sheep’s clothing, Jesus Christ Himself being witness. To men like him, Jesus said, “Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell?” (Matt. 23:33).
In II John, verses 9 to 11, is another plain command of God about those who do not bring the true Gospel, or the true doctrine of salvation by Christ: “Whosoever transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ, hath not God. He that abideth in the doctrine of Christ, he hath both the Father and the Son. If there come any unto you, and bring not this doctrine, receive him not into your house, neither bid him God speed: For he that biddeth him God speed is partaker of his evil deeds.”
Again we are told that anybody who does not stand true to this doctrine that Christ Himself, God’s Son, is come in the flesh to save people, that He died and rose again—anyone who does not receive that doctrine—does not have God. He is not a Christian. He is a Hell-bound, wicked sinner. The curse of God is upon him. No Christian should ever go to hear any such man preach. No Christian should ever give a penny to his support. Such a man should not even be entertained in your home. You should never bid him Godspeed. To support him, to lend your encouragement, to give him fellowship is to be a partaker of his wicked deeds in damning souls by denying the true Gospel.
No Christian should ever support or encourage or receive into his home a modernistic preacher, one who does not believe the Bible and who has not trusted in the Christ of the Bible, the virgin-born Son of God who died for our sins and rose bodily from the grave and ascended to Heaven and is coming again. One who does not believe this Gospel is not a Christian and is not fit to preach.
In every church in the land where there are sincere Christians, they should immediately oust any preacher who does not preach the Gospel of salvation by the blood. If they cannot oust the preacher, they should themselves leave and never give another penny to the support of such a church and such a modernist, unbelieving infidel.
The first essential thing about preaching is that it is to be Gospel preaching, true to the blood, true to the Bible teaching of salvation by faith in Christ, who died an atoning death and rose from the grave to be our Saviour. Oh, beloved preachers, preach Christ and His blood and His salvation freely offered to dying sinners!
II. We Need Preaching of the Word of God, the Bible
We
need Bible preaching! A slanderous and
unscriptural book against evangelism by
a seminary president says that
evangelists ought to preach nothing but
the simple Gospel of how to be saved.
But when Paul wrote to Timothy telling
him to “do the work of an evangelist,”
he gave him a solemn charge to preach
all the Word of God.
“I charge thee therefore before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead at his appearing and his kingdom; Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine.”—II Tim. 4:1,2.
That is in the same passage where Paul
commands Timothy to “do the work of an
evangelist.” The evangelist as well as
the pastor is to “preach the word.” The
foreign missionary is to “preach the
word.”
You see that the Gospel of salvation is not all of the Bible. The Bible has other things besides the plan of salvation. The Ten Commandments are not in the plan of salvation. The Sermon on the Mount is beautiful and good, and it ought to be preached, but it is not the plan of salvation by the blood of Christ. First Corinthians 13, the love chapter, teaching brotherly charity, is in the Bible, but it is not the plan of salvation. A preacher should preach the whole Word of God. His preaching should be Bible preaching.
A Bible preacher is to “preach the
word.” He is to reprove with the Word of
God. He is to rebuke with the Word of
God. He is to “exhort with all
longsuffering and doctrine” (teaching);
that is, his exhortation should be on a
Bible basis and made in Bible terms and
backed up by Scriptures quoted or read.
Preaching should start with a Bible text
or passage and expound that text or
passage. Preaching should make clear the
meaning of the Scriptures. Points made
should be proven by the Scriptures and
illustrated by scriptural examples.
There is room for logic, there is room
for illustrations; but these are
secondary. The Word of God itself must
be preeminent in preaching.
I have before me a sermon submitted by an eminent and greatly used man of God for publication in the sword of the lord. But I cannot publish it as it is. It starts off without a Scripture as a text. It is not based upon any Bible passage. Later it uses two Scriptures to prove a point or two, and there is mention made of three or four other Scriptures, phrases from the Scriptures. But it is not a Bible sermon. It is true and good. But the theme itself was not found in a Scripture, and the outline was not found in the Scripture. It is not a Bible exposition. It has some Scriptures in it, but it is not a Bible sermon in the sense that it is founded directly and obviously on the Word of God.
I believe that some preaching ought to
be topical preaching, that is, preaching
on a subject. But in such a case, the
subject ought to be found in the
Scriptures, and then the points the
preacher makes under that subject ought
to be proved, every one, from the
Scripture itself.
