Thursday, November 22, 2012

Quotes from The Anguish and Agonies of Charles Spurgeon by Darrel W. Amundsen

What torments did Spurgeon suffer? How did he reconcile his painful experiences with his view of a gracious God?
At the risk of oversimplifying, we can categorize Spurgeon’s sufferings as spiritual, emotional, and physical.
Spiritual Agonies – Throughout his ministry, he referred to the horrors he had felt for five years while under conviction of sin, intellectually aware of the gospel, yet blind to its personal application.
Slander and Scorn – During his early years in London, Spurgeon received intense slander and scorn.
He said, “If to be made the laughing stock of fools and the song of the drunkard once more will make me more serviceable to my Master, and more useful to his cause, I will prefer it to all this multitude, or to all the applause that man could give.”
The Weight of Preaching – Spurgeon attracted vast audiences from the beginning of his ministry. He remarked in 1883, “I have preached the gospel now these thirty years and more, and…often, in coming down to this pulpit, have I felt my knees knock together, not that I am afraid of any one of my hearers, but I am thinking of that account which I must render to God, whether I speak his Word faithfully or not.”
Emotional Trial by “Fire” – On the evening of October 19, 1856, Spurgeon was to commence weekly services at the royal Surrey Gardens Music Hall…capable of holding twelve thousand. During Spurgeon’s prayer [before an overflowing crowd] several malicious miscreants shouted, “Fire! The galleries are giving way!” In the ensuing panic, seven people died and twenty-eight were hospitalized with serious injuries. Yet until Spurgeon’s death, the spectre of the calamity so brooded over him that a close friend and biographer surmised: “I cannot but think, from what I saw, that his comparatively early death might be in some measure due to the furnace of mental suffering he endured on and after that fearful night.”
Depression – If Spurgeon was acquainted with depression before, following the Surrey Hall disaster, it became a more frequent and perverse companion.
Having been absent for three Sundays [due to incapacitating illness], when he returned he preached on 1 Peter 1:6: “Wherein ye greatly rejoice though now for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations.” In the sermon, entitled “The Christian’s Heaviness and Rejoicing,” Spurgeon said that during his illness, when “my spirits were sunken so low that I could weep by the hour like a child, and yet I knew not what I wept for…a kind friend was telling me of some poor old soul living near, who was suffering very great pain, and yet she was full of joy and rejoicing. I was so distressed by the hearing of that story, and felt so ashamed of myself…” While he was struggling with the contrast between his depression and joy evinced [evidenced] by this woman who was afflicted with cancer, “This text flashed upon my mind, with its real meaning…that sometimes the Christian should not endure his sufferings with a gallant and joyous heart” but “that sometimes his spirits should sink within him, and that he should become as a little child smitten beneath the hand of God.”
Spurgeon was indeed frequently “in heaviness.” Spurgeon’s depression was the direct result of his various illnesses, perhaps simply psychologically, and in the case of his gout, probably physiologically as well. Despite this, Spurgeon thought of his own depression as his “worst feature” and once commented that “despondency is not a virtue; I believe it is a vice. I am heartily ashamed of myself for falling into it, but I am sure there is no remedy for it like a holy faith in God.”
Spurgeon comforted himself with the realization that such depression equipped him to minister more effectively: “I would go into the deeps a hundred times to cheer a downcast spirit. It is good for me to have been afflicted, that I might know how to speak a word in season to one that is weary.”
Labors of Ministry – An orphanage to look after, four thousand members, marriages, burials, weekly sermons, The Sword and the Trowel to be edited, and a weekly average of five hundred letters to be answered.” In 1872 he asserted that “the ministry is a matter which wears the brain and strains the heart, and drains out the life of a man if he attends to it as he should.”
For his dear sake, I look with pity upon people who say, ‘Do not preach so often; you will kill yourself.’ A minister of God is bound to spurn the suggestions of ignoble ease, it is his calling to labor, and if he destroys his constitution, I, for one, only thank God that he permits us the high privilege of so making ourselves living sacrifices.”
Gout – The disease that most severely afflicted Spurgeon was gout, a condition that sometimes produces exquisite pain. What can be clearly identified as gout had seized Spurgeon …when he was 35 years old. He wrote, “…It is a great mercy to get one hour’s sleep at night…What a mercy have I felt to have only one knee tortured at a time. What a blessing to be able to put the foot on the ground again, if only for a minute!” Spurgeon was seldom free from pain from 1871 on.
The Down-Grade Controversy - Early in the controversy he commented that he had “suffered the loss of friendship and reputation, and the infliction of pecuniary withdrawments and bitter reproach…But the pain it has cost me none can measure.”
Where Is God During Suffering? - Spurgeon maintained that since God is sovereign, there are no such things as accidents. This, however, is not fatalism: “Fate is blind; providence has eyes.”
Unwavering belief in God’s sovereignty was essential for Spurgeon’s well-being: “It would be a very sharp and trying experience to me to think that I have an affliction which God never sent me, that the bitter cup was never measured out by him, not sent to me by his arrangement of their weight and quantity.”
He explained in 1873: “As long as I trace my pain to accidents, my bereavement to mistake, my loss to another’s wrong, my discomfort to an enemy, and so on, I am of the earth, earthy, and shall break my teeth with gravel stones; but when I rise to my God and see his hand at work, I grow calm, I have not a word of repining.”
Here and elsewhere Spurgeon noted the potential benefits of pain. In a sermon published in 1881 he maintained, “In itself pain will sanctify no man: it may even tend to wrap him up within himself, and make him morose, peevish, selfish; but when God blesses it, then it will have a most salutary effect—a suppling, softening influence.”
Here we see a marvelous paradox in Spurgeon’s experiential theology. He candidly admits that he dreaded suffering and would do whatever he legitimately could do to avoid it. Yet when not suffering acutely, he longed for it. “The way to stronger faith usually lies along the rough pathway of sorrow,” he said. “…I am afraid that all the grace that I have got out of my comfortable and easy times and happy hours might almost lie on a penny. But the good that I have received from my sorrows, and pains, and griefs, is altogether incalculable…Affliction is the best bit of furniture in my house. It is the best book in a minister’s library.”
On June 7, 1891, in extreme physical pain from his illnesses, Spurgeon preached what, unknown to him, proved to be his last sermon. His concluding words in the pulpit were, as usual, about his Lord: “He is the most magnanimous of captains. There never was his like among the choicest princes. He is always to be found in the thickest part of the battle. When the wind blows cold he always takes the bleak side of the hill. The heaviest end of the cross lies ever on his shoulders. If he bids us carry a burden, he carries it also. If there is anything that is gracious, generous, kind, and tender, yea lavish and superabundant in love, you always find it in him. These forty years and more have I served him, blessed be his name! And I have had nothing but love from him. I would be glad to continue yet another forty years in the same dear service here below if so it pleased him. His service is life, peace, joy. Oh, that you would enter on it at once! God help you to enlist under the banner of Jesus even this day! Amen.”

Excerpted from Free Grace Broadcaster, Issue 140, April 1992.

