The Importance of Preaching
Elder O. B. Mink Now In Glory First in order in pastoral care of the church is, “to
feed the church of God which He hath purchased with His own blood” (Acts
20:28). If the pastor fails in this principal, he has
failed in all, and the ill effect is spiritual retrogression. The pastor
being faced with the ever present and vital need of feeding the church, must
of necessity implement an activity mode that will assure him adequate study
for sermon preparation, lest he find himself, not only unprepared to preach
on Sunday, but ill prepared. The importance of preaching is clearly and repeatedly
stated in the scriptures. The pastor who builds his sermon on the word of
God, comes to the pulpit with a medium through which the Holy Spirit blesses
the church to grow in grace, and in the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ.
The maintenance of spiritual health in the church depends largely on the
pastor scheduling time for sermon preparation, and allowing as little infringement
on that time as possible. This is not to say, all pastoral time should be spent
in sermon preparation, certainly not, for there are many other important
and essential duties inherent in the pastoral office; duties such as, pastoral
counseling, visitation, and not least is the duty of over-seeing all corporate
functions of the church. However, if the pastor’s study time is unduly infringed
upon, the power of his preaching will be diminished, and the whole church
will suffer a lack of spiritual vitality, for the sermon is the chief instrument
which the Lord uses to feed the church. Intrusions into and infringements upon the pastor’s
study time are inevitable, but they should be of a serious nature, and not
something minor, or which could be settled by self initiative. In the majority
of cases, all that is needed to resolve the matter, is a little self incentive,
reasoning, and meekness. But when there are intrusions into the time zone
which the pastor has reserved for sermon preparation, it steals vital and
significant time which belongs, not merely to the pastor, but to the whole
church. And when the time of such an imposition is measured by the number
in attendance on Sunday morning, it will be seen as a wholesale robbery of
time, for every person in attendance suffers some measure of spiritual loss.
Generally, the pastor is a docile and patient person,
and takes the problems of his parishioners very seriously, but there is
nothing more important to the God called pastor than preaching Christ to
a needful and hungry church. In scripture delineation of pastoral functions,
preaching comes first. He is not to be a novice, but one who is “able
by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the gainsayers” (Titus
1:9). The pastor who does not reserve adequate study time
for sermon preparation, will in due season find himself with a spiritually
malnourished church, and a church thusly affected is not irreparable, but
stands in critical need of pastoral attention which is wanting in most pastors.
God has commanded His pastors to study (II Timothy 2:15), and
it follows that He has given them time for study. It is through this time
of study and prayer that God makes them equal to their calling, but when
this all important time is abused, either by the pastor or church members,
the church defeats itself and becomes weak and ineffectual. One sure way for
the church and the pastor to “redeem the time,” is to allocate it
according to scripture, and so doing, both pastor and church will be a mighty
power for God on earth.
<>(The
Baptist Herald - April, 1992)
|