Don’t
Preach to Me!
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[May 11, 2009]
A
preacher once asked comedian and actor George Burns for advice;
“You’re so good with audiences, Mr. Burns, and you hold their
attention so well. Do you have any advice for a preacher?” He
answered, “My advice is to have a good beginning, and good ending,
and then keep them as close together as you can.”
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What
is your opinion of preaching? There seems to be two vastly different
views of what happens in our community’s churches every Sunday
morning. One group just can’t believe that anyone would sacrifice a
day off to go and sit in church and listen to someone deliver a 25
minute speech. And yet, a number of people are re-discovering the
thrill of listening to biblical, quality, and passionate preaching.
Surprised? It’s true! A growing number of adults are re-discovering
the excitement of listening to pastors who have mastered the ancient
practice of unveiling the deeper secrets of God through the art of
preaching. It’s being accomplished with surprising clarity and
simplicity.
A man recently said to me, “I love your sermons…you put the hay
where the cows can reach it.” I’m not sure, but I think that’s a
complement.
I have been a preacher for some 15 years now and for the last two
years here in Lincoln. Any one who knows me well knows I love
preaching. It consumes most of my day to day thinking. My philosophy
is: “If I can’t eat it or preach it…I don’t want it!”
Preaching at Lincoln Christian Church has always and will always be
a challenge. I have people who know the bible from cover to cover
and then I have people who couldn’t find the book of Acts. I have
people who have been Christians for 50 plus years and I have people
who just started investigating what Christianity is all about. One
group wants the deeper things of God’s word and the other needs me
to keep it simple. It’s like having a class of college students all
the way down to kindergarteners, each asking to be challenged.
I’m not the only one with these challenges either. Just about ever
church in town has the same group makeup. Without question, it is
very challenging to be a preacher in Lincoln Illinois. However, I
may be nervous at times, but I am never intimidated.
The Apostle Paul spoke very highly of the profession of preaching.
He said in I Corinthians 2:1-4, “When I came to you brothers, I did
not come with eloquence or superior wisdom as I proclaimed to you
the testimony of God. For I resolved to know nothing while I was
with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified. I came to you in
weakness and fear, and with much trembling. My message and my
preaching were not with wise and persuasive words, but with a
demonstration of the Spirit’s power, so that your faith may not rest
on men’s wisdom, but on God’s power.” (NIV)
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An old professor of mine once said, “It is the greatest of sins to
make God’s word boring.” Maybe it’s due to quotes and scriptures
like these that make preachers work so diligently on their messages.
I have always felt that if people have a high view of scripture, you
will have a high view of preaching. If you have a low view of
scripture, it leads to a low view of preaching.
So my challenge is simple; don’t downplay the importance of
preaching. God has said, “Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the
word of God.”
One last thing! Let’s remember, it was Madonna who sang, “Don’t
preach to me!” It was not someone who was deeply passionate or
outwardly concerned with eternal issues!
Submitted by Ron Otto
Preaching minister of Lincoln Christian Church
[Submitted by Ron Otto-
Preaching minister of Lincoln Christian Church]
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