A beautiful example of Bible preaching
is found in chapter 8 of Nehemiah. There
all the people were gathered together in
the street that was before the water
gate, and Ezra the scribe brought the
Law of Moses. There Ezra stood upon a
pulpit of wood and opened the Book in
the sight of all the people. Then a
number of godly preachers helped to
explain the Scriptures. “So they read in
the book in the law of God distinctly,
and gave the sense, and caused them to
understand the reading” (Neh. 8:8). That
was Bible preaching. They read the Word
of God and explained the sense and
caused the people to understand the
meaning. And it was not dry-as-dust
preaching either, for the people were so
moved that they mourned and wept and
repented of their sins.
At
Pentecost we have a great example of
Bible preaching. Peter stood up before
the people and quoted five verses from
Joel, chapter 2, and preached a
marvelous sermon on the pouring out of
the Holy Spirit and the plan of
salvation. Read that story in Acts
2:14–39, and then remember that “with
many other words did he testify and
exhort.” And in the brief part of the
sermon which is given, there is also a
clear exposition of Psalm 16:8–10. Peter
started with Scripture and expounded
that Scripture and other Scriptures and
added fervent exhortation and
explanation.
Read
Matthew 5, part of the Sermon on the
Mount. There surely you will be
impressed with the preaching of Jesus,
that He again and again took an Old
Testament Scripture and expounded the
deeper meaning, more than was apparent
on the surface. Do not be misled by the
teaching of infidels and modernists that
Jesus was doing away with the Law. He
plainly said, ‘I am not come to destroy
the law but to fulfill it.’ He plainly
said that not one jot or tittle should
pass away until all should be fulfilled.
But in each case, He used the Scripture
and explained the deeper meaning of the
Scriptures.
So, preacher, start with the Scripture. Find the theme, the real subject itself, in the Scripture. Find the outline in the Scripture; or if the outline itself is just logically deduced, then find Scriptures to back up every statement and quote them. Use many Scriptures to make clear the point and use Bible illustrations wherever possible. There is living power in the Word of God. The Scripture itself brings conviction to people who are not convicted, brings light to people in darkness, brings salvation to those who are lost. We need Bible preaching.
III. We Need Preaching Against Sin
Bible preaching would necessarily be
preaching against sin. Paul commanded
Timothy, “Preach the word…reprove,
rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering
and doctrine.” There has to be
scriptural rebuke and reproof for sin if
it be true Bible preaching, preaching
like that of the great men of God in the
Bible.
Consider the preaching of the prophet
Isaiah. In chapter 1 of his prophecy is
eloquent and beautiful yet startling
preaching against sin. With burning
words, with bold onslaught, Isaiah
reminds the people of their desolate
country, their cities burned with fire,
the land devoured by strangers, the
nation stricken and sore and wounded. He
denounces their hypocritical sacrifices
and says that God despises their
oblations, the incense, their holy days
and feasts. He says that God will hide
His eyes and will not hear their prayers
because their hands are full of blood.
In that one chapter, he denounces them
for oppression of the poor, for their
rebellion against God, for their
spiritual harlotry. He says that their
princes run with thieves, that everyone
looks for bribes, that leaders do not
give honest protection to widows and
orphans. And that is only one example
from many in the preaching of Isaiah. He
preached against definite sins.
When Nathan the prophet came before David, he gave a thrilling example of a God-called and God-anointed preacher preaching against sin. Before him was King David in his robes, with the power of life and death over every subject. Yet Nathan boldly preached him a sermon, using a parable to show the wickedness of David’s sin. Then when the anger of David was aroused against the hypothetical rich man who had taken his neighbor’s little ewe lamb, Nathan with crushing and powerful effect pointed his finger in the face of King David and said, “Thou art the man”
(II
Sam. 12:7), and showed him the horrible
sin which he had committed in taking
Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah, and
murdering Uriah. It was a tense moment.
Nathan might have lost his life. But he
stood up for God and openly denounced
sin. God give us more Nathans today in
the pulpit, as well as in private
conversations!
How painfully sharp, how pointed and untactful was the preaching of John the Baptist! “O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come? Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance” (Matt. 3:7,8). Then he warned leading Jews that they should not be saved just because they were children of Abraham and that they were likely to be hewn down like fruitless trees to be cast into the fire of Hell.
And the preaching of John the Baptist
was just as bold when he faced Herod the
king and told him plainly that he had no
right to take his brother’s wife (Matt.