Should a Church Have Elders? By Mark Dever

There are many pragmatic reasons why a church might have elders. A plurality of elders can help to carry the burden of pastoral ministry; they can bring a rich variety of experience to bear on the issues and problems every pastor faces; they can hold the pastor accountable in a context of shared ministry; they can save the pastor from a multitude of errors in judgment before it ever becomes apparent in a congregational meeting. The list could go on.
But the best reason a church should have elders is because the New Testament says that it should. Throughout his epistles, and especially the pastoral epistles, Paul makes it plain that every New Testament church should have elders, that is men who "direct the affairs of the church" (1 Timothy 5:17-18 ). He commissioned Titus to make sure that all the churches in Crete had elders (Titus 1:5 ). And he took the time to outline for both Timothy and Titus what sort of men should be called to that office (1 Timothy 3:1-7 ; Titus 1:6-9 ), as well as the procedure that should be followed should a man need to be removed from the office (1 Timothy 5:19-20 ). So central were elders in Paul's thinking that, though eager to reach Jerusalem by Pentecost, he took the time to call the Ephesian elders together and give them one last exhortation (Acts 20:16-38 ), the heart of which was that they be faithful as "shepherds of the church of God".
Of course, elders were not just Paul's idea. Peter too assumed their presence in the churches to which he wrote, and gave them a message identical to Paul's: Be shepherds of God's flock. (1 Peter 5:1-4 ). So did the author of Hebrews (Hebrews 13:17 ).
So the Bible clearly teaches that New Testament churches are to be led by elders. At the end of the day, this question is just another way of asking whether or not we are going to allow the Scriptures to be the sole authority in the life of the church. For though there are lots of pragmatic reasons to have elders, from the perspective of a pastor, there are more pragmatic reasons not to have them. Elders can slow a senior pastor down, they can disagree with him, they can even tell him on occasion that he's wrong. Pragmatically speaking, who would want that?
But Peter and Paul remind us that the churches we pastor are not our own. We are pastors of God's church, God's flock. And so it is God's Word that must have the final say. Jesus created the church, he died for the church. He is its only King and law-giver. If we are committed to shepherding Christ's church, and not our own, then we must be willing to do it his way. According to the Bible, his way includes elders.
Further reading:
Edmund Clowney, _The Church_ (IVP, 1995) ch. 14; T.E. Peck, _Notes on Ecclesiology_ (repr. GPTS Press, 1994), ch. 16. The problem with both of these recommendations is that they are written by Presbyterians, who claim far more for the authority of elders than Scripture warrants. Nevertheless, they both lay out clearly the argument from Scripture for the presence of elders in the local church.

Quotes from The Expository Genius of John Calvin by Steven J. Lawson


Preface – “…sad to say, we live in a generation that has compromised this sacred calling to preach. Exposition is being replaced with entertainment, preaching with performance, doctrine with drama, and theology with theatrics.” (p. XI)

“The greatest season of church history---those eras of widespread reformation and great awakening---have been those epochs in which God-fearing men took the inspired Word and unashamedly preached it in the power of the Holy Spirit.” (p. XII)

“By overwhelming consent, he [John Calvin] remains the greatest biblical commentator of all time.” (p. 4)

“…when John was 14, he entered the University of Paris to study theology in formal preparation to become a priest. Calvin’s time at the university resulted in a master of arts degree at age 17.” (p. 6)

“Frail in stature, Calvin suffered many ailments.” (p. 15)

Calvin permitted only the Word of God, the Psalms to be sung in his church. (p. 23)

“Calvin’s deeply embedded convictions about the supreme authority of the Bible demanded an elevated view of the pulpit.” (p. 24)

“This commitment to the undisputed authority of the Bible compelled him to preach verse by verse through entire books of the Bible.” (p. 24)

“It is the expositor’s task, he believed, to bring the supreme authority of the divine Word to bear directly on his listeners.” (p. 26)

Calvin wrote, “God will have His church trained up by the pure preaching of His own Word, not by the contrivances of men [which are wood, hay and stubble].” (p. 30)

“As a faithful shepherd, he fed his congregation a steady diet of sequential expository messages.” (p. 32)
“This verse-by-verse style---lectio continua, the ‘continuous expositions’---guaranteed that Calvin would preach the full counsel of God. Difficult and controversial subjects were unavoidable. Hard sayings could not be skipped. Difficult doctrines could not be overlooked. The full counsel of God could be heard.” (p. 32)

“Whether the biblical book was long and extensive…or brief and short…Calvin was determined to preach every verse.” (p. 34)

“In Calvin’s words, preaching is ‘the living voice’ of God ‘in His church.’”(p. 35)


”In all of life, one supreme passion consumed John Calvin: the glory of God.” (p. 39)

“…this commitment to God’s glory heavily influenced Calvin’ biblical exegesis. When he studied, it was to behold the majesty of God.” (p. 40)

“The pastor, he wrote, “ought to be prepared by long study for giving to the people, as out of a storehouse, a variety of instruction concerning the Word of God.” (p. 41)

Calvin’s personal motto was, “My heart I give to thee, O Lord, promptly and sincerely.”
(p. 44)

“Two things are united,” he confessed, “teaching and prayer; God would have him whom He has set as a teacher in His church to be assiduous in prayer.” (p. 44)

Calvin “… preached no less than ten times a fortnight to the same congregation.” (p. 46)

“Calvin was not a silver tongued orator, but a Bible-teaching expositor.” (p. 55).

“When Calvin stepped into the pulpit, he did not bring a manuscript of his sermon with him.” (p. 57)

“Calvin believed spontaneous preaching helped yield a ‘lively’ delivery, one marked by energy and passion.” (p. 58)

“In Bible exposition, substance is to be desired above style, and doctrine before delivery.” (p. 65)

“Calvin is the founder of the modern grammatico-historical exegesis.” (p. 69)

“…Calvin insisted on sensus literalis, the literal sense of the biblical text. He rejected the medieval quadriga, the ancient interpretation scheme that allowed for literal, moral, allegorical, and analogical meaning of a text.” “The true meaning of Scripture is the natural and obvious meaning.” (p. 71)

“When Calvin protested against allegorizing, he was protesting not against finding a spiritual meaning in a passage, but against finding one that was not there.” (p 72)

Calvin declared, “I have felt nothing more important than a literal interpretation of the biblical text. (p. 72)

“Calvin’s purpose in preaching was to render transparent the text of Scripture itself.” (p. 73)


“Calvin used cross-references sparingly. It appears that he desired not to wander unnecessarily from the primary passage that lay open before him.” (p. 73)

In Calvin’s preaching, two kind of cross-referencing are evident. In the first, Calvin cited a passage without attempting to quote it verbatim. (p. 73) “On other occasions, Calvin directly quoted verses or passages, either by reading them, reciting them from memory or paraphrasing them.” (p. 74)

“Throughout his ministry, Calvin kept his preaching singularly focused on explaining the God-intended meaning of the biblical text.” (p. 79)

“While there is only one correct meaning to a passage, there are multiple ways of conveying that meaning in a sermon. This difference accounts for the art of preaching.” (p. 84)

“The Reformer [Calvin] wrote his first book in Latin and preached in his native French from either a Hebrew or Greek Bible.” (p. 85)

“Calvin also spoke in simple sentences that were easily accessible to his listeners.” “As he preached, Calvin’s towering intellect nearly always lay ‘concealed, behind [his] deceptively simple explanations of his author’s meaning.’” (p. 87)

“Calvin will never speak the original Greek word and will rarely refer to ‘the Greek.’” (p.88)

“Another means Calvin employed to explain a biblical text was to restate a verse in alternative words. He would adopt a different sentenced structure and use synonyms.” (p. 88)

“Calvin’s signature formula to introduce a restatement was ‘It is as if he were saying…’” or “in other words…” (p. 93)

“He showed little concern to supplement his exposition with quotations from other authors. For Calvin, nothing must overshadow the Word.” (p. 96).

“Philip Schaff…notes, “[Calvin] lacked the genial element of humor and pleasantry; he was a Christian stoic: stern, severe, unbending, yet with fires of passion and affection glowing beneath the marble surface;.” (p. 99)

“He was by nature and taste a retiring scholar, but Providence made him an organizer and ruler of churches.” (p. 99)

“Calvin rightly believed that he did not need to make the Bible relevant---it was relevant.” (p. 104)


Calvin wrote, “We have not come to the preaching merely to hear what we do not know, but to be incited to do our duty.” (p. 104)

“He preached primarily to edify and encourage the congregation God had entrusted to him. In short, he preached for changed lives.” (p. 104 -105)

“Calvin was never needlessly harsh or domineering with his own congregation.” (p. 105)

“Calvin often utilized first person plural pronouns-- ‘us’ and ‘we’--as he exhorted his congregation.” (p. 106)

“…Calvin was a master of the art of pastoral exhortation with inclusive language.” (p. 106)

“Without a doubt, loving admonishment and reproof were a part of Calvin’s preaching.”
“All true exposition of Scripture must include such correction.” (p. 112)

”For Calvin, preaching also required an apologetic defense of the faith.” “In Calvin’s view, the full weight of Scripture must be brought to bear against theological error, whether inside the organized church or outside it.” ( p. 112)

“At the heart of this practice was a holy compulsion to guard the glory of God, defend Christ’s matchless character, and protect the purity of the gospel.” (p. 112)

“Calvin took every opportunity to uphold sound doctrine and to refute any and all contradictions to it. He was a staunch guardian of the truth.” (p. 115)

“Calvin’s expositions were approximately one hour in length, some six thousand words each.” (p. 120)

“In the conclusion of each sermon, Calvin first gave a short summation of the truth he had exposited. He then passionately called for his hearers’ unqualified submission to the Lord.” (p. 120)

“Finally, he concluded with public prayer, committing his flock into the sovereign hands of the Lord.” (p. 120)

“These concluding prayers were vertical in their thrust, pointing his listeners upward to God.” (p. 126)

“This was the passion of Calvin’s preaching. Start to finish, it was soli Deo Gloria—for the honor and majesty of God alone.” (p. 129)

Premarital Counseling - Seize the Day!

