You're a Preacher

I know what it is like to deny Christ as my leader, Savior and friend. I know what’s like to have my faith squashed by fears – fears of the unknown and fears of the predicted. I have been down the road that chooses cursing over blessing, sinner over saint, and worldly over Christ-likeness. I know what it is like to follow Christ but see no eternal value in my praying and choosing to sleep instead. My life is just as broken, dirty, foolish, and unkempt as the next.

But that’s the beauty of our faith. We take our brokenness, anguish and despair into the pulpit with us. We own it. We use it to preach. God is not asking us to be perfect – but rather to live life fully alive. To go through our day knowing we have messed up, failed, and fallen short of the glory of God but also to know that we are forgiven by a God who is all loving, all powerful, and always present.

God is not telling us to preach from our perfection, “Look at me, look what God has done for me my whole life and how much better I am than you.”

On the contrary, God is asking us to preach from our brokenness, “It is by the grace of God and the forgiveness in God’s love that I stand before you today.”

We are all preachers. We all carry the gift of the Holy Spirit with us empowering us to do the will of our God. Our lives, because of the resurrection, are no longer our own. We are Christians – followers of the way. We carry deep within us a belief, well it’s even deeper than that, an ever-rooted conviction that we are a part of a much bigger story.

A lot of people fear preaching because it is such a strange concept. What is preaching? It is standing before someone as God’s spokesperson. We are not speaking on behalf of our knowledge, our experiences, or our hobbies. We are speaking primarily on God’s message. We are heralding the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

For some, the fear is in the sermon. “What should I say? There is no way I can reiterate the story of Christianity and formulate it with illustrations and jokes!” For others there is a real fear of not feeling adequate. This one is mine. How can anyone confidently stand before another group of people and speak on behalf of God? How much prayer must you pray in order to receive a word from God? When do you know you have the word? What gives you the right to deliver God’s word to God’s people? Apparently no one knows all the horrible things we have done and are capable of doing. If they did, they would have never asked us to preach. And here we sit, in our ontological anxiety full of fear and doubt that we do not belong in such a moment as to speak God’s words to people living today.

My word of hope to you is, “Our faith should quell our fears, never our courage.”

To accept the call to preach is not to accept the paid job of preaching in a church each week. To accept the call to preach is to continually speak out of the part of your soul in which God lives. To preach is to be in concert with that inner voice of love and what it is saying to you at the time. Preaching is connecting your experiences to the Christ event in the gospel. It is to tell people – here I stand – a broken but moldable person – ready and willing to partner with God in the ongoing Creation of the world.

As you preach remember, “Faith should quell your fears, never your courage.”

Comments

Pilgrim said…
Inclusion or Exclusion!

Some people have an Idea that God is inclusive for mans eternal destiny, that all religions and all people will be saved. That God will allow all of mankind to enter into heaven because everybody is good so God must be fair and include everyone! It is true God does love the whole world but God is exclusive about mans eternal destiny without the Savior. To keep this simple man has a problem called sin in which man refuses to believe that there are eternal consequences for having sin, which is a one way ticket to hell. God is holy and he will not allow anyone with sin to enter into heaven. God is hurt and angry about our sin, we have broken his laws. But God is just and good and he knows our need so he provided a solution to our problem. His solution to our problem is to have our sins removed by having our sins placed on someone else, a sacrifice for us; paying for the penalty of the sin we have in our lives. So that someone else would get the penalty of Gods wrath and separation on him that was meant for us. So God sent his son Jesus on a mission from heaven to earth as our sacrifice to die on the cross on our behalf after this happened three days later Jesus came back from the dead, alive. But that’s not all remember I wrote that God is exclusive about mans eternal destiny without the Savior? The only way that Gods promise can be applied to your life is for you to turn from your way of thinking and know that your sin offends and hurts God and call on the Lord Jesus who’s alive to save you. Your sins are then transferred to Jesus for what he did at the cross, dying and being abandon by God because of your sins, for you and because Jesus arose from the dead he is alive you can now enter into a relationship with God. Will you call out to Jesus to save you? It’s your choice to enter in exclusively with God’s grace for you. Where will you want to spend eternity after hearing Gods promise for you?
If the answer was yes that you do want Jesus as your sin bearer, Savior, and you do believe God raised Jesus from the dead you can pray with your voice.

“Dear Lord Jesus save me.”

Acts 20:21 Testifying both to the Jews, and also to the Greeks, repentance towards God, and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ.

Http://www.shipwrecksoul.blogspot.com
Barrett Owen said…
Pilgrim,

Thanks for your attention to this blog.

May I offer a suggestion - use "humanity" instead of "man" when referring to all humans. Whether our salvation is exclusive or not, you can be inclusive when referring to all people.
Anonymous said…
My guess is that Pilgrim has a large bullhorn and loves to hand out tracts.

I certainly don't necessarily think such evangelistic tactics are very prone to work today, but I did hear a testimony on the radio from a girl who came to faith in Jesus thanks to one of those tracts. However, today she is a close friend to the person who gave it to her. They met that day.

I guess I am disturbed that Pilgrim felt the need to explain the Gospel. Does that mean you need to be saved? But I am most disturbed that said explanation contained casual references to hell.

When a golfer stands on the tee and surveys the shot ahead, it is imperative that the focus remains on the fairway and not the water, sand, out of bounds, etc. I pray my life will demonstrate who Jesus was so that others may come to know Him. I am just not interested in running around constantly pulling fire alarms.
Pilgrim said…
Yes a golfer does stands on the tee and surveys the shot ahead and he looks to make the perfect shot, to make the mark. But only Jesus can make the perfect shot for you. It was done by his life, his saving power at the cross, for us not by our works. Faith is resting on who the risen Lord Jesus is and our response to him. This is walking by God's Spirit and not in our strength.
1Co 2:5 That your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God.
www.shipwrecksoul.blogspot.com

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