14:3,4). The preachers today who plead
that they must preach only “a positive
message,” that preaching against sin is
a “negative message,” certainly do not
follow the pattern of this great man of
God, one of the greatest ever born of
women, as Jesus said. John the Baptist
preached against sin, against particular
sins. And he did it boldly. He hurt
people’s feelings, he made people angry,
he caused a disturbance. But he was
faithful to God and to the Bible.
Oh, preachers, witness the preaching of
Stephen! That day he had on his
coronation robes! I think he must have
whispered sweetly in his own heart, O
Lord Jesus, today I will see Thy face!
Today is the day of my martyrdom and of
my crowning and of my glory! Acts,
chapter 7, tells the story.
What an array of Scriptures Stephen recalled and summarized in telling the history of how Israel had rejected the prophets of God and resisted the Spirit. What a scriptural sermon! And the thrilling narrative mounted to its climax, and the people stood spellbound when Stephen suddenly turned upon them with the fire of God in his eyes and in his voice and said: “Ye stiffnecked and uncircumcised in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost: as your fathers did, so do ye. Which of the prophets have not your fathers persecuted? and they have slain them which shewed before of the coming of the Just One; of whom ye have been now the betrayers and murderers: Who have received the law by the disposition of angels, and have not kept it.”—Acts 7:51–53.
“Murderers”! “Betrayers”! ‘Persecutors!’
“Stiffnecked and uncircumcised in heart
and ears”! “Ye do always resist the Holy
Ghost”! That is Bible preaching against
sin!
It is true that it brought the wrath of the crowd upon Stephen. It is true that he was beaten into a bloody mass, stoned to death in their anger. But he went home to Heaven that day, and Jesus, who usually sits on the right hand of the Father, rose to receive him! (Rev. 3:21; Acts 7:56).
Oh, to go to Heaven like Stephen did! Oh, to go with lips purified by bold preaching in Christ’s name, preaching against sin, preaching in the power of the Holy Ghost!
How Jesus preached against sin! He
preached against covetousness; He
preached against unbelief; He preached
against adultery or even looking on a
woman to lust after her. He preached
against grudges and said that if men did
not forgive, neither would the Father in
Heaven forgive them. He said to the
Pharisees and scribes, “Ye are of your
father the devil, and the lusts of your
father ye will do.” He told the
religious leaders who were impenitent
that they had been granted the use of
God’s vineyard, the leadership over His
people, but that they would be cast out
and the vineyard rented to others. Men
hated Jesus because He preached against
sin. God forgive us preachers who never
anger anybody by preaching like Jesus!
Some preachers preach on love but never
preach against sin. The Lord Jesus loved
men, loved sinners enough to die for
them, but how He hated sin! Remember
when He made a whip, drove the traders
from the temple, overturned the tables
of the moneychangers, scattered the
money on the stone floor! Preaching
ought sometimes to be like that. With
holy boldness preachers ought to hate
sin and expose sin.
How sharply Paul the apostle preached
against sin. On his first missionary
journey, Paul and Barnabas came to
Paphos. When Elymas the sorcerer
withstood them and tried to keep Sergius
Paulus, the deputy ruler of the country,
from being saved, Paul faced him, filled
with the Holy Ghost, and said, “O full
of all subtilty and all mischief, thou
child of the devil, thou enemy of all
righteousness, wilt thou not cease to
pervert the right ways of the Lord?”
(Acts 13:10). And the hand of God came
on him as Paul by faith foretold, and
the man was blind for a season for his
sins, and the deputy was wonderfully
saved.
Young preacher, do not be taken in by the sophistry of the time-serving preachers who do not preach against sin. Do not be influenced by denominational leaders who fear you will cause a disturbance in your church. Do not be too much moved by the pleadings of your wife, who is afraid that you will have your salary lowered or that you will be out of a job with no place to go. Be faithful to Christ, and Christ will be faithful to you. “Them that honour me I will honour” is the promise of God (I Sam. 2:30).
It is true that a preacher ought not to
be a coward, to say in the pulpit what
he dare not say to an individual who
needs it. It is true that preachers
ought to preach with love and compassion
and tears. But that does not change the
fact that we are plainly commanded to
rebuke and reprove, that we are to
preach the Word about particular sins.
The preacher who never has a word to say
against drunkenness and adultery and
lewdness and covetousness and blasphemy
is a dumb dog who cannot bark. He is a
Balaam preaching for profit. He is
fallen into the snare of the fear of
man. We need preaching against sin,
against particular sins.
