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Posted by: gunner23

Original: 10/7/2006 1:18 AM
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Saturday, October 07, 2006

 


Tonight I find myself honestly wondering when the word "preach" became a Christian cuss word.  As in, "We shouldn't preach at people; we should just love them."  Or, "I just want to talk; I don't want to preach at you."  Or, "Yeah, nobody really likes him; he just preaches at people."

I've used the word in this kind of way all the time, and I know what we mean by it when we use it this way.  So I'm not saying that I don't understand why we use it this way or that I'm not sure what we're trying to communicate.  I'm not even saying that I frown on using the word "preach" in a negative context.

But I do think that it's dangerous if we never think about it.  Love, grace, mercy, compassion, understanding, listening, gentleness, and meekness have everything to do with following Christ and being His ambassadors.  Scripture is replete with examples of God's tenderness and compassion as well as exhortations for us to reflect Him in these things.  But it's also chock-full of preaching.  In fact, the entire book is one massive story designed to "preach" to a world full of sinners about the wickedness of our hearts, the error of our ways, the destiny of those who turn their backs on God, and the glory of free salvation in Jesus Christ.  It tells us what's real, not just what we want to hear.  And the God who wrote it did so because He loves us.

He loves us so much that in His Book there are fire-and-brimstone prophets, mind-blowing judgments, sermons from cover to cover, toe-to-toe confrontations, and a lot of things said that stop us dead in our tracks and, unless our hearts are changed, make us very, very mad at God for saying them.

I think we need to be careful not to let the world define our words for us.  Don't buy into the notion that "preaching" is bad and "love" is good.  They're not antithetical to each other.  Yes, of course it's unloving for someone to preach the truth to someone without a spirit of love.  But it's unloving because it's unloving.  It's not unloving because it's preaching.  And it's equally unloving to love someone without preaching the truth to them.  If you love someone but don't tell them the truth that they need to hear, you're not really loving them.  You're probably loving yourself.  You're loving yourself so much that you'd rather maintain a comfortable relationship with them and keep their mind and emotions at ease than inform them of the truth that will save their lives.

I believe wholeheartedly in personal relationships and in loving, patient evangelism and in gentle, unhypocritical presentations of the truth.  I think there a lot of ways to "preach at people" that are very uncaring, very cold, and very wrong.  But I don't want to pendulum-swing to the other side and condemn "preaching" and castigate truth-telling and advocate a procrastinating, soppy, flimsy method of evangelizing and exhortation that "loves" and "listens" people all the way into hell.

I want to do both.  I want to love people and I want to tell them the truth.  I want to meet their tangible needs and weep with them and listen to them pour out the aches of their hearts, and I also want to speak an honest, sincere, straightforward, unwavering message of truth that can only heal as it wounds.

If I claim to follow Jesus, I don't think that I can pick one or the other.  Because Jesus didn't leave me a choice between the two.

 

 Posted 10/7/2006 1:18 AM - 316 Views - 2 eProps - 2 comments

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You're right; preaching is a good thing. I my comments didn't give you the impression that I don't believe that.

I really think you answered your own question - or would have if it had been a question - about why 'preaching' can be a derogatory term. It's that tendency to do it the wrong way. Preaching itself isn't any more wrong for its abuses, contortions, and overextension than tolerance is.

It seems to me that our basic function as small-a apostles is to convey who He is and what He desires & requires of humans. That kind of communication requires making spoken and written statements about who He is - from Scripture - and the kind of reflection/following that people like Paul Tripp call "incarnation." I think that most of the criticism that is leveled at preaching - at least from "our" camp - is criticism of a representation of God that is way unbalanced toward preaching and away from demonstrating.

And I think that, in American culture, there are way, way more people that have heard the preached/spoken/written Gospel than there are who have actually seen it, which is one reason why a lot of people are so insistent that we focus more on demonstration.

And, of course, preaching - just like dialogue between Christians - doesn't stop at conversion.

Posted 10/9/2006 5:38 PM by danwatson22 - reply

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Dan: Thanks for the dialogue.  I agree that exemplifying the gospel is non-negotiable.  I long to be a person who does it more and does it better.  I don't think I know what comments of yours you're referring to... maybe your affirmation of Grace's post (I don't think I know her; just referencing her because you did).  I just glanced at her post, but unfortunately didn't have time to read the whole thing.  I wish I did.  I felt like the overall point was good -- we need to live the gospel.  I just don't want to highlight that need at the expense of biblical preaching.  I'm not saying she or you did that, because again, I didn't read the whole post, and you only made a few limited comments about it.  I just think that generally (apart from you or her), it's a danger in our day and age to look down on the idea of "preaching" because of a negative caricature we've developed.  I agree with you that that caricature is rooted in a sad reality.  I'm just trying to reclaim the word and reinvest it with its positive biblical meaning.  Keep thinking hard and writing.

Posted 10/9/2006 8:52 PM by gunner23 - reply


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