Carving a Middle Road: Two Types of Preaching

One of the best things about Herman Bavinck’s book Saved by Grace is how he unfolds the impact various theologies have on preaching.  In the latter section of the book he notes that there are two main types of preaching, evangelistic and ethical preaching. We could rephrase this as preaching which assumes the listener is not a Christian and preaching which assumes they are. He then goes on to give the dangers when one type of preaching dominates congregational preaching.

Evangelistic preaching-Preaching Only to the Unsaved

When this method under the blessing of the Lord has brought someone to conversion, it separates that person from the environment wherein God has place him, and it has no eye for the apostolic exhortation that each one after his conversion should remain in the calling entrusted to him. This approach appreciates the first part of Jesus’ word: preach the gospel to every creature; but it neglects the second part: teach the nations that are made my disciples to keep all that I have commanded. This method does lay the foundation but does not continue to build on that foundation, and therefore runs the danger that the entire foundation, constructed with little effort out of unstable materials, will later be washed away by the storms of unbelief and superstition. 

Preaching that always assumes unbelief never builds on the basics. A church like this eventually atrophies. I have seen Baptist and Presbyterian churches where the sum of every sermon is, “Believe in Jesus.” The most pressing matters of the day are rarely dealt with from the pulpit. The Biblical text is often twisted to fit an agenda.  Many texts are avoided all together. The saints do not become strong. Assurance of salvation is hard to find as all members walk around with a “?” on their foreheads.

Ethical Preaching-Preaching Only to the Saved

This approach to preaching leads people gradually to confuse believing the confession with confessing belief, yielding a situation of dead orthodoxy that is satisfied with intellectual assent to doctrine and that bothers itself very little with disposition of the heart and purity of life. Such an approach teaches church members to think and talk this way: Are we not members of the church? Did we not receive baptism when we were young? Did we not make a profession of faith, and have we not participated in the covenant meal? Just as Israel exalted itself because of its descent from Abraham and because of the temple of the Lord in its midst, so too many New Testament church members often build their hope for eternity on outward ecclesiastical privileges in which they share, and they surrender themselves to a false security. But the Word of the Lord testifies against all of this; it is not the one who says, “Lord, Lord,” but the one who does the will of the Father who will enter the kingdom of heaven. 

As the revivalistic, seeker sensitive model described above weakened, so the ethical model of preaching began to ascend. People are assumed to be regenerate. Instead of a “?” they all have a big “E” on their heads for elect. This leads to presumption and often a stagnate Christian life.

Bavinck goes on to write that it is hard to carve a middle road between the two but it must be done.

The difficulty of including both of these components in preaching and keeping them in balance is recognized by every minister of the Word according to his capacity. 

In a healthy church there will be sermons or portions of sermons that exhort the members to examine themselves to see if they are in the faith and sermons or portions of sermons that build on the foundation of Jesus Christ. There will be the Gospel proper, “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ” and what I call the broad Gospel, “Walk worthy of your calling.” Finally, he notes that understanding the covenant allows a pastor to do both:

Congregational preaching ought never to omit the serious summons to faith and repentance. Proceeding on the basis of the covenant does not exempt the preacher from that, but rather it is precisely this that obligates him to issue such a summons…for no matter how inestimably great the blessings already are that God bestows upon us when from our birth we are included in the covenant, born in a Christian church to Christian parents, baptized with holy baptism and nurtured in a Christian family-all these blessings are still not enough. Each person is confronted with the obligation of personal, saving faith; only one who believes in the Son has eternal life… The preacher’s sermons should connect God’s work that has preceded, to the gifts and blessings He has bestowed in His covenant, in His Word, and in His baptism. His sermons should continue building upon the foundation God Himself has laid, but then should also continue warning of the need for self-examination, so that people do not deceive themselves for eternity. Biblical sermons seriously summon church members to faith and conversion both initially and continually, for only those who believe will be saved. 

How one applies Bavinck’s insight will vary from church to church and even from phase to phase of church life. In a large church with dozens of visitors each Sunday exhortations to examination may be more frequent.  A smaller body of believers where each member is known by the minister will mainly need discipleship.  The type of preaching will also vary from text to text. Some texts are more evangelistic and others less so. I would argue that most regular Sunday morning preaching should be discipleship based, Bavinck’s second type of preaching. But even in those situations the call to faith and trust in Christ should be regularly given. And sometimes when it is, a baptized Christian believes for the first time.

The Coming Division Between Christ and Family

For many generations a convert to Christianity in the West (Europe & America) did not have to sacrifice much. The reason was Western Christendom. Most of society was built on Christian laws and operated under a Christian ethic. If someone went to a revival meeting and got saved they went out into a world, that for the most part, approved of their conversion and the actions that flowed from it.  If a preacher called a man to come to Christ, that repentance rarely meant that the man would lose his family or job for believing in Jesus.