IV. We Need Preaching About Hell and
Judgment
It is not honest preaching of the Bible that does not preach Hell. Man is a sinner. If he does not repent, he will die unconverted, forever away from God. Men ought to be warned of the horrible fate of dying without Christ.
I am sick of hearing people say, “I do not believe in scaring men.” I do! I wish I could have scared Hitler and told him what would happen to him for his crimes against mankind and against God. If I could have told him the truth and could have made him believe it, I would have saved the world the horrors of World War II.
I wish I could warn every boy of what will happen if he goes into a life of crime. I wish I could make people afraid of crime.
I wish I could scare every girl about the dangers of the dance and petting, and the horrors of the life of a harlot and the damnation that will come to her.
I wish I could scare every lad about the terror that is in whiskey and beer and wine. A man who is not afraid of liquor is a fool.
I tried earnestly and was successful in
making my children afraid of the fire
when they were little. There are some
things of which any sensible person in
his right mind ought to be afraid. And
there is nothing in the universe as
frightful as the fact of Hell, a Hell
full of Christ-rejecting sinners, who
went to Hell because they would not
repent. I am for the kind of Bible
preaching that makes people want to
avoid Hell.
There is coming a judgment when
Christ-rejecting sinners will be dragged
out of Hell to face God and give an
account of their sins. That is a
horrible and fearful thought. It ought
to be preached.
All Bible preachers preached on these
themes of Hell and judgment and the
wrath of God.
Isaiah preached on Hell. He said, “Hell
from beneath is moved for thee to meet
thee at thy coming” (Isa. 14:9). He
preached, “Therefore hell hath enlarged
herself, and opened her mouth without
measure: and their glory, and their
multitude, and their pomp, and he that
rejoiceth, shall descend into it” (Isa.
5:14).
Again and again Isaiah preached woe and judgment. In chapter 5, verse 16, he gave six woes upon Israel. He said that “the Lord of hosts shall be exalted in judgment, and God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousness.”
But Jesus was the great “Hell preacher.”
He preached, “And fear not them which
kill the body, but are not able to kill
the soul: but rather fear him which is
able to destroy both soul and body in
hell” (Matt. 10:28).
It was Jesus who preached that
“whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall
be in danger of hell fire” (Matt. 5:22).
It was Jesus who preached, “So shall it be at the end of the world: the angels shall come forth, and sever the wicked from among the just, And shall cast them into the furnace of fire: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth” (Matt. 13:49,50).
It was Jesus who preached in the same
chapter, “As therefore the tares are
gathered and burned in the fire; so
shall it be in the end of this world.
The Son of man shall send forth his
angels, and they shall gather out of his
kingdom all things that offend, and them
which do iniquity; And shall cast them
into a furnace of fire: there shall be
wailing and gnashing of teeth” (Matt.
13:40–42).
Jesus announced that He Himself, the Son
of Man, would one day “say also unto
them on the left hand, Depart from me,
ye cursed, into everlasting fire,
prepared for the devil and his angels”
(Matt. 25:41). And He said, “And these
shall go away into everlasting
punishment: but the righteous into life
eternal” (vs. 46).
It
was Jesus who told, in Luke 16:19–31,
that horrible, terrifying story of the
rich man who died and went to Hell and
there lifted his eyes, tormented in
flames, and begged for Lazarus to be
sent to dip his finger in water to cool
his parched tongue.
I say, Jesus Christ was a hellfire preacher. One who does not preach Hell and judgment is not true to Him.
It was Jesus who said that all judgment was given to the Son. Christ will sit on a throne, judging sinners, sending them away to the lake of fire.
Paul preached, like other Bible preachers, on Hell and judgment and the wrath of God. I very often preach on the first Sunday night of a revival campaign on Hell or on the last judgment. And I do it with a good precedent, for Paul, the first time he ever preached at Athens, preached, “He hath appointed a day, in the which he will judge the world in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained; whereof he hath given assurance unto all men, in that he hath raised him from the dead” (Acts 17:31).
When Paul stood before Felix, he
preached on sin and judgment. “And as he
reasoned of righteousness, temperance,
and judgment to come, Felix trembled”
(Acts 24:25). When Paul preached on
righteousness, temperance and judgment
to come, that was Bible preaching. And
when Felix trembled under the deep
conviction of the Holy Spirit, that was
Bible results. Away with these nice,
easy sermons that do not stir anybody’s
fears, do not bring any fears, do not
bring any tears, do not lead men to
repent! Away with this preaching that
leaves sinners asleep in their sins,
undisturbed and self-satisfied! O God,
give us the kind of preaching that makes
men tremble as they think about Hell and
judgment to come!
