By Rick Long
Rick is the Executive Director, Grace Church of Arvada, Arvada, CO;
Speaker and Workshop Teacher. He founded Grace Church in 1989 and since
then he has seen God grow the church exponentially. The ministry has
over 2000 members and is a Purpose Driven Church committed to the Global
glory of God. Rick has been instrumental in laying the groundwork for
Dare 2 Share Ministries in Colorado.
John MacArthur once addressed the issue of "Biblically-Anemic
Preaching." Dr. MacArthur boldly confronted pulpits across America that
have abandoned the teaching of God's Word in exchange for self-help
guides, philosophical remedies and popular anecdotes that can be as
easily discovered by watching any episode of Dr. Phil or Oprah.
I absolutely agree with him when it comes to his concern about
"churches" who have reduced the teaching of God's Word to nothing more
than a highlight during the weekend services; but I disagree with the
degree to which Dr. MacArthur restricts methodology for preaching the
Word of God. Respectfully, I would like to submit an alternate point of
view.
I believe that there is liberty within the body of Christ for a variety
of approaches to teaching the Word of God. After all, the purpose of
the Scriptures is clearly defined in 2 Timothy 3:16-17 (NIV). "All
Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking,
correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be
thoroughly equipped for every good work." As you can see from a close
look at the Greek word "pros," which is translated "for," Scripture is
helpful for doctrine, rebuking, correcting and training in
righteousness, but these are not the end-all purposes. The purpose of
Scripture is "so that the man of God may be mature." The purpose of our
preaching and teaching is not to wow the crowds with our amazing wit or
knowledge of Scripture, but to preach messages that change lives. In
Romans 8:29 we find that the primary purpose for God's Word and work in
our lives is to make us like God's Son, Jesus. What concerns me about
those who believe the only way to teach is verse by verse and chapter by
chapter is that they label preachers as topical, exegetical or some
other label. Let me point out that these labels themselves are
extra-biblical. When the original letters were written, they had no
chapters and verses; they were sent to be read, understood and applied.
Again, the ultimate purpose for the Word of God is that our minds be
changed so that our obedience is a by-product of what we have learned.
The goal, and I think Dr. MacArthur would agree with this point, is not
merely head knowledge, but life transformation.
The majority of American Christians know far more Scripture than they
are living out! (This is not to say that the Church is permeated with
biblical literacy. But it is to say that biblical literacy isn’t the
sole crisis we face—but rather biblical application of what we do know
is also of great concern.) The bottom line is this: our preaching must
lead to Christ-like convictions that produce Christ-like character which
must produce Christ-like conduct. We are called to be doers of the
Word and not hearers only.
In a recent article, Dr. MacArthur stated:
“…today’s sermons tend to be short, shallow, topical homilies that
massage people's egos and focus on fairly insipid subjects like human
relationships, "successful" living, emotional issues, and other
practical but worldly—and not definitively biblical—themes.”
I don’t wish to spend energy defending those who do massage people's
egos, but I can in no way concede the issue of human relationships as an
“insipid subject.” Human relationships are at the heart of biblical
teaching, regardless of our preaching style.
Let me break it down. Though I preach for nearly 50 minutes every week,
I do believe that the amount of time spent is not nearly as important
as the content of what is said. We see this borne out in Jesus’ teaching
discourses, the brief parable of the sower as a clear example of power
not being sacrificed for brevity. I have heard some of the most
life-changing messages that were no longer than ten minutes.
So I don’t find the length of a sermon being proscribed in the Bible.
All Bible-loving preachers will agree with the dangers of massaging
egos. But I believe I’m on solid ground when I defend the value of
preaching biblically on topics that encourage and give hope. (Perhaps
Dr. MacArthur would also affirm this.)
The Bible is filled with hundreds of examples of human relationships
that demonstrate the type of husband, son, employee, friend, relative,
brother, boss and so on that I am called to be, and the passages that
teach me how to live out these responsibilities are just as numerous.