In the coming years this will change. Conversion to Christ in the West will require more sacrifice. In particular, we will find families divided. There will be other types of loss, such as jobs and money, but nothing compares to being rejected by our family. Losing family is a deep wound. New Christians will no longer find themselves in a world that basically approves of them and their actions. Instead they will find themselves in the position of many Muslims who when they choose Christ lose all. Two Muslim brothers who came to Jesus described it this way:

Faith [in Jesus] often means the total rejection of culture, ethnicity, family, and friends. To find heaven’s glory in Jesus Christ, we Caner brothers lost our father. (Islam Unveiled)

Another example is Rosaria Butterfield who was a lesbian professor at a major university when she came to Jesus. In the account of her conversion she notes that not only did she lose her friends, they felt betrayed by her. They put their trust in her. They counted on her to support them. When she came to Christ, they felt like she had stabbed them in the back. While this was not her biological family, the bonds she felt with these people were as strong as natural family bonds.

Stories like these will become more common as the years progress.  We will hear of sons being rejected by fathers and fathers rejected by sons. We will hear of children raised in homosexual homes converting to Christ and being rejected by their parents. We will hear of daughters being kicked out of homes for their faith in Christ. We will hear of Muslims rejecting family members for conversion, not in the Middle East, but here in America. We will hear of close knit groups who hate a member for leaving them and following Jesus. The possibilities are endless, but the probability of families, biological or otherwise, being divided by Christ is high.

How can the church prepare for this?

First, we must remind ourselves and tell those we evangelize that Jesus demands absolute loyalty. Family is not the highest good. Jesus is. You can gain your family and lose Jesus. You can hold to all sorts of wonderful family values, like the Mormons and the Muslims, and still burn in Hell. Jesus came to separate.

Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. And a person’s enemies will be those of his own household. Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me. And whoever does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. (Matthew 10:34-38)

Family is important, but it does not trump Jesus Christ.  If we give the impression that family is more important than Jesus people will not make the choice to follow Jesus with their whole heart. They will be divided. We must declare without apology, that if the choice is Jesus or family, Jesus must win.

Second, our churches must be a places where broken families come to be integrated into God’s eternal family of brothers and sisters. Single mothers, divorced folks, people recovering from sodomy and abortion, the abused, the abuser, etc. when they trust in Christ and are baptized should find a place in our churches to serve and grow. Widows must be cared for and orphans must be adopted. If our churches cannot or will not bring in these people then we are saying biological family trumps God’s family. That is a grievous sin and shows disloyalty to Jesus. Teaching this is not enough. Somehow, and it is not easy, we must create a tone, an atmosphere where broken families are welcome. Perhaps most important is to remember that we were broken (Titus 3:3) and outside of God’s family (Ephesians 4:14-22), but God in his mercy has adopted us and saved us.

Third, we must maintain strong families, but not idolize them. A good Biblical home is a wonderful witness of God’s grace to the watching world. We should teach and model what a good wife and husband looks like. We should teach parents to raise their children in the discipline and admonition of the Lord. We should encourage our young people to get married and have lots of children.  But all of this must be done, not as an end to itself, but as a way to glorified God and build his kingdom. If we build the family for the sake of the family then we have made the family an idol. And God destroys idols. But if we build our families so they might serve and build the church, including those who do not have families, then we are reflecting Biblical priorities.

Fourth, we should be grateful for the good relationships we have with non-Christian family members. For many, even though their family is not worshiping Jesus, they can still be friends. Of course, there is always a divide. No matter how much we love our family, if they do not trust in Christ there is chasm that cannot be crossed until they believe.  But God is kind. He gives common grace so we can enjoy their company and they our’s despite their lack of faith.

Finally, we should be thankful when our biological family is Christian. My whole family believes in the Lord Jesus Christ. He could have made me choose between Christ and my family as many Christians around the world have done. But he didn’t. God in his mercy has made my temporary, biological family part of my eternal, spiritual family.  The only proper response to this astonishing fact is gratitude.

Women Converts in Acts 16 & 17

Women play an important role in Acts 16 and 17. First you have Timothy’s mother in 16:1. Then Paul preaches to women in 16:13 and Lydia converts in 16:14. In 17:4 many (or not a few) leading women are converted. Later in 17:12 several “prominent/high standing” women believe. Finally, in 17:34 Damaris converts after Paul’s sermon on Mars Hill. 

What is really fascinating is that all of these women appear to be prominent. Timothy’s mother is married to a Gentile who did not believe. Lydia is the head of her household and appears to be a woman of some standing. Purple fabric was in high demand and expensive. So she was probably well known and wealthy. Paul uses the word “protos” meaning “first or chief” in 17:4 to describe the women converted there. This word is used in 13:50 of the chief men in Antioch. In 17:12 he uses a different word for the women meaning “elegant/beautiful,” “honorable,” “influential,” or “wealthy.” This same word is used in 13:50 to describe the women who drove Paul out of the Antioch of Pisidia.  So these women had enough influence to be a part of the “city council” that decided Paul had to go. Now here in 17:12 women like these being converted to Christ at Berea. And it appears that Damaris was sitting at Mars Hill with the philosophers. I am not sure what this all means, but it is interesting how the Christian faith was brought to these women and what their conversions meant for the early church. It also makes me wonder do our churches focus on evangelizing women enough? 

