The human preacher is to put for the time and effort to be schooled in preaching, to study and prepare and exegete for preaching, to hone and craft his sermon for preaching, but, in the end, “success is God’s work.”[1]As humbling as that is for preachers, it is absolutely true.
From Toastmasters to TED Talks, America has a history of enjoying and practicing oratory. Social Media has only confirmed that people love to hear themselves talk. Without end. Amen. Living near our nation’s capital, I’m regularly reminded of some of the great oratory of the past, from JFK’s “Ask Not” to FDR’s “Having Nothing to Fear but Fear Itself”! In fact, one of my favorite places to stand and take in the National Mall is the very spot, marked by a bronze plaque, where MLK declared his “Dream”! There is something so very powerful about the human spirit connecting with its fellow man on some point of culture, policy, or morality. So memorable. So life-changing, yet so not. Ironically, as much as we can remember those speeches, they are locked in time, in an outer world in which those words may never be as significant again. In the end, the words become more about the man speaking and how the movement of the moment rested solely on him. He made them flutter! He made them soar! He made them cry!
There are moments, though, that are eternally more powerful, more lasting, more life-changing than the great historic speeches of the past. These moments happen, have happened, and will happen in urban cathedrals and prairie chapels. In these moments, the one speaking fades into the distance and with words often forgettable, hearts are made new, marriages are restored, children are warmed to parents, indeed, the dead are made to live. How? What is happening when public speaking on spiritual subjects moves beyond human oratory?
Preaching. Preaching, with Unction, to be exact. That preaching which is NOT with “superiority of speech or wisdom” but goes about simply “declaring…the testimony of God” (1 Cor. 2). And what makes that work? The Holy Spirit. Now, to be clear, human effort in preaching and the Spirit’s working at not diametrically opposed. They go hand in glove. The human preacher is to put for the time and effort to be schooled in preaching, to study and prepare and exegete for preaching, to hone and craft his sermon for preaching, but, in the end, “success is God’s work.”[1]As humbling as that is for preachers, it is absolutely true. Take, for instance, those who saw themselves in a competition with Paul and for all the wrong reasons.
Some indeed are preaching Christ out of envy and strife, and some also from good will. The former preach Christ out of contention, not sincerely, intending to add trouble to my circumstance. But the latter preach out of love, knowing that I am appointed for the defense of the gospel. What then? Only that in every way, whether in pretense or in truth, Christ is preached. And in this I rejoice. Indeed, I will rejoice (Philippians 1:15-18).
Paul was able to rejoice, knowing that Christ was being preached, knowing that the promise of the Word’s fruitfulness in Isaiah 55 would be fulfilled, knowing that, even with impure, contentious motives on the part of the preacher, the Spirit can still work in power through the preached Word.
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