The life of Paul stands as a blueprint for gospel preachers. He not
only wrote that we are to "preach the word; be
instant in season
and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort with
all
longsuffering and doctrine," he lived it everyday!
Paul set the
example for those who do the work of an evangelist.
Therefore, I
would like to observe one important lesson from the
preaching of
Paul.
While in custody at
Caesarea, Paul was visited by Felix, the
procurator of
Judea, and his wife Drusilla. The Bible says, "And
after certain days, when Felix came with his wife
Drusilla, which
was a Jewess, he sent for Paul, and heard him
concerning the faith in Christ. And as he reasoned of righteousness,
temperance, and judgment to come, Felix trembled, and answered, Go thy
way for this time; when I have a convenient season, I will call for
thee"
(Acts 24:24-25). Felix was a very powerful
person. He had the
authority to release Paul or to have him executed.
Yet Paul
preached a sermon to the procurator that was
"terrifying" (ASV)!
Now why did Paul preach on righteousness, temperance
(or
self-control), and judgment to come? Have you ever
thought about
it? What was he thinking? Paul preached on those
things because
they were exactly what Felix needed to hear!
According to
Josephus, a Jewish historian, Felix had no right to
Drusilla. They
were living in an adulterous relationship. He
records, "While Felix
was procurator of Judea, he saw Drusilla, and fell in
love with her;
for she did indeed exceed all other women in beauty,
and he sent
to her a person whose name was Simon, one of his
friends; a Jew
he was, and by birth a Cypriot, and one who pretended
to be a
magician; and endeavored to persuade her to forsake
her present
husband, and marry him; and promised, that if she
would not
refuse him, he would make her a happy woman" (The
Works of
Josephus, pp. 533, 534). Paul preached what was
NEEDED!
When Paul traveled to
Athens and other cities filled with idolatry
he preached on the one true living God. Were they ear
tickling
sermons? No. Did his messages win him any popularity
contests?
Absolutely not. In fact, the craftsmen at
Ephesus, who made their
livelihood in idolatry, enraged the community to riot
against Paul
(Acts
19:23-41). Yet he
never wavered in his preaching because it
was what they needed to
hear.
Can you imagine standing before former President Bill
Clinton with an opportunity to preach the gospel? What would you say?
Would you seek to impress the President? Would you avoid all issues of
controversy? Think about it. Would you have the courage to speak on
needful things (i.e., fornication, adultery, lying, abortion,
homosexuality, the necessity of baptism, the one true church) to the
President? I think it is safe to say Paul would.
We need men in the pulpit today who will call sin
"sin." We need
preachers who will preach against homosexuality,
abortion,
immodesty, drunkenness, fornication, divorce, and
denominationalism. We need preachers with the courage
and
conviction to oppose even brethren who "bring in
damnable
heresies" and "overthrow the faith of some." Just
because a man
has been baptized in water does not give him a
"license to
mislead." We need preachers who will boldly oppose
such men.
We need men who will preach on the one true church.
Too many
among us act as if they are ashamed about the church
and it's
distinctive nature. They say we need to "preach more
Christ, and
less church." How can that be done? How can you
preach the king
and not the kingdom? How can you preach the groom and
not the
bride? How can you preach the foundation and not the
house?
How can you preach the savior and not the saved? How
can you
preach the head and not the body? Such is an
impossible task. For instance, Saul was said to have persecuted the
church (Gal
1:13).
Yet the Lord asked, "Why persecutest thou me?" (Acts 9:4).
Therefore, we must conclude that to persecute the church is to
persecute Christ himself! Furthermore, when Philip
went to
Samaria, the Bible says he "preached Christ unto
them" (Acts 8:5).
We then see that he was
preaching about the kingdom – or church (v. 12). Obviously Christ and
his church cannot be separated. The two stand together. We need
preachers who will speak out and tell folks about the one true church of
our Lord.
This is not to say that preachers should be rude or
impolite. Such
behavior is counterproductive for the cause of
Christ. We are told
to "preach the truth in love" (Eph
4:15). However,
there is no
excuse for preachers to avoid issues of importance
just because it
might offend someone in the pew. Tell them what they
NEED to
hear!
Sadly, many preachers nowadays deliver sermons that
are strictly
positive in nature. They are men-pleasers who seek to
"dazzle" the congregation with entertaining presentations rather than to
convict the sinner of his sins. Such dazzling performances were not the
concern of Paul (2 Cor 4:5). He did not fill his lessons with
irrelevant stories and pointless anecdotes intended
to impress the
audience. He was interested only in preaching the
unadulterated
gospel of Jesus Christ! Would Paul's bold preaching
be welcomed where you worship?
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