This is just a note to encourage you to take advantage of the opportunity to give premarital counseling to couples for whom you perform wedding ceremonies. Premarital counseling is your chance to educate a couple for marriage before it is forever too late. It may be the only time you will have to teach them the basics of the Faith as well.
Things that I have found to be helpful in counseling a couple for marriage: First, I have them write out their personal testimony – how they came to Christ. This may give you the opportunity to lead one or both to Christ as Savior. Remember, we are not to join a believer to an unbeliever in marriage (2 Cor. 6:14).
Next, I have them sign a commitment to stay the course to the end of the counseling period. My performing the wedding ceremony depends on this (A commitment is important for any kind of counseling you might do.) In fact, one clear danger signal is what Alistair Begg calls the “Hurry-up offense.” He suggests that a couple allow seven months of lead time to adequately complete the premarital process.
Then, I ask them if they are sure, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that marriage to one another is God’s will for them. If they answer in the affirmative, I challenge them to make a commit to purity until the wedding night if they have not already done so. If they are living together, they must separate until the wedding night. The months leading up to the wedding are often the most difficult to maintain moral purity.
I usually have a six-to-eight-week premarital counseling course that I require of each couple I marry. I have included a sample schedule of our sessions.
You might want to go over key passages of Scripture and perhaps sermons you have preached on various areas of importance for marriage. Examples: Gen. 2; Eph. 5; I Pet. 3; I Cor. 7 and 11:3. I have typed up my messages on these passages and then put blanks in them for the couple to fill in as I go through it with them. Subjects like “The Origin and Purpose of Marriage” (Gen. 2:18 – 25), “The Responsibility of the Christian Wife” (Ephesians 5:22 – 24; I Pet. 3:1 – 6), “The Responsibility of the Christian Husband” (Eph. 5:25 – 33; I Pet. 3:7), “Sexual Harmony in Marriage” (I Cor. 7:1 – 11), “Children & Parenting” (Eph. 6:1 – 4; Proverbs), “Financial Wisdom” (Proverbs), and “Divorce and Remarriage” (Mat. 5:32; 19:3 - 6; Mk.10:11,12; Rom. 7:3; I Cor. 7:10, 11, 39) are usually covered. Other topics might include: Birth Control, Abortion, Communication, and Moms working outside the home.
I also have them read books (specific chapters) on Christian marriage, listen to C.D.’s, and do some exercises in workbooks. My wife is almost always present to give a wife’s perspective on the topic covered.
What a wonderful opportunity premarital counseling affords us for teaching! Seize the day!

Quotes from Jottings and Hints for Lay Preachers by F. B. Meyer

Ch. 9 – Expository Preaching

“There are two methods of preaching which are far as the poles asunder, the topical and the expository. In the former [topical preaching] the preacher selects as his theme some subject in theology or philosophy, or some topic suggested by the current life and table talk of the day, makes his address, and then looks into his Bible or concordance for an appropriate motto-text, more or less suitable, but there is perhaps the smallest possible connection between the discourse and the text. In the latter [expository preaching] the preacher prayerfully selects some extended tract of Scripture on which he proposes to concentrate himself for a considerable term of services; carefully breaks it up into paragraphs, each of which will probably yield him at least one sermon; studies the whole to get the general tenor, and then concentrates himself on each separate part, with the result that his soul is dyed with the message that burdened the prophet or evangelist who spoke, centuries ago, in the power of the Holy Spirit. The former method needs a much cleverer man; the latter will enable a man of very moderate abilities to fulfill a long and useful pastorate which will make his people Bible students, acquainted with the whole range of Scripture truth, and less liable than most to be swept away by every wind of doctrine and sleight of cunning craftiness.” P. 62

Three advantages of expository preaching:

“First. Your people will be kept in constant contact with the Word of the living God.

Second. They will be interested to come again and again to pursue the line of teaching…as people will buy the magazine in which the serial story ends with the words, To be continued in our next.

Third. You will be led to consider passages of the Word of God which your own temperament or habit of thought might lead you to avoid, and which might seem so pertinent to the case of people in your audience that you might be accused of being too personal.” P. 65

Giving sources of your study:

“Let me give one caution. Though you shall carefully study every authority in your reach, and especially the original Hebrew or Greek, it is not wise to needlessly obstrude the names of your authorities. Give your people the results, and do not worry them with the process. It is enough for the bees to give us honey; you know in a moment if the amalgam is right. It is not necessary for our tiny purveryors to tell us how far they flew….” P. 66

[We might add that it is always good to give credit for direct quotes from other authors.]
Ch. 10 - A Great Sermon

“Few things are more helpful to a young preacher than to take up the masterpieces of pulpit eloquence…to analyse them, and try and discover their salient characteristics.” P. 67

“I would specially urge young preachers to fill their sermons with the Word of God, which is the sword of the Spirit.” P. 69

“You may be sure that, since all Scripture is profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for instruction, the more there is of it in your sermons the better.” P. 69

“And you may be sure that he will be the successful preacher, whether to children or adults, who can enchain their interest, and lead from the familiar to the less familiar, and from the seen to the unseen.” P. 70

Ch. 14 – The Use of Illustrations

“Other things being equal, the preacher who uses illustrations will be surest of an audience and of the intelligent appreciation of his hearers; for the effort to employ them indicates a desire on his part to accommodate himself to the capacity of the people, and to translate divine truth into human experience and life.” P. 89

“No man ever spake as our Lord did, because none has been so prolific as He in the use of illustrations.” P. 89

“And a careful study of His method would greatly enrich and enhance our power of presenting truth to the minds of men.” P. 89

“The object in using illustrations is to bring the unseen and eternal within the range of ordinary minds, and to express the things of the spiritual world in the language of the senses and the soul.” P. 93

“Illustrations should follow, and not precede, the thoughtful presentation of truth. If we always hasten to present a striking illustration to our hearers, we shall do them the permanent injury of weakening their powers of reasoning and apprehension. Our people should be trained to think, to base their beliefs on scriptural authority, to apprehend statements of truth in their unadorned beauty and simplicity. But when this has been done, it is highly beneficial to employ illustrations to confirm and clinch the impression, to elucidate it for those to whom it may not be quite clear, and to call in the aid of the imagination to assist the memory in her office.” P. 95

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Quotes from "This Little Church went to Market" by Gary Gilley

Chapter 9: A Church that Misunderstands Worship: How Shall We Then Sing?

“Music by itself, apart from the truth contained in the lyrics, is not even a legitimate springboard for real worship.”

“Aroused passions are not necessarily evidence that true worship is taking place. Genuine worship is a response to Divine truth.”

How shall we then sing?

“Preaching has fallen out of favor in our entertainment age as a means of communicating God’s truth.”

“Pulpits are taboo, notes are hidden, expository preaching is abandoned for ‘relevant’ topical dissertations, references to church history are rare, and doctrine is considered too heavy.”

“But when it comes to the modern church attempting to connect with this generation, a generation born and raised in the era of entertainment, nothing is more prominent than music. So, we are not surprised to find that one of the great attractions for many toward this new way of ‘doing church’ is its music.”

“Far too often in modern worship music’s place seems to be that of setting a mood. With the right music and talented musicians it is possible to create almost any mood.”

“But is the setting of a mood or atmosphere the biblical purpose of Christian music?”

“…the central role of music in the New Testament church is to be a partner with the teaching of the Word of God.” (Col. 3:16; Eph. 5:19)

“Just as the authority and truth of Scripture should dominate our preaching and teaching, so should it dominate our singing.”

