Oct 29, 2017 - Default    No Comments

What is expository preaching?

Steven Lawson:

Well, when we say expository preaching Fred… and just to be very succinct we’re really talking about biblical preaching…the word expository if you take the Oxford English dictionary and look it up it really means a commentary or setting forth of principal themes from a text. And then the word preaching really goes beyond the exposition and really takes the truth of the biblical passage that has been read and explained and properly interpreted and then shows the relevance of that passage to modern-day life and drives it home to the heart with fervor and passion as well as pastoral comfort and encouragement.

So those two words—expository is the adjective and preaching is the noun—expository describes a kind of preaching that is unusually text driven. It starts with the text of Scripture, stays with the text of Scripture, supports it with other texts of Scripture, gives the proper interpretation of this text of Scripture, gives the authorial intent, shows how it fits in the overall message of the Scripture and then shows the relevance of this passage. What it requires of us, how it speaks to the Lord Jesus Christ and then the preaching part, there has to be an element of preaching that I think goes beyond teaching.

A young man once came to Martin Lloyd-Jones and said “what’s the difference between teaching and preaching?” And Lloyd Jones said with that dry humor, “Young man if you have to ask me the difference between teaching and preaching it’s obvious you have never heard preaching because if you’d ever heard preaching you would know the difference between teaching and preaching.” He went on to say:

A lecture which is teaching oriented can be given any time, today, next week, next month, next semester, but with preaching there’s a sense of urgency about the message. It must be delivered now and it must be received now. And it both builds up and it tears down, both comforts and afflicts, it challenges, it consoles, it confronts, it points the way with urgency.

So just to give you a short answer—obviously you and I both could go a couple of days on the answer but it’s not expository teaching; the word teaching is implied in the word expository. It’s expository preaching.

The Puritans used to say there needs to be a fire in the pulpit and the fire gives off light and heat. There’s the light of the exposition and there’s the heat of the preaching. That’s really what expository preaching is there’s both light and heat.

The light of instruction and interpretation and even application, but with the heat of preaching that motivates and inspires and challenges and summons and confronts and corrects and encourages and consoles—all of those elements are part of preaching.

Oct 27, 2017 - Default    No Comments

John Rogers, Puritan evangelist

— from Puritan Evangelism by Joel Beeke

A great Puritan evangelist, John Rogers, warned his congregation against neglecting Scripture by telling them what God might say: “I have trusted you so long with my Bible…it lies in [some] houses all covered with dust and cobwebs, you care not to listen to it. Do you use my Bible so? Well you shall have my Bible no long.”

Roger then picked up his Bible and started walking away from the pulpit. Then he stopped, fell on his knees, and took on the voice of the people, who pleaded, “Lord, whatever Thou dost to us, take not Thy Bible from us; kill our children, burn our houses, destroy our goods; only spare us Thy Bible, take not away Thy Bible.”

“Say you so?” the minister replied, impersonating God. “Well, I will try you a while longer; and here is my Bible for you. I will see how you use it, whether you will search it more, love it more, observe it more, and live more according to it.”

Thomas Goodwin was so moved by Rogers’ dramatic presentation that when he left church he wept upon his horse’s neck for fifteen minutes before he felt strong enough to mount it.

 

摘自:教会期刊2013年3月刊

有一位清教徒布道家 John Roger 有一次在讲道上…开始劝诫众人,并扮演上帝的角色说道:“我已经把我的圣经赐给你们这么长时间了,你们却忽视它,它被放在家家户户里面,全盖满了灰尘和蛛网。你们不愿意去读它。你们不就是这样使用我的圣经的吗?好吧,那我就不再把圣经给你们了。”

他说完抓起讲台上的圣经,就要拿走。然而他突然又换了个角色,几乎跪了下来,以民众的名义向上帝激动地呼喊:“主啊,不管你对我们怎样行,不要拿走你的圣经,杀我们的孩子吧,烧掉我们的房子吧,毁掉我们的财产吧;只要留下你的圣经!”

整个教堂里安静得如同坟墓一般。罗杰斯又一次扮演起上帝的角色:“你说的是真的吗?好吧,我就再试你一段时间。(他把圣经重新放回讲台上)我把圣经交给你,我要看你怎么用它,看你是不是更爱它,是不是更重视它,更按它而活。”

https://www.churchchina.org/archives/130301.html

Oct 21, 2017 - Default    No Comments

notes

“Christians should not be optimists; we know too much about sin. We should also not be pessimists, for we know the living God.” – Tim Keller

The thing between optimism and pessimism is hope. Optimism is not the same as hope. 
Optimists say: “We are good.” 
Pessimists say: “We are bad.” 
Hope says: “We are not good because we are sinners, yet we should not lose hope, for we know the living God.”

 

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“God will only give you what you would have asked for if you knew everything he knows.” — Tim Keller

 

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Hebrews 11:1 “Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.”

knowledge + evidence = truth
God’s words + no evidence = truth = faith

 

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If it is not explanatory, it is not expository.
If it is not about Christ, it is not Christianity. 

It is not about what the texts mean but what God means.
It is about how God wants to use these texts to tell you about Jesus Christ and the need for you to come to him. 

Paul says in 1 Corinthians 2.2, “For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified.” He is saying, that is the only theme in the whole Bible. If you know the heart of God, you can be the mouth of God.

 

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— Tim Keller

Religion: I obey therefore I am accepted. 
Gospel: I’m accepted therefore I obey.