V. We Need Preaching That Demands
Repentance
It
is foolish to try to teach men to trust
in Christ for salvation, unless we
include in that teaching the plain need
for a wicked heart to turn from sin.
Everywhere the Bible says, “Believe on
the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved” or its equivalent, it is
understood that no one can turn TO Jesus
Christ without turning FROM sin.
Inevitably and necessarily, faith in
Christ comes only to the penitent heart,
the heart willing and anxious to do
right and to please God, longing for
goodness and purity. People who repent
do not always do right about everything,
but they want to do right. I do not mean
that salvation is an extended process. I
do not even mean that there are two
separate steps in salvation, but it is
foolish and unscriptural to teach any
salvation without repentance.
Bible preachers all preached repentance.
Ezekiel called on Israel to repent: “Say
unto them, As I live, saith the Lord
God, I have no pleasure in the death of
the wicked; but that the wicked turn
from his way and live: turn ye, turn ye
from your evil ways; for why will ye
die, O house of Israel?” (Ezek. 33:11).
Every preacher ought to preach with that
imperative pleading in his voice and
message today.
John the Baptist preached, “Repent ye:
for the kingdom of heaven is at hand”
(Matt. 3:2). And Jesus began to preach
exactly the same message: “From that
time Jesus began to preach, and to say,
Repent: for the kingdom of heaven is at
hand” (4:17).
The preaching of Jesus is illustrated by
Luke 13:1–5: “There were present at that
season some that told him of the
Galilæans, whose blood Pilate had
mingled with their sacrifices. And Jesus
answering said unto them, Suppose ye
that these Galilæans were sinners above
all the Galilæans, because they suffered
such things? I tell you, Nay: but,
except ye repent, ye shall all likewise
perish. Or those eighteen, upon whom the
tower in Siloam fell, and slew them,
think ye that they were sinners above
all men that dwelt in Jerusalem? I tell
you, Nay: but, except ye repent, ye
shall all likewise perish.”
When Jesus gave the Great Commission to
His apostles, He commanded that
“repentance and remission of sins should
be preached in his name among all
nations, beginning at Jerusalem” (Luke
24:47).
Peter preached at Pentecost, “Repent,
and be baptized every one of you in the
name of Jesus Christ” (Acts 2:38).
When Peter had returned from winning Cornelius and his household to Christ and explained the matter to the apostles and brethren in Judea, “When they heard these things, they held their peace, and glorified God, saying, Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life” (Acts 11:18). It was determined then that repentance was offered to Gentiles. Even Gentiles can repent and be saved. There is no salvation without repentance. We need preaching on repentance.
Paul, preaching to the men of Athens,
said, “And the times of this ignorance
God winked at; but now commandeth all
men every where to repent” (Acts 17:30).
Oh, may God give us a heart to demand
that men repent toward God and trust His
Son for salvation. That is the kind of
preaching we need.
VI. We Need Preaching That Demands Immediate Decision for Christ
The fatalists, the hyper-Calvinists who say some men are predestined to be lost, do not want preachers to give a public invitation and to press for a decision. Dr. Lewis Sperry Chafer, in his book slandering evangelists and opposing mass evangelism, says that it is wrong to give a public invitation for people to accept Christ, wrong to press for immediate decision. But there he is unscriptural and contrary to Bible precept and practice. Down through the centuries, the great soul winners have pressed upon people to decide, and at once, for God or against Him.
When Moses, on Mount Sinai for forty
days, left the children of Israel to
their own devices, they asked Aaron to
make them a golden calf, and then they
danced around this golden calf naked and
drunken and said, “These be thy gods, O
Israel, which brought thee up out of the
land of Egypt” (Exod. 32:4). The wrath
of God burned hot against this
idolatrous people. Moses, with a broken
heart, set out to discipline the people.
Before the leading idolaters were to be
put to death, he called for a division,
a public and immediate decision. “Then
Moses stood in the gate of the camp, and
said, Who is on the Lord’s side? let him
come unto me. And all the sons of Levi
gathered themselves together unto him” (Exod.
32:26). Then Moses commanded the Levites
who would stand for God to take their
swords and go throughout the camp,
slaying the wicked. It was a hard
decision for men to make, to come out on
the Lord’s side publicly and set out to
kill their own brothers and loved ones,
but that is what Moses demanded, and
that decision they made—made boldly for
God. It is God’s plan. Bible preachers
should call for immediate decision for
Christ.