Music as teaching

“…the Apostle Paul informs us that music serves the role of teaching and admonishing. Christian music is at its best when it instructs in sound doctrine.

“Conversely, music has often been used within the church to teach and promote a wide range of heresies and aberrant doctrines.”

Arius used music to spread his belief that Jesus was a created being and not fully God. While the church councils, such as that of Nicaea, condemned Arianism, it continued to be popular among the masses for decades because Arius’ teachings were placed to music and sung by undiscerning congregations.”

“Contemporary Christian music, in particular, is long on inspiration and short on instruction.”

“…do the modern praise choruses have a place in our worship service? I personally believe that they do, but….”

“Martin Luther said, ‘Music is the handmaiden of theology.’”

“Charles Wesley’s hymns included verses from every book in the Bible except Nahum and Philemon. He viewed his hymns as a primer in theology….”

“Isaac Watts, the father of English hymnology, wrote hymns to complement his sermons.”

“By contrast, much contemporary Christian music bypasses the mind and aims directly at the emotions.”

“Many modern choruses teach questionable doctrine….”

David Wells analyzed 406 praise songs along with 662 hymns of a traditional hymnal. He found “…that 58.9 per cent of the praise songs he analyzed offer no doctrinal grounding or explanation for the praise. By contrast, among classical hymns it was hard to find hymns that were not predicated upon and did not develop some aspect of doctrine.”

What should we do?

“If we are concerned about our Christian music being more than entertainment there are numerous things we could do…”

“First, we should evaluate all the music we sing in our churches. Does it teach solid theology? Does it admonish us to correct living? Does it worship God in truth?...?”

“Second, churches must receive training regarding this whole area of entertainment.”

“Third, we could study with great profit the Psalms to discover how music is to be used to accomplish its biblical mandated goal.”

“Fourth, we need to teach our children good Christian music within the context of the church.”

A final consideration

“The reaction of the concerned Christian is to be ever mindful that the Word, and not our experience, is our authority.

“…we should take a good look at the Psalms to study the kind of music that pleases God and accomplishes his purposes.”



Quotes from "Counted Righteous in Christ" by John Piper

I just started reading this little book, and some of Piper’s comments in the first chapter really struck a cord with me, so I thought that I would share them with you. The context of these quotes is the importance of the doctrine of the imputation of Christ’s righteousness to the believer’s life. I am not sure that I will share quotes from the rest of the book, but I wanted to share these.

“To begin with, the older I get, the less impressed I am with flashy successes and enthusiasms that are not truth-based. Everybody knows that with the right personality, the right music, the right location, and the right schedule you can grow a church without anybody really knowing what doctrinal commitments sustain it, if any.”

“Church-planting specialists generally downplay biblical doctrine in the core values of what makes a church ‘successful.’ The long-term effect of this ethos is a weakening of the church that is concealed as long as the crowds are large, the band is loud, the tragedies are few, and persecution is still at the level of preferences.”

“… more and more this doctrinally-diluted brew of music, drama, life-tips, and marketing seems out of touch with real life in this world—not to mention the next. It tastes like watered-down gruel, not a nourishing meal. It simply isn’t serious enough. It’s too playful and chatty and casual. Its joy just doesn’t feel deep enough or heartbroken or well-rooted. The injustice and persecution and suffering and hellish realities in the world today are so many and so large and so close that I can’t help but think that, deep inside, people are longing for something weighty and massive and rooted and stable and eternal. So it seems to me that the trifling with silly little sketches and breezy welcome-to-the-den styles on Sunday morning are just out of touch with what matters in life.”

“Silliness is a stepping-stone to substance. But it’s an odd path. And evidence is not ample that many are willing to move beyond fun and simplicity.”

“There are deeper and more connections than most of us realize between the grasp of doctrine and the good of people and churches and societies.”

“I don’t think we have to look far then [past a lack of truth-based ministry] for the weakness of the church and the fun-oriented superficiality of many youth ministries and the stunning fall-out rate after high school.”

“I do not believe that even perfect parenting could prevent all wilderness wanderings of our children. Mainly because of what God said in Isaiah 1:2: “Hear, O heavens, and give ear, O earth; for the Lord has spoken: ‘Children have I reared and brought up, but they have rebelled against me’” (ESV).”

“…doing missions without deep doctrinal transfer through patient teaching will not only wreck on the vast reefs of ignorance but will, at best, produce weak and ever-dependent churches. Therefore, pastors who care about building, sending, and going churches must give themselves to building sending bases that breed doctrinally-deep people who are not given to emotional dependency on fads but know how to feed themselves on Christ-centered truth.”

“…we have enough churches being planted by means of music, drama, creative scheduling, sprightly narrative, and marketing savvy. And there are too few that are God-centered, truth-treasuring, Bible-saturated, Christ-exalting, cross-focused, Spirit-dependent, prayer-soaked, soul winning, justice-pursuing congregations with a wartime mindset ready to lay down their lives for the salvation of the nations and the neighborhoods.”

“There is an almost universal bondage in America to the mindset that we can only feel loved when we are made much of. The truth is, we are loved most deeply when we are helped to be free from that bondage and to find our joy in treasuring Christ and making much of him.”

Quotes from "Fool’s Gold? Discerning Truth in an Age of Error" by John MacArthur

This book has twelve chapters covering some controversial issues including evaluations of several books like The Purpose-Driven Life by Rick Warren and Wild at Heart by John Eldredge. It also contains chapters on questions such as contemporary worship music and altar calls to name a few.

In this review I would like to quote some statements from chapter 7 titled Solid Rock? What the Bible Says about Contemporary Worship Music by John MacArthur.

…this chapter focuses on the often controversial topic of contemporary music. Should the church only sing hymns, should it sing praise choruses, or should it land somewhere in the middle? And what are the biblical principles for determining these standards?

…a profound change took place in church music sometime near the end of the nineteenth century. The writing of hymns virtually stopped. Hymns were replaced by “gospel songs”—songs generally lighter in doctrinal content…

The key difference was that most gospel songs were expressions of personal testimony aimed at an audience of people, whereas most of the classic hymns had been songs of praise addressed directly to God.

A NEW SONG
The man most commonly regarded the father of the gospel song is Ira Sankey, a gifted singer and songwriter who rode to fame on D. L. Moody’s coattails.

…for more than seventy years virtually no hymns have been added to the popular repertoire of congregational church music.

My remarks are by no means meant as a blanket criticism of gospel songs. Many familiar gospel songs are wonderfully rich expressions of faith.

In general, the rise of the gospel song in congregational singing signaled a diminishing emphasis on objective doctrinal truth and a magnification of subjective personal experience.

…traditionalist critics who attack contemporary music merely because it is contemporary in style…need to think through the issues again.

…the concern I am raising has to do with content, not merely style. Judging from lyrics alone, some of the most popular old-style music is even more offensive than the modern stuff. example “In the Garden”

Numerous gospel songs suffer from the same kind of weaknesses. In fact, many…are practically devoid of any truly Christian substance and are thick with sappy sentimentality. “Love Lifted Me,” “Take My Hand, Precious Lord,” “Whispering Hope,”…

…neither the antiquity nor the popularity of a gospel song is a good measure of its worthiness.

Sadly, by the end of the century the gospel song had muscled in and elbowed out the classic hymn. And so the trend Sankey began all but ended the rich tradition of Christian hymnody that had flourished since the time of Martin Luther and even long before.

Before Sankey’s time, hymns were composed with a deliberate, self-conscious, didactic purpose. They were written to teach and reinforce biblical and doctrinal concepts…

Indeed, it may be the case that modern church music has done more than anything else to pave the way for the sort of superficial, flippant, content-starved preaching that is rife today.

THE ERA OF THE PRAISE CHORUS
Praise choruses, like hymns, are usually songs of praise addressed directly to God.

But unlike hymns, praise choruses generally have no didactic purpose. Praise choruses are meant to be sung as simple personal expressions of worship, whereas hymns are usually corporate expressions of worship with an emphasis on some doctrinal truth.

SONGS, HYMNS, AND SPIRITUAL SONGS
The biblical prescription for Christian music is found in Colossians 3:16: “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom, singing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, with thankfulness in your hearts to God.”