Teaching soundly about these matters is critical. And while I may not
teach in what appears to me as a narrowly-defined style of preaching, I
believe I’m on track in imitating Christ in both my purpose and manner
of preaching.
God help me as I articulate what God has done at our church of 2,300 in
Colorado. It is a place where 67 percent of all the members came to
know Christ in and through this church. In 19 years we have grown from
23 curious onlookers to 2,300 (mostly!) active believers. We are living
the purposes of God and reaching out to the community through 52 unique
ministries in our church. We have trained 300 churches how to be active
in their community and have become a church to which the local rescue
mission sends their recovering addicts. We are made up of doctors,
lawyers, orthodontists, as well as prostitutes, drug addicts and
criminals—people who have gloriously come to know Jesus and are learning
to surrender to his Lordship in every area of their lives. Last year
750 adults came to Christ in our services, yet we do not take on the
label "seeker" church, because I believe God does the seeking, we're
just chucking the seeds. He gets all the glory and he deserves all the
praise. But I share what God has done in our midst to illustrate that he
is active in our church, which operates under a style some would reject
as “unbiblical.” I just won’t concede that! The truth is, we would
never have seen such impact had we regarded issues of human
relationships as being insipid.
In my finite and limited years of experience, I have come to believe
that a "deep" study of the Word of God means that we are called to live
what we read. I have a conviction that preachers must not lose touch
with the culture around us, the very culture with which we have been
called to share the message of Christ. I have no apologies for a pursuit
of relevance.
There are only two types of people who will ever walk through your
doors: your family or your mission field. Each person deserves the most
powerful and persuasive presentation of God's Word we can provide. If I
am teaching on the subject of love, why would I limit myself to a narrow
study of 1 Corinthians 13:4-8, when the subject is addressed in 1200
passages in Scripture? I want the full counsel of God so I may bring
light to the subject, but I compel the hearer to action with a
well-thought-out approach and a variety of tools to bring the sermon to
life. In a culture of multimedia as well as church resources around
every corner, it is not just my prerogative to use these tools—but my
duty to use them. My God deserves the best I can give him, and that is
exactly what we strive for at Grace Church of Arvada.
We see in Scripture an emphasis on application. Romans is 50
percent application. Ephesians is 50 percent application, Philippians is
100 percent application, and James is over 80 percent application. We
are not just to inform our people, but to preach for transformation—and
that is done by application teaching. We use videos and testimonies
almost every week. We utilize examples from pop culture and often deal
with the headlines of the day. People, Christians and non-Christians
alike, are searching for answers to life's most difficult questions, and
we have the answer—it is the Word of God.
My production team, made up of qualified staff members and pastors,
discusses every sermon and every Scripture. We plan every detail of the
weekend and make sure that God's Word is handled correctly and remains
the focus of all we do. We are planned ahead, and I preach sermons,
complete with all the "bells and whistles," to the production team
two-and-a-half weeks before the actual weekend it will be delivered.
This is how careful we are with the Word of God—but my approach
certainly differs from that of Dr. MacArthur. I consider myself on his
same team—and would value being validated in my approach rather than
being viewed as having somehow compromised God's Word—though God is
certainly the final judge over all of our preaching. I believe that
there are a variety of approaches or methods to delivering the message.
And as long as God's Word is handled accurately and with reverence, and
as long as lives are being transformed by the clear Gospel of grace,
then God is pleased. I preach for life change and nothing else. If my
people leave on the weekend and say, "Wow, my pastor is so smart, did
you hear the words he used?", I have failed. But if their week is
impacted by changed behavior as they live for Christ, then I have
succeeded.
My fellow pastors, my word to you is this: I pray for you and can
understand the burden you bear every day. God has placed you in the
position you’re in and he wants you to preach exactly the way he created
you. Don't try to be someone you’re not. Preach the way God has gifted
you. Stay true to your studies and to the Word and lead your people in
its light. I am praying for all of you.
In closing, I want to say that friendly tension is what sharpens our
faith. Dr. MacArthur challenged me in many areas, and I hope I have done
the same for you.
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