Archives For preach

I’m excited about this Summer. Lord willing, it will be the first opportunity I’ve had to work on the teaching-end of an internship with a young man interested in dedicating his life to the work of an evangelist. Your prayers for our efforts at Laurel Canyon would be appreciated.

In light of this great opportunity, I’ve been thinking about resources that have helped me along the way. I want to highlight four books that fall nicely into four important categories:

  • The perspective of wisdom
  • The importance of character
  • The practical side of ministry
  • The craft of public speaking

I highly recommend all four books. If you’re just beginning the work of preaching, or even entertaining the possibility of that role of service in the future, get these books. If you’ve been preaching for several years, I’m confident these books would still be worth your time. If you know of a young man doing his best to grow in the work of an evangelist, these would make excellent gifts that could impact him for years to come.

I’m excited to pass along that One Stone Biblical Resources is running a special sale for InGodsImage.com readers. Don’t miss the limited-time DISCOUNT CODE at the end of this post.

Continue Reading...

Around the Web (3/13)

March 13, 2013 — 1 Comment

Around the Web


Why? Why do we do what we do when we come together as a church?

For more sermons, visit the Sermons archive.

What’s the “biggest” word in the Bible? I’d suggest to you that few are “bigger” than IF. We frequently couple this common two-letter word with another word—THEN—to communicate our personal goals and expectations of others.

  • If you clean your room, then I’ll take you to Dairy Queen.”
  • If you take a nap, then you can stay up later tonight.”
  • If we save this amount of money, then we’ll be able to go on vacation this summer.”
  • “If I can leave work on time, then I’ll meet you for dinner.”

What’s the “biggest” word in each of those sentences? IF.

The same point could be illustrated from all over God’s written communication to mankind. He has clearly expressed his expectations for us, many times using the simple word IF. Few examples are more succinct and powerful than the New Testament letter of 1 John. Did you know that John uses the simple “if… then” line of reasoning more than twenty times in the span of just five chapters? Check the majority of the examples out for yourself here.

We love to focus on the promises of God that so frequently follow the word THEN. Let’s just make sure we pay careful attention to the IF that forms the logical foundation of those promises. If we do not, then we have little reason for hope.

For more sermon outlines and recordings, be sure to visit the Sermons archive.

“God asks no man whether he will accept life. That is not the choice. You must take it. The only choice is how.” (Life Thoughts, Henry Ward Beecher)

In October 2010, I preached a series of sermons entitled, “What Happens After We Die?” Our theme verse for the month was David’s prayer in Psalm 39:4, “O LORD, make me know my end and what is the measure of my days; let me know how fleeting I am!”

In light of a month’s worth of sermons on the end of time and life after death, how would the Spirit  of God naturally and logically draw this series of lessons to a close?  2 Peter 3 is an excellent example of the practical, concluding points we all need to hear.

  1. God’s promises make life-changing impressions on sincere minds (2 Pet 3:1).
  2. Remembering divine predictions can shape our present thinking (2 Pet 3:2).
  3. There have always been, and will always be, scoffers (2 Pet 3:3-4).
  4. Nothing can withstand the raw power of God’s mighty word (2 Pet 3:5-7).
  5. God does not operate according to our time-table (2 Pet 3:8).
  6. God is being patient with humanity for a reason: that we would repent (2 Pet 3:9).
  7. The day of the Lord is going to come like a thief (2 Pet 3:10).
  8. Therefore, we ought to be people of holiness and godliness (2 Pet 3:11).
  9. The return of Jesus ought to be a consistent part of our prayers (2 Pet 3:12).
  10. While we are waiting, God has supplied everything we need to grow (2 Pet 3:15-18).

Other lessons in the “What Happens After We Die?” series of sermons include:

For more interactive outlines and mp3 recordings, be sure to visit the Sermons archive.

NOTE: Advertisements on the above player are randomly generated by the service provider and do not necessarily imply endorsement of the material advertised. Readers are always encouraged to apply the “Berean test” (Acts 17:11) to all that they see and hear.

I recently ran across a similar list of questions that Francis Chan asks himself before every opportunity to teach or preach.  Below is my (adapted) list of seven questions.

  1. Am I more concerned about what people will think of my message or what God thinks? (teach with fear, Acts 5:29)
  2. Do I genuinely care for these people? (teach with love, 1 Thes 2:7-8)
  3. Am I faithfully presenting this section of Scripture? (teach with accuracy, 2 Tim 4:2)
  4. Am I depending on the Holy Spirit’s power or my own cleverness? (teach with boldness, Heb 4:12)
  5. Have I applied this message to my own life? (teach with integrity, Phil 3:12-14)
  6. Am I aiming to draw attention to myself or to God? (teach with humility, 1 Cor 3:5-7)
  7. Do these people need this message? (teach with urgency, Acts 20:18-21)

Can you think of other questions that ought to be asked?

Some great words of encouragement below from Trevin Wax.

Disciple-makers know great joys.   We also know great heartaches.   Sometimes, it’s the people who have brought us the greatest joy that eventually cause us the greatest heartache.

Perhaps you’ve been in my shoes.   You led someone to Christ, and you faithfully sought to pour your life into them.   You discipled them to the best of your ability.   You welcomed them into your home.   You sought to live an exemplary life before them.

But after a period of time, they turned around and went back to their old life.   They left you and the church.

So you prayed for them.   You pleaded with them.   All to no avail.   They fell back into their former worldliness and disappeared.   And week after week, their absence shouts at you:

You failed them.

You mistook their initial enthusiasm for true conversion.

