The story
is told of a congregation that had long been known for teaching the
truth. However, this congregation got a new preacher, and within a
couple of years had descended into total and fatal error. The previous
preacher had been there for three decades, and the faithful respected
him for preaching nothing but the truth. Everybody wondered, “What
happened?”, “How did this happen?” One person, who knew the congregation
well, explained it this way: “The previous preacher told them the truth
all those years. What he didn’t tell them was what wasn’t the truth.” By
not being warned against specific error, the congregation was left an
essentially untaught congregation, and an easy target for a change agent
seeking to take over a church.
This story
has unfortunately been repeated countless times with slight variations.
Elders have demanded the truth be taught from their pulpits, at the same
time telling preachers, “Don’t preach against that error—it’s not a
problem here.” So when that problem finally arrives, no one is prepared
for it. “Conservative” congregations are too often what one writer
described, “Conservative in an ignorant, non-polemic,
sweetness-and-light kind of way, which is just meat for the wolves.”
“No” is not
a very popular thing to say, and not a pleasant thing to hear. In
today’s pluralistic “no one way is better than another” mind-set, even
people who nod their head aggressively to the firm “yeses” of the Gospel
cringe whenever they hear the “noes.”
The
negative plays a crucial role in preaching. Two-thirds of the Lord’s
commission to Jeremiah was negative
(Jer. 1:10).
Gospel preachers are charged to “reprove, rebuke, exhort,” again,
two-thirds negative
(2 Tim. 4:2).
Faithful Gospel preachers preach the “noes.”
A common
compliment given preachers is, “I’ve never heard him preach error.” But
has he addressed the marriage, divorce, and remarriage issues that
ensnare so many brethren today? Has he preached against “social”
drinking and immodest attire? Has he preached against liberalism? Has he
addressed any of the fellowship issues the church faces today?
One cannot
preach the truth without preaching against error. One cannot live
righteously without being warned against sin. A congregation cannot long
remain faithful without deliberately avoiding the missteps of the
faithless.
Let us
never be afraid or ashamed to preach God’s “noes.”
Other
Articles
A Builder or a Wrecker?
2 John 9
- An Abused Passage
2 Peter 3 and New
Creation Theology
A Leadership
Crisis
Changing the Mission of the Church
Placing Membership
A Healthy Church
For Past Auburn Beacons go to:
www.aubeacon.com/Bulletins.htm
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