Joshua was an old man. Soon he would be
leaving the nation Israel, and others
would take over the leadership. So he
called together the heads of tribes and
the officers of the nation to Shechem.
There he put before them a simple
proposition and demanded their decision.
In Joshua 24:15 it is recorded that he
said to them, “And if it seem evil unto
you to serve the Lord, choose you this
day whom ye will serve; whether the gods
which your fathers served that were on
the other side of the flood, or the gods
of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell:
but as for me and my house, we will
serve the Lord.” The people insisted
that they would serve the Lord, and he
made the proposition harder, and they
went on record that they would serve the
Lord.
“Choose you this day whom ye will
serve,” ought to be an under-current in
the preaching of every Bible preacher.
That means public invitation. That means
putting people on the spot. That means
insisting that they decide at once, here
and now, for or against Jesus Christ.
Jesus pressed His disciples with the
question, “Whom say ye that I am?” And
how pleased He was when Simon Peter
answered and said, “Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living God” (Matt.
16:15,16).
Again Jesus put His disciples on the
spot and said, “Will ye also go away?”
(John 6:67). The multitude quit
following Jesus. They found He demanded
repentance and a changed life and heart.
It was not all to be easy eating of
unearned food and following a King who
would do all the work. So Jesus pressed
upon His disciples that they too must
decide. And, thank God, they had sense
enough to answer, in the words of Peter,
“Lord, to whom shall we go? thou hast
the words of eternal life. And we
believe and are sure that thou art that
Christ, the Son of the living God” (John
6:68,69).
So
Jesus pressed upon the woman who was
healed when she stooped down and touched
the hem of His garment, and He insisted
that she claim Him openly and publicly
(Luke 8:43–48).
John the Baptist demanded immediate decision and pressed upon people to come out openly and be baptized, therefore confessing their sins and confessing their faith in the coming Messiah.
Paul went “night and day with tears,”
urging people to repent and come to
Christ. Everywhere he demanded
repentance and got it.
There should be a compelling urgency that demands immediate decision in every gospel message. Jesus said that the man who made a great supper and bade many sent his servant back again and again and commanded him, “Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled” (Luke 14:23). That is the way the Lord Jesus wants us to win souls and to preach. There should be a compelling note, an insistent note, a bold and powerful urgency, demanding people to decide today for Christ and Heaven.
Some years ago in Dallas, Texas, in the
Galilean Baptist Church, Dr. P. B.
Chenault was preaching in a series of
meetings. The last night came. He
preached on “Today and Tomorrow.” He had
two texts. One was in Hebrews 3:7:
“Wherefore (as the Holy Ghost saith, TO
DAY if ye will hear his voice…).” The
other text was Proverbs 27:1: “Boast not
thyself of to morrow; for thou knowest
not what a day may bring forth.” The
fervent, godly preacher made his final
appeal. He laid upon all of our hearts
that TODAY was the only day that someone
present might ever have; that today was
the day of salvation. He urged the folly
of neglecting and postponing any duty
and especially of neglecting salvation,
since none of us could know what a day
might bring forth. The service came to a
close. After an earnest session of
prayer and affectionate good-byes,
Brother Chenault, with his wife and
baby, drove away into the night toward
another engagement in Illinois.
Mrs. Rice and I retired. But at 2:30 in the morning, I was awakened by the insistent ringing of the telephone. Dr. Chenault had had his speeding car wrecked by a drunken driver, and he, with crushed head, had gone to meet the Saviour he loved. Ah, how it pressed upon my heart that we should be faithful in preaching for immediate decision.
No man knows what will be tomorrow. I think the dear Saviour must have laid upon Dr. Chenault's heart the need for preaching that sermon his last night on earth.
We
need preaching that demands immediate
attention and immediate decision on the
great issues of life and death,
salvation or damnation, Christ or Satan,
Heaven or Hell.
Let us pray that God will raise up anointed preachers; bold, Bible preachers and personal soul winners:
Who will preach the true Gospel of salvation by the blood;
Who will preach the Word of God, the Bible;
Who will preach against sin, against particular sins, preaching boldly;
Who will preach on Hell and judgment as did Christ and Bible preachers;
Who will preach demanding repentance, a heart-turning away from sin and turning toward God;
Who will preach demanding immediate decision for Christ.
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