…careful distinctions between these words is not essential, or Scripture would have recorded those distinctions for us.
The greater significance of the expression “Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs” seems to be this: Paul was calling for a variety of musical forms and a breadth of spiritual expression that cannot be embodied in any one musical form.

The prevailing mood in modern evangelical churches—where people seem to want to binge on a steady diet of nothing but simplistic praise choruses—also destroys the principle of variety Paul sets forth here.

…I am convinced Christian songwriters today are making a similar mistake by failing to write substantial hymns while purging the old hymns from our congregational music repertoire and replacing them with trite praise choruses and pop-song look-alikes.

TEACHING AND ADMONISHING ONE ANOTHER
Few modern praise choruses teach or admonish. Instead, most are written to stir the feelings only. They are too often sung like a mystical mantra with the deliberate purpose of putting the intellect into a passive state while the worshiper musters as much emotion as possible. Repetition is deliberately built into many praise songs precisely for this purpose.

Like it or not, today’s songwriters are teachers too. Many of the lyrics they are writing will soon be far more deeply and permanently ingrained in the minds of Christians than anything they hear their pastors teach from the pulpit.

Although not true in every case, the theological depth that generally characterizes contemporary praise choruses is not as profound and not as precise. In fact, for some songs it might be appropriate to ask if the contemporary church is collectively guilty of dishonoring God with our faint praise.

ADDENDUM: A CHECKLIST FOR CHURCH MUSIC
So how can churches be God-honoring in the music they use?
Neither personal preferences nor cultural trends can be our guide. …Scripture must be our authority. (John lists ten questions church leaders should ask about the worship music they use).


Quotes for Pastors
Tommy Jenkins

Quotes from "This Little Church Stayed Home: A faithful church in deceptive times" by Gary Gilley (Book 2)

Preface

“…despite all the claims of spiritual interest, despite the runaway numerical growth at the celebrated megachurches, despite frequent ‘sightings’ of revival and despite the rapid succession of fads (from Promises Keepers to the ‘Prayer of Jabez’ to ‘Forty Days of Purpose’ to ‘The Passion of the Christ’), each promising to reform the church, the fact is the church’s light is flickering.”

“Megachurches (worship attendance of 2000 or more) are springing up weekly (There were 842 in February of 2004) church buildings are rapidly being constructed, Christian concerts and rallies are well attended….”

“However…George Barna…informs us that since 1991 there has been a 92% increase in the number of adults in America who do not attend church (from 39 million to 75 million).”

“Then U. S. News and World Reports in its 19 April 2004 issue stated, “Surveys confirm that the percentage of Americans attending a weekly worship service fell appreciably during the past four decades. From roughly 40 percent in the 1960’s, it today hovers at about a quarter.’ Something just does not add up.”

Barna writes, “Unchurched people are not just lazy or uninformed. They are wholly disinterested in church life.” Gilley adds, “This analysis should come as no surprise in light of Scripture” (Rom. 3:11 – “There is none who understands” and Cor. 1:18 – “For the word of the cross is to those who are perishing foolishness”).

“What are the followers of Christ to do? Barna suggests that the church reinvent their core spiritual practices while holding tightly to their core spiritual beliefs.”

“This strikes me as the same rhetoric that the seeker-sensitive church has been propagating for years. For two decades the church-growth experts have told us that if we are to attract the unchurched, we must change the way we ‘do church’. We must offer them new ‘settings and experiences’. We must meet their perceived felt-needs. We must do away with biblical exposition and focus on stories. We must eliminate dogma and become relevant. We must do away with hymns and major on contemporary music.”

“Now, after two decades of church leaders buying and implementing everything that the market-driven qurus have offered, we find far fewer people attending church services (of any kind). Their methodologies have failed, yet Barna encourages us to keep it up.”

“But this is the wrong approach. The church cannot, as Barna has noted, compete with the world system.”

“The Christian community has something to offer that no one else has: the truth as found in Jesus Christ and the Scriptures.”

“I want to discuss what God says a church should be….”

“If much of the modern church has sold its birthright and gone ‘to market’, what would a church look like that resisted these trends and ‘stayed home’?”

“This will be the approach that will be followed in this book.”

What do the Scriptures say?

“Harvard professor Kirsopp Lake [writing in the 1920s and representing the emerging liberal wing of Christendom] made this insightful observation: “…the fundamentalist may be wrong. I think he is. But it is we who have departed from the tradition, not he….”

“Fundamentalists (those who adhere to the fundamentals of the faith) had not, and have not moved. Their authority continues to be the Scriptures. They attempt to develop their personal lives and local churches according to the instruction and model found in the Bible.”

“The classic liberal, lacking confidence in the Word, marching to the tune of modernity, developed a quasi-Christianity created in the image of man – they have reaped what they sowed.”

“The so-called new paradigm church movement today has not bothered to dispense with the Scriptures.”

“The problem is they lack confidence in the Scriptures and have therefore co-mingled it with a plethora of supplemental sources.”

“In the infant days of the church, as outlined in the book of Acts, we find a newly regenerated people, with no money, no buildings and no program having an astonishing impact on their world in a very short time. As the newly born church began, what was important to them?”

1) Evangelism (2:41, 47) 2) Worship (2:46 – 47) 3) Prayer (2:42) 4) Truth (2:42) 5) the ordinances: Baptism (2:41) and communion (2:42) 6) Purity (5:1 – 6).

Church Discipline is Part of "Doing Church"

It is unfortunate that most pastors today are not as concerned about the biblical doctrine of church discipline as our Lord was (Matthew 18:15-20).
When they debate methods of “doing church,” this subject is noticeably missing from the dialogue. It is the type of music, method of outreach, the question of drama and entertainment that is front and center today.
Let someone else deal with church discipline; we will give ourselves to the ministry of the Word. The trouble with that attitude is that church discipline is a doctrine of Scripture.

To any pastor who is serious about “doing church” and understands that church discipline is a crucial part of his responsibility, there are several informative books that I would like to recommend. These books will lay a firm foundation for him to follow and will help him better understand the biblical mandate and method for church discipline:

1. Beyond Forgiveness: The Healing Touch of Church Discipline by Don Baker, published by Multnomah Press. This book deals with the discipline and restoration of a local church staff member.

2. A Journey into Purity by Richard Belcher, published by Rassbury Press. This book deals with the subject of church discipline in a theological novel format and would be a great book to introduce your congregation to the subject.

3. A Guide to Church Discipline by J. Carl Laney, published by Bethany House Publishers. This book lays out the step by step method of church discipline and answers many questions concerning it. The forward is written by John MacArthur.

4. The Reformed Pastor by Richard Baxter, published by John Knox Press. This puritan classic is a good source of teaching on church discipline. In chapter two, “The Oversight of the Flock,” section 1, “The Nature of this Oversight,” Baxter has an extended treatment on the method of exercising church discipline.

Together, these sources should give a pastor all of the information that he may need to enter upon the important work of church discipline.

Quotes from "The Expository Genius of John Calvin" by Steven J. Lawson

Preface – “…sad to say, we live in a generation that has compromised this sacred calling to preach. Exposition is being replaced with entertainment, preaching with performance, doctrine with drama, and theology with theatrics.” (p. XI)

“The greatest season of church history---those eras of widespread reformation and great awakening---have been those epochs in which God-fearing men took the inspired Word and unashamedly preached it in the power of the Holy Spirit.” (p. XII)

“By overwhelming consent, he [John Calvin] remains the greatest biblical commentator of all time.” (p. 4)

“…when John was 14, he entered the University of Paris to study theology in formal preparation to become a priest. Calvin’s time at the university resulted in a master of arts degree at age 17.” (p. 6)

“Frail in stature, Calvin suffered many ailments.” (p. 15)

Calvin permitted only the Word of God, the Psalms to be sung in his church. (p. 23)

“Calvin’s deeply embedded convictions about the supreme authority of the Bible demanded an elevated view of the pulpit.” (p. 24)

“This commitment to the undisputed authority of the Bible compelled him to preach verse by verse through entire books of the Bible.” (p. 24)

“It is the expositor’s task, he believed, to bring the supreme authority of the divine Word to bear directly on his listeners.” (p. 26)