What kind of minister are you?   You couldn’t keep them on the narrow path.

See what happens when you open your heart and life to someone?

Eventually, God brings another person along for you to disciple.   But you find that this time it’s just a little harder to pour your life into them.   It’s harder to give your all when it comes to their growth and discipleship.   You don’t verbalize your thoughts, but your heart has them:

What’s the use of pouring your life into them if they wind up like the other guy?

What if they let you down too?

What if they are only here for a season?

The ache you feel for your earlier friend keeps you from fully engaging the next one the Lord has for you.

You are not alone. The apostle Paul once counted Demas as a fellow worker (Colossians 4.14; Philemon 24).   But in his last letter, he tells Timothy:

Do your best to come to me soon.   For Demas, in love with this present world, has deserted me and gone to Thessalonica… (2 Timothy 4.9-10)

It’s not hard to read between the lines and sense Paul’s sorrow.   He wants to see Timothy (at least  partly) because Demas has deserted him.

Of course, Paul’s biggest concern is that Demas’ soul is in peril.   His love for the world is a demonstration of his lack of love for God.   Make no mistake.   Paul is concerned for Demas’ soul and destiny.

But that’s not all that grieves the apostle.   Paul needs companionship, partnership, and encouragement.   So he tells Timothy to come to him soon.   Paul is saying, I need you, Timothy.   Demas is gone. In other words, It hurts.   Bad.

Perhaps you’ve discipled a Demas before.   If so, then you know the hurt that accompanies their desertion.   You are deeply disappointed by their decisions.   You can feel your spirit deflate whenever you think about where they are right now.   You may even question your effectiveness as a minister.

In that moment of grief, you’ve got two choices.   The first choice is to let your hurt turn into bitterness.   The root of bitterness will keep you from giving yourself to the next person God brings your way.   Bitterness constructs a wall around your heart in order to guard you from future hurt.   Go this direction and you will never have another Demas to deal with.   But you won’t ever raise up a Titus either.

The other choice is to stay grounded in the gospel, the only news that brings joy in the midst of pain.   That’s what Paul does.   He doesn’t turn bitter.   He doesn’t deny his sorrow.   Instead, he leans on other partners in the gospel and tells them, “I need you.”

Armed with faith in the power of the gospel and confidence that God’s plan cannot be thwarted, Paul moves forward.   He keeps making plans.   Bring the parchments.   Bring Mark too.   Bring my cloak. Hurt or no hurt, Paul maintains a steadfast joy in the sovereignty of God as he keeps on pursuing the kingdom and proclaiming the gospel.

Pray for your Demas.   Weep over him.   Beg God for him.   But don’t let Demas steal your joy.   Don’t let Demas rob you of your passion for discipling others.   God will continue to bring people your way.   The reason you can keep working is because the gospel never stops.

People like Demas will come and go.   Yes, the next prospect may turn out to be a Demas.   But it could be that the next one is a Timothy.

Monday.   The day after many of us poured out our hearts and souls in preaching to others…and the beginning of the countdown before we do it all over again in six days.

Psalm 62 has some valuable insight for preachers.   Many of us will labor physically and mentally throughout this week in preparation to encourage and challenge others on Sunday.   Our message will be that of David in Psalm 62:8:

________________Trust in him at all times, O people;
_____________________pour out your heart before him;
_____________________God is a refuge for us.

I find it interesting, however, what David wrote just before Psalm 62:8.   In Psalm 62:5-7, David preaches to his own soul.

________________For God alone, O my soul, wait in silence,
_____________________for my hope is from him.
________________He only is my rock and my salvation,
_____________________my fortress; I shall not be shaken.
________________On God rests my salvation and my glory;
_____________________my mighty rock, my refuge is God.

That’s a valuable lesson I need to remember each Monday morning—before I preach to others, I need to preach to my own soul!   I am called to live Psalm 62:5-7 before I preach Psalm 62:8.   I will be best prepared for Sunday if I make the best use of my time over the next six days:

  • Centering my focus on God above all others and all things.
  • Paying more attention to my soul than my body.
  • Taking the time to deliberately wait and meditate in silence.
  • Praising God as my only rock.
  • Rejoicing in the assurance of my salvation.
  • Fortifying the fortress of my faith in him.
  • Asking for his wisdom and strength so that I might not be shaken.
  • Expressing my ongoing and desperate need for his continued mercy and grace.
  • Seeking his glory above my own.
  • Determining to be steadfast and immovable as I build on the mighty rock.
  • Remembering that my flesh and my heart may fail, but God is my unfailing refuge.

Preaching to others is a frighteningly wonderful work of service.   “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!” (Romans 10:15).   If you are granted the opportunity to do so six days from today, give it your all!   But do more than simply prepare your material.   Prepare yourself to preach.   Before you preach to others, spend significant time in preaching to your own soul.

“It is easier to declaim like an orator against a thousand sins in others than to mortify one sin in ourselves; to be more industrious in our pulpits than in our closets; to preach twenty sermons to our people than one to our own hearts.” (John Flavel)

In John 2:13-17, we read:

The Passover of the Jews was at hand, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem.   In the temple he found those who were selling oxen and sheep and pigeons, and the money-changers sitting there.   And making a whip of cords, he drove them all out of the temple, with the sheep and oxen.   And he poured out the coins of the money-changers and overturned their tables.   And he told those who sold the pigeons, “Take these things away; do not make my Father’s house a house of trade.”   His disciples remembered that it was written, “Zeal for your house will consume me.”

What about you?   Do you feel any sense of that righteous zeal?   What has “consumed” you?

SERMON AUDIO :