But above
all he excelled in prayer. The inwardness and weight of his
spirit, the reverence and solemnity of his address and behavior,
and the fewness and fullness of his words have often struck even
strangers with admiration as they used to reach others with
consolation. The most awful, living, reverend frame I ever felt
or beheld, I must say, was his prayer. And truly it was a
testimony. He knew and lived nearer to the Lord than other men,
for they that know him most will see most reason to approach him
with reverence and fear. -- William Penn of George Fox
THE
sweetest graces by a slight perversion may bear the bitterest
fruit. The sun gives life, but sunstrokes are death. Preaching
is to give life; it may kill. The preacher holds the keys; he
may lock as well as unlock. Preaching is God's great institution
for the planting and maturing of spiritual life. When properly
executed, its benefits are untold; when wrongly executed, no
evil can exceed its damaging results.
It
is an easy matter to destroy the flock if the shepherd be unwary
or the pasture be destroyed, easy to capture the citadel if the
watchmen be asleep or the food and water be poisoned.
Invested with such gracious prerogatives, exposed to so great
evils, involving so many grave responsibilities, it would be a
parody on the shrewdness of the devil and a libel on his
character and reputation if he did not bring his master
influences to adulterate the preacher and the preaching. In face
of all this, the exclamatory interrogatory of Paul, "Who is
sufficient for these things?" is never out of order.
Paul
says: "Our sufficiency is of God, who also hath made us able
ministers of the new testament; not of the letter, but of the
spirit: for the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life." The
true ministry is God-touched, God-enabled, and God-made. The
Spirit of God is on the preacher in anointing power, the fruit
of the Spirit is in his heart, the Spirit of God has vitalized
the man and the word; his preaching gives life, gives life as
the spring gives life; gives life as the resurrection gives
life; gives ardent life as the summer gives ardent life; gives
fruitful life as the autumn gives fruitful life.
The
life-giving preacher is a man of God, whose heart is ever
athirst for God, whose soul is ever following hard after God,
whose eye is single to God, and in whom by the power of God's
Spirit the flesh and the world have been crucified and his
ministry is like the generous flood of a life-giving river.
The
preaching that kills is non-spiritual preaching. The ability of
the preaching is not from God. Lower sources than God have given
to it energy and stimulant. The Spirit is not evident in the
preacher nor his preaching. Many kinds of forces may be
projected and stimulated by preaching that kills, but they are
not spiritual forces.
They
may resemble spiritual forces, but are only the shadow, the
counterfeit; life they may seem to have, but the life is
magnetized. The preaching that kills is the letter; shapely and
orderly it may be, but it is the letter still, the dry, husky
letter, the empty, bald shell. The letter may have the germ of
life in it, but it has no breath of spring to evoke it; winter
seeds they are, as hard as the winter's soil, as icy as the
winter's air, no thawing nor germinating by them.
This
letter-preaching has the truth. But even divine truth has no
life-giving energy alone; it must be energized by the Spirit,
with all God's forces at its back. Truth unquickened by God's
Spirit deadens as much as, or more than, error.
It
may be the truth without admixture; but without the Spirit its
shade and touch are deadly, its truth error, its light darkness.
The letter-preaching is unctionless, neither mellowed nor oiled
by the Spirit. There may be tears, but tears cannot run God's
machinery; tears may be but summer's breath on a snow-covered
iceberg, nothing but surface slush.
Feelings and earnestness there may be, but it is the emotion of
the actor and the earnestness of the attorney. The preacher may
feel from the kindling of his own sparks, be eloquent over his
own exegesis, earnest in delivering the product of his own
brain; the professor may usurp the place and imitate the fire of
the apostle; brains and nerves may serve the place and feign the
work of God's Spirit, and by these forces the letter may glow
and sparkle like an illumined text, but the glow and sparkle
will be as barren of life as the field sown with pearls.
The
death-dealing element lies back of the words, back of the
sermon, back of the occasion, back of the manner, back of the
action. The great hindrance is in the preacher himself. He has
not in himself the mighty life-creating forces. There may be no
discount on his orthodoxy, honesty, cleanness, or earnestness;
but somehow the man, the inner man, in its secret places has
never broken down and surrendered to God, his inner life is not
a great highway for the transmission of God's message, God's
power. Somehow self and not God rules in the holy of holiest.
Somewhere, all unconscious to himself, some spiritual
nonconductor has touched his inner being, and the divine current
has been arrested. His inner being has never felt its thorough
spiritual bankruptcy, its utter powerlessness; he has never
learned to cry out with an ineffable cry of self-despair and
self-helplessness till God's power and God's fire comes in and
fills, purifies, empowers.
Self-esteem, self-ability in some pernicious shape has defamed
and violated the temple which should be held sacred for God.
Life-giving preaching costs the preacher much -- death to self,
crucifixion to the world, the travail of his own soul. Crucified
preaching only can give life. Crucified preaching can come only
from a crucified man. |
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