Calvin wrote, “God will have His church trained up by the pure preaching of His own Word, not by the contrivances of men [which are wood, hay and stubble].” (p. 30)

“As a faithful shepherd, he fed his congregation a steady diet of sequential expository messages.” (p. 32)
“This verse-by-verse style---lectio continua, the ‘continuous expositions’---guaranteed that Calvin would preach the full counsel of God. Difficult and controversial subjects were unavoidable. Hard sayings could not be skipped. Difficult doctrines could not be overlooked. The full counsel of God could be heard.” (p. 32)

“Whether the biblical book was long and extensive…or brief and short…Calvin was determined to preach every verse.” (p. 34)

“In Calvin’s words, preaching is ‘the living voice’ of God ‘in His church.’”(p. 35)


”In all of life, one supreme passion consumed John Calvin: the glory of God.” (p. 39)

“…this commitment to God’s glory heavily influenced Calvin’ biblical exegesis. When he studied, it was to behold the majesty of God.” (p. 40)

“The pastor, he wrote, “ought to be prepared by long study for giving to the people, as out of a storehouse, a variety of instruction concerning the Word of God.” (p. 41)

Calvin’s personal motto was, “My heart I give to thee, O Lord, promptly and sincerely.”
(p. 44)

“Two things are united,” he confessed, “teaching and prayer; God would have him whom He has set as a teacher in His church to be assiduous in prayer.” (p. 44)

Calvin “… preached no less than ten times a fortnight to the same congregation.” (p. 46)

“Calvin was not a silver tongued orator, but a Bible-teaching expositor.” (p. 55).

“When Calvin stepped into the pulpit, he did not bring a manuscript of his sermon with him.” (p. 57)

“Calvin believed spontaneous preaching helped yield a ‘lively’ delivery, one marked by energy and passion.” (p. 58)

“In Bible exposition, substance is to be desired above style, and doctrine before delivery.” (p. 65)

“Calvin is the founder of the modern grammatico-historical exegesis.” (p. 69)

“…Calvin insisted on sensus literalis, the literal sense of the biblical text. He rejected the medieval quadriga, the ancient interpretation scheme that allowed for literal, moral, allegorical, and analogical meaning of a text.” “The true meaning of Scripture is the natural and obvious meaning.” (p. 71)

“When Calvin protested against allegorizing, he was protesting not against finding a spiritual meaning in a passage, but against finding one that was not there.” (p 72)

Calvin declared, “I have felt nothing more important than a literal interpretation of the biblical text. (p. 72)

“Calvin’s purpose in preaching was to render transparent the text of Scripture itself.” (p. 73)


“Calvin used cross-references sparingly. It appears that he desired not to wander unnecessarily from the primary passage that lay open before him.” (p. 73)

In Calvin’s preaching, two kind of cross-referencing are evident. In the first, Calvin cited a passage without attempting to quote it verbatim. (p. 73) “On other occasions, Calvin directly quoted verses or passages, either by reading them, reciting them from memory or paraphrasing them.” (p. 74)

“Throughout his ministry, Calvin kept his preaching singularly focused on explaining the God-intended meaning of the biblical text.” (p. 79)

“While there is only one correct meaning to a passage, there are multiple ways of conveying that meaning in a sermon. This difference accounts for the art of preaching.” (p. 84)

“The Reformer [Calvin] wrote his first book in Latin and preached in his native French from either a Hebrew or Greek Bible.” (p. 85)

“Calvin also spoke in simple sentences that were easily accessible to his listeners.” “As he preached, Calvin’s towering intellect nearly always lay ‘concealed, behind [his] deceptively simple explanations of his author’s meaning.’” (p. 87)

“Calvin will never speak the original Greek word and will rarely refer to ‘the Greek.’” (p.88)

“Another means Calvin employed to explain a biblical text was to restate a verse in alternative words. He would adopt a different sentenced structure and use synonyms.” (p. 88)

“Calvin’s signature formula to introduce a restatement was ‘It is as if he were saying…’” or “in other words…” (p. 93)

“He showed little concern to supplement his exposition with quotations from other authors. For Calvin, nothing must overshadow the Word.” (p. 96).

“Philip Schaff…notes, “[Calvin] lacked the genial element of humor and pleasantry; he was a Christian stoic: stern, severe, unbending, yet with fires of passion and affection glowing beneath the marble surface;.” (p. 99)

“He was by nature and taste a retiring scholar, but Providence made him an organizer and ruler of churches.” (p. 99)

“Calvin rightly believed that he did not need to make the Bible relevant---it was relevant.” (p. 104)


Calvin wrote, “We have not come to the preaching merely to hear what we do not know, but to be incited to do our duty.” (p. 104)

“He preached primarily to edify and encourage the congregation God had entrusted to him. In short, he preached for changed lives.” (p. 104 -105)

“Calvin was never needlessly harsh or domineering with his own congregation.” (p. 105)

“Calvin often utilized first person plural pronouns-- ‘us’ and ‘we’--as he exhorted his congregation.” (p. 106)

“…Calvin was a master of the art of pastoral exhortation with inclusive language.” (p. 106)

“Without a doubt, loving admonishment and reproof were a part of Calvin’s preaching.”
“All true exposition of Scripture must include such correction.” (p. 112)

”For Calvin, preaching also required an apologetic defense of the faith.” “In Calvin’s view, the full weight of Scripture must be brought to bear against theological error, whether inside the organized church or outside it.” ( p. 112)

“At the heart of this practice was a holy compulsion to guard the glory of God, defend Christ’s matchless character, and protect the purity of the gospel.” (p. 112)

“Calvin took every opportunity to uphold sound doctrine and to refute any and all contradictions to it. He was a staunch guardian of the truth.” (p. 115)

“Calvin’s expositions were approximately one hour in length, some six thousand words each.” (p. 120)

“In the conclusion of each sermon, Calvin first gave a short summation of the truth he had exposited. He then passionately called for his hearers’ unqualified submission to the Lord.” (p. 120)

“Finally, he concluded with public prayer, committing his flock into the sovereign hands of the Lord.” (p. 120)

“These concluding prayers were vertical in their thrust, pointing his listeners upward to God.” (p. 126)

“This was the passion of Calvin’s preaching. Start to finish, it was soli Deo Gloria—for the honor and majesty of God alone.” (p. 129)















Training Men to Lead

“I will therefore that men (Gk. aner – male in distinction to female) pray everywhere, lifting up holy hands (hands unstained – a holy walk) without wrath and doubting (anger and disputing).” (I Tim. 2:8)

Pastors who seldom call others to lead in prayer are missing a tremendous opportunity to disciple men in the assembly. Others should be called upon, not only in Sunday school classes and other weekly Bible studies, but also in the morning worship service. I am not alone in thinking this. Warren Wiersbe, in his little book titled, In Praise of Plodders, says, “Some ministers pray too often in the Sunday service and they ought to invite others to share in this ministry.” Of course if this has not been his custom, he may have to orient the men of the congregation by informing them ahead of time that he would like for them to lead in prayer at the opening or closing of the service.

If the leader would call upon others to pray, he would find that they would begin to develop in the area of leadership. He should call upon men in general and not only those who are aspiring to lead. Of course, there will be occasions when the pastor may need to open or close the service in prayer, but he should not reserve that place entirely for himself.

Don’t be hesitant to call upon men to lead in prayer. It will stretch them. It will help them learn to pray aloud – to pray in public. It will encourage them to lead their own family in prayer before meals and at family devotions. They will become leaders in their families.

If pastors and elders would call upon other men to lead in prayer, the people would be taught that not only the trained clergy is able to address God in prayer in the worship service, but all spiritual men may do so. And visitors would see that the pastor is not the only spiritual man in the congregation.

Quotes on Humor in Preaching

While preaching is a serious business - it is God’s means of saving lost sinners (I Cor. 1:21), a good case can be made for the use of humor in preaching. Jesus had a sense of humor, and He often used humor in His preaching. The book of Ecclesiastes says, “There is a time to laugh and a time to cry” (3:4). I have at least two books in my library on the humor of Jesus, one by David Redding and the other by Elton Trueblood. Dr. Larry Michael has a chapter on laughter in his book titled Spurgeon on Leadership.