Some Further Thoughts on Evangelism

            Here are a few more thoughts that I had following Tom Short’s visit last week. 
1.      It is important to remember that most, if not all of the men, who preached in Acts were appointed by a church or other elders. The picture in Acts is not of lots of men just deciding to go preach in the open air. The men who preach in Acts, Peter, Paul, Philip, Stephen, Barnabas, Silas, Timothy, were appointed men who had been recognized as gifted and sent by a church. God does not expect that many men will do open air preaching. There are some gifted for this. These men should be trained and appointed to the task. We should support them with prayer, money, and if we have time accompanying them as they preach.
2.      I have made this point before, but it is worth repeating. There are not a lot of commands in the New Testament for the average Christian to go out and evangelize (Ephesians 6:19 might be one of those verses).  There is such an emphasis in churches on evangelism that we fail to look at the Biblical data. Here are some passages that talk about our relationships with non-Christians: Matthew 5:13-16, Colossians 4:5-6, I Thessalonians 1:6-10, 4:11-12, Peter 2:11-12, 3:1-6, 3:13-17.  These passages emphasize a holy life that is dedicated to Christ and a willingness to talk about God and Christ as the opportunity arises. I am not encouraging silence about Christ. But I am saying that for most of us evangelism will be done in the context of our daily living, not as we jump out of our daily lives to do something special. The danger is that our day to day living suffocates our desire to evangelize. We must work against this and look for ways in our daily lives to tell others about Christ.
3.      The raising of godly children is one of the most effective ways of discipleship.  A man who has several children would do better to raise those children in holiness than to spend every weekend evangelizing. Once his children are firmly planted in the Lord then he can extend his reach.
4.      Good discipleship is essential for good evangelism. It is not enough to reach the lost. We must make disciples.  That is why having a good church life, including good preaching, good fellowship, etc., is essential to the task of evangelism.
5.      Our evangelism must be motivated by love for Christ and love for the lost, not by guilt.
6.      The lifeblood of evangelism is prayer. We need to pray in a very deliberate fashion for those who do not know Christ. 

Observations from Street Preaching

Last week Tom Short, a man who preaches on college campuses around the country, spent two afternoons preaching at West Virginia University.  It was a great experience for Christ Church and gave us a good vision for evangelism. Here are some of my observations from watching Tom preach and from listening to him talk on Monday night.

Observations from Tom’s Preaching
1.      The Gospel is almost always a breaking into someone’s peaceful life. People do not like to be told that they are wrong. My sons observed how many people did not seem to care about something as important as their own salvation. This is true. Men and women do not want to believe that they headed for Hell. They think they are really good, moral people. When a preacher tells them they are not they tend to react with anger or apathy.
2.      The creation versus evolution debate is not going away. A vast majority of college students assume evolution to be true. This assumption shapes the way they think about the world, the people around them, the Bible, and Christians.
3.      Most non-Christians do not know what they are talking about when it comes to other religions. Very few of them actually know what Islam or Bhuddism teaches. There are exceptions. But most non-Christians have their beliefs formed by what they heard, not by actually investigating/researching a religion.
4.      Most non-Christians do not know what the Bible teaches. They might know a verse or a Bible story. But that is about all. Their knowledge of the Bible is weak. 
5.      Non-Christians love to attack the Bible. As Tom preached this was a constant theme in all the questions. How do we know the Bible is true? Why should we believe the Bible?
6.      The doctrine of Hell is also one of the most questioned and hated teachings of the Bible.
7.      It is interesting that Hell, evolution, and the authority of the Bible are three areas the Christian church is compromising on and it is also the areas where Church is under attack. It is odd that we are retreating from battles we should be fighting with vigor.

Points from Tom’s Teaching on Monday Night
1.      The WVU campus provides us with a unique opportunity. There are almost 30,000 students there. Many of them are unbelievers or backslidden Christians. We would be foolish at Christ Church to ignore this field that is right in front of us.
2.      Persistence is one of the keys to evangelism. This means persistence as individuals and as a church.
3.      It is always awkward when you bring up spiritual issues with people. It is never easy or normal. People don’t like to talk about these things. But often after you talk with them they are glad for the conversation.
4.      A godly home and marriage is one of the greatest apologetics in our world where divorce and disrespect are rampant.
5.      The greatest change he has seen in his thirty years of preaching is that people now see Christians as a threat. It used to be that non-Christians would have a live and let live mentality towards believers.  But now they see us as threat to progress. We are the ones who destroy human rights (homosexuality). We are the ones who hold back science with our views of creation. We are the ones who hold women down. So now many atheists are aggressively trying to stamp us out.
6.      It usually takes 5-7 conversations for someone to come to Christ. There is a long term commitment to seeing men and woman come to Christ.
7.      Those who have time, such as single men, should put those who are seeking Christ in contact with older men who do not have time to evangelize. I really liked this point and think our single men have done this well. Most of us with an 8-5 job, a wife, and children cannot and should not spend time at campus evangelizing.  But we can still have a role to play as someone comes to Christ.