Our Puritan forefathers were rather stern when it came to preaching, but C.H. Spurgeon, who has been called “the last Puritan,” was known to have had a great sense of humor which he often used in his preaching. A lady once complained to Spurgeon that he used too much humor in his sermons. Spurgeon replied, “Well madam, you may very well be right; but if you knew the number of jokes I do not tell you, and the number of things that I refrain from saying you would give me credit.”

The great evangelist George Whitfield never used humor. John Piper seems to have this view, yet he often injects humor into his sermons. Martyn Lloyd Jones had a similar view of humor in preaching. Others make a great use of humor; Charles Swindoll is a good example as are also Alistar Begg and David Jeremiah. Both Swindoll and Jeremiah offer recordings of excerpts from their sermons of their humor. A humorous story can bring light on a major point. The trick is to keep humor and gravity in balance. Humor should seldom be used for sake of humor, I think.

The great reformer Martin Luther gave nine properties and virtues of a good preacher. First, [he said] he should, “…teach systematically…[and] have a ready wit…”etc.

In his book, Lectures on Preaching, Phillips Brooks called humor one of the most helpful qualities that the preacher can possess.

John Stott, who went to be with the Lord in 2011, said, “We should press [humor] gladly into service in the cause of the gospel.”

John Ortberg believes “…humor must always be the servant of the message. If humor does nothing to forward that purpose, then the preacher must willingly jettison it from the sermon.”

Even Lloyd Jones said, “I would not dare to say that there is no place for humor in preaching, but I do suggest that it should not be a very big place because of the nature of the work and because of the character of this truth with which we are dealing.”

I think that Haddon Robbinson gives the proper balance on the subject of humor in preaching in his book, Biblical Preaching when he writes, “…the cardinal rule of humor is [that] it must serve the truth.”

Sunday, April 22, 2012

The Men of the Titanic

On the night of April 14, 1912, one of the worst maritime disasters in history occurred. The British luxury liner, Titanic, a 46,000 ton ship on her maiden voyage from Liverpool, England, to New York City, struck an iceberg about 95 miles south of the Grand Banks of New Foundland The ship that had been hailed unsinkable, because of its sixteen water – tight compartments, sank in just three hours. The iceberg had penetrated five of the compartments—one more than was considered possible in any single accident.

The captain of the ship had boasted that not even God could sink the ship. Because of the overconfidence of her builder, lifeboats had been provided for only a fraction of the passengers and crew. Some 2,220 persons were on board the giant ship; of these 1,513 lost their lives.

But as tragic as the disaster was, it has left us one of the greatest illustrations of sacrificial love in history. We are told that while the ship’s orchestra played “Nearer My God to Thee,” 1,513 brave souls, mostly men who had given up their places in the life boats for the women and children, gave their lives in the freezing waters of the North Atlantic. It was reported that some 600 widows of the Titanic disaster were left in Liverpool alone!

Recent investigations have shown that the metal of the Titanic was inferior. The mettle of the men of the Titanic was not!

Someone has reported that a recent survey asked the question, “Would you have given up your right to a seat in a lifeboat if you had been on the Titanic?” Forty-eight percent responded “No.” It would seem that this was a much safer place for women to live in, during the days when the Judeao-Christian ethic (or chivalry) was still alive.

How heroic these men of the Titanic were! But what they did was only what God’s Word demands of every Christian Husband. In Ephesians 5:25 we read, “Husbands, love your wives,as Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it.” So, the Christian husband is to demonstrate sacrificial love for his wife just as those men of the Titanic demonstrated their unselfish love for the women and children of the ill-fated ship, by giving their lives for them.

February has just passed. It is the month when we think a lot about the real meaning of love. So let me pose this question, “How much do you love your wife.” How have you demonstrated sacrificial love for her? Let me suggest some tangible ways that you can show her you love her. Think for a moment about some things that you are quite sure irritate you wife most and give them up. It may be a habit that annoys her, it may be a hobby that keeps you away too much, or it may be something else. Give it up if you love her. Make it your goal to change these things in order to demonstrate the reality of your love.

On the positive side, do something tangible for her. Send her flowers, open the car door for her, tell her that you love her, take her out to dinner—just the two of you, not just on Valentine’s Day, but all through the year.

Be like the men of the Titanic in demonstrating your love. Better still be Christ-like in your love for your wife. Christ proved His love for the church by paying the supreme sacrifice. How have you demonstrated your love for your wife?

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Quotable Spurgeon

Quotes from The Quotable Spurgeon
Harold Publishing Company

From the introduction:

“The great German theologian and pastor Helmut Thielicke stated,” ‘Sell all the books you have…and buy Spurgeon.’”

“At the age of six…being already well able to read…[he] picked up a copy of Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.  It fascinated him—actually, he read it over one hundred times during his life.”

“He said, ‘the revealed word awakened me; but it was the preached word that saved me; I now think I am bound never to preach a sermon without preaching to sinners.”

“Spurgeon was also tremendously sensitive to the absolute necessity of the work of the Holy Spirit in his pulpit style and ministry.”

“Many things could be said about Spurgeon’s preaching style, but perhaps central to it all was the fact that he was absolutely committed to the full authority of the Scriptures.”

“…for three years there were over one thousand people every Sunday turned away from the ten-thousand-seat-capacity Surrey Gardens Music Hall, where he preached to a packed building before the construction of the Metropolitan Tabernacle building.”

From the section titled “Preaching the Word.” pp. 207 – 232 (other sections include:  Evangelism, Prayer, His Holy Word, Living Faith, God’s Grace, Affliction, Sinful Nature, etc.)

“However learned, godly, and eloquent a minister may be, he is nothing without the Holy Spirit.”

“…men love spiritual warmth.  Cold truth, even cold gospel truth, is never attractive.  Ministers must be fervent, their spirits earnest, and their style energetic, or many will not come to them.  Religion is a dish to be served hot; once it becomes lukewarm it is sickening.  Our baptism must be with the Holy Spirit and with fire if we would win the masses to hear the gospel.”

“Let the preacher give his people food, and they will flock around him, even if the sounding brass of rhetoric and the tinkling cymbals of oratory are silent.”

“The best teachers are those who have labored to be understood by the dullest capacities.  Preachers who all along have aimed to suit the educated never become so simple or efficient as those who have made a point of explaining even the elements [basics] of faith to the ignorant.”

“The church has never had worse enemies than false teachers.  Infidels and persecutors do but mild injury to her, but her heretical preachers have been as evening wolves.”

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Quotes on Preaching from Gathered Gold by John Blanchard



“If you shoot over the heads of your congregation, you don’t prove anything except that you don’t know how to shoot.”  - James Denney

“If it is bad to preach over people’s heads, not to preach to their heads at all is worse.”
-          James S. Stewart

“The Christian ministry exists for the promotion of holiness.” – Donald MacLeod

“My grand point in preaching is to break hard hearts, and to heal the broken one.” 
-           John Newton

“If we can teach Christ to our people, we teach them all.” – Richard Baxter

“There are three particular temptations that assail Christian leaders:  the temptation to shine, the temptation to whine and the temptation to recline.” – Anon

“A pleasing preacher is too often an appeasing preacher.” – Anon

“A self-serving minister is one of the most loathsome sights in all the world.”  
-          Walter J. Chantry”

“It has always been the mark of false prophets and preachers that they preached what people wanted to hear.”  - Peter DeJong

“I had rather be fully understood by ten than admired by ten thousand.” – Jonathan Edwards

“Popularity has killed more prophets than persecution.” – Vance Havner

“No man ought to be in a Christian pulpit who fears man more than God.” – William Still

“A man cannot really preach until preach he must.  If he can do something else, he probably should!” – Vance Havner
                 
“A man should only enter the Christian ministry if he cannot stay out of it.”
-          D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

“I cannot recall, in any of my reading, a single instance of a prophet who applied for the job.”
-          A. W. Tozer

“Error in the pulpit is like fire in the hayloft.”  - Anon

“Preaching is truth through personality.” – Phillips Brooks
“I preached as never sure to preach again, and as a dying man to dying men.” - Richard Baxter

“I go out to preach with two propositions in mind.  First, every person ought to give his life to Christ.  Second, whether or not anyone else gives him his life, I will give him mine.” 
-          Jonathan Edwards

“A minister without boldness is like a smooth file.” – William Gurnall

“A minister should go to every service as though it were the first, as though it could be the best, and as though it might be the last.” – Vance Havner

“I preach as though Christ was crucified yesterday, rose from the dead today and was coming back tomorrow.” – Martin Luther

“To me, the work of preaching is the highest and greatest and the most glorious calling to which anyone can be called.” – D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

“No man who is full of himself can ever truly preach the Christ who emptied himself.”
-          J. Sidlow Baxter

“No man can give at once the impressions that he himself is clever and that Jesus Christ is mighty to save.” – James Denney

“Make sure it is God’s trumpet you are blowing….” - W. Ian Thomas

“We must study as hard how to live well as how to preach well.” – Richard Baxter

“He will make the best divine that studies on his knees.” – John Flavel

“We should begin to pray before we kneel down and we should not cease when we rise up.”
-          C. H. Spurgeon

“A preacher should have the mind of a scholar, the heart of a child and the hide of a rhinoceros.  His biggest problem is how to toughen his hide without hardening his heart.” – Vance Havner

“If any minister can be satisfied without conversions, he shall have no conversions.”
-          C. H. Spurgeon


Monday, March 19, 2012

The Da Vinci Code & Biblical Christology



In 1982 the book Holy Blood and the Holy Grail caused a stir by asserting that Jesus fathered a child.  The book postulates the following hypotheses:

1.       Jesus married Mary Magdalene and had at least one child by her.
2.      He and His sympathizers staged His crucifixion and resurrection. 
3.      Mary Magdalene and her offspring made their way to Southern France to escape the Disciples of Jesus 
      who refused to recognize Mary as the designated leader.
4.      Jesus’ bloodline mixed with the noble families of the Franks and became the basis for the Merovingian 
      Dynasty of the Early Middle Ages.
5.      The Merovingian line extends into the modern noble line of Europe so that Jesus’ descendents are alive 
      today.
6.      The bottom line is that Jesus was just a man, no more, no less.  As in the song of Mary Magdalene in Andrew Lloyd Webber's blasphemous "rock-opera" Jesus Christ Superstar, “He’s just a man, and I’ve known so many men before.  In very many ways he's just one more.” 

The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown is more of the same.  Built on the same Gnostic foundation, it portrays Jesus as a mere man.  Because of this Gnostic teaching, the biblical doctrine of Christology becomes crucial for believers to understand.  Who was Jesus Christ?  Was He a liar,  lunatic, or Lord of all? 

The doctrine of the deity of Christ, that He was God, has been a foundation for Christian orthodoxy from the very beginning of Christian history.  The evidence for the deity of Christ is overwhelming.  B. B. Warfield has written, “You cannot read the New Testament without seeing on almost every page the fact of the deity of Christ, that is, that Jesus Christ was God.  He was not a part of God, not a manifestation of God, He was God.”

Quotes from Spurgeon on Depression



Spurgeon lived with depression most of his adult life.  Early in his ministry, Asiatic cholera swept through the tenement section of London around New Park Street church.  Young Spurgeon , seeing friends fall one by one, was seized with despair until he saw a note in a shop window that read, “Because thou hast made the Lord, which is my refuge, even the Most High, thy habitation, there shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling.” 

As crowds grew at New Park Street Chapel, the congregation was forced to larger and larger facilities to accommodate them.  On one occasion, when ten thousand people had gathered to hear him preach, someone suddenly cried “Fire!”  A terrible panic followed in which seven were killed and scores injured.  It is said that Spurgeon’s depression deepened and that he never fully recovered.

Spurgeon wrote, “The tongue of the taught belongs only to those who also are men of sorrows and acquainted with grief.”

“In the days of his greatest preaching in the Tabernacle, Spurgeon was often in despair and even thought of quitting, for he felt that his illness kept him too often from the pulpit.”

Spurgeon lists several causes for depression.  He wrote, “The times most favorable to fits of depression, I have experienced, may be summed up in a brief catalogue. “

      “First among them I mention the hour of great success.  When at last a long-cherished desire is fulfilled, when God has been glorified greatly by our means, a great triumph achieved, then we are apt to faint….”

      Second, “In the midst of a long stretch of unbroken labour, the same affliction may be looked for.  The bow cannot be always bent without fear of breaking.  Repose is as needful to the mind as sleep to the body….”
     Third, “Before any great achievement, some measure of the same depression is very usual.  Surveying the difficulties before us, our hearts sink within us….  This depression comes over me whenever the Lord is preparing a larger blessing for my ministry.”

     Fourth, “This evil will also come upon us, we know not why, and then it is all the more difficult to drive it away.  Causeless depression is not to be reasoned with….  If these who laugh at such melancholy did but feel the grief of it for one hour, their laughter would be sobered into compassion.”

Speaking of human pride and suffering Spurgeon said, “Our wine must needs be mixed with water, lest it turn our brains.   My witness is, that those who are honored by their Lord in public have usually to endure a secret chastening, or to carry a secret chastening…lest by any means they exalt themselves….”  And again, “By all the castings down of His servants God is glorified….”

“The refiner is never far from the mouth of the furnace when the gold is in that fire, and the Son of God is always walking in the midst of the flames when His holy children are cast into them.”

“…it is only felt affliction which can become blest affliction.  If we are carried over every stream, where would be the trial and where the experience, which trouble is meant to teach us?”

“The Lord frequently appears to save His heaviest blows for His best-loved ones…the Gardener prunes his best roses with most care.”

“Discipline is sent to keep successful saints humble, to make them tender towards others, and to enable them to bear the high honours which their heavenly Friend puts upon them.”

“There is always a merciful limit to the [disciplining] of the sons of God.  Forty stripes save one were all that an Israelite might receive….”

“If the Christian did not sometime suffer heaviness he would begin to grow too proud, and think too much of himself, and become too great in his own esteem.”

“Another reason for this discipline is, I think, that in heaviness we often learn lessons that we never could attain elsewhere.”

“Men will never become great in divinity until they become great in suffering.  ‘Ah!’ said Luther, ‘affliction is the best book in my library,’ and let me add, the best leaf in the book of affliction is that blackest of all the leaves, the leaf called heaviness, when the spirit sinks within us, and we cannot endure as we could wish.”
“And yet again; this heaviness is of essential use to a Christian, if he would do good to others.”

“There are none so tender as those who have been skinned themselves.  Those who have been in the chamber of affliction know how to comfort those who are there.”

“He may make His sons of thunder anywhere; but His sons of consolation He must make in the fire, and there alone.”

Depression often results from too much study and too little exercise.  Spurgeon said, “I confess that I frequently sit hour after hour praying and waiting for a subject, and that is the main part of my study.  Almost every Sunday of my life I prepare enough outlines of sermons to last me for a month.”

Jesus said to His weary disciples, “Let us go into the desert and rest awhile.”  Spurgeon said, “…The Lord Jesus knows better.  He will not exhaust the strength of His servants prematurely and quench the light of Israel.  Rest time is not waste.  It is economy to gather fresh strength.”

“…infirmities may be no detriment to a man’s career of special usefulness; they may even have been imposed upon him by divine wisdom as necessary qualifications for his peculiar course of service.  Some plants owe their medicinal qualities to the marsh in which they grow….”

“Pain has, probably, in some cases developed genius, hunting out the soul which otherwise might have slept like a lion in its den.”

“How low the spirits of good and brave men will sometimes sink…but the [pain] is as real as a gaping wound, and all the more hard to bear because it lies so much in the region of the soul that to the inexperienced it appears to be a mere matter of fancy and imagination.  Reader, never ridicule the nervous and hypochondriacal, their pain is real—it is not imaginary….The mind can descend far lower than the body…flesh can bear only a certain number of wounds and no more, but the soul can bleed in ten thousand ways and die over and over again each hour.” 

It is said that many times Spurgeon came home from meetings at the great tabernacle exhausted and in great depression.  Then Susanna, Spurgeon’s wife, would read to him from Baxter’s Reformed Pastor, at which he would weep and she would weep with him.  (Richard Day, The Shadow of the Broad Brim, p.p.  113, 114)