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Bring the Book! The Primacy of Preaching in Corporate Worship
Preached on July 19, 2009, by Eric Schumacher.
Topics: The Local Church Worship
© Eric M Schumacher – Delivered at the 2009 Tennessee Baptist Convention Music Ministry Leadership Conference
Session 2 of 4
[On August 14-15, I had the privilege of leading four breakout sessions at the Tennessee Baptist Convention Music Ministry Leadership Conference. In preparation, I preached these sermons at Northbrook Baptist Church. The manuscript below is what I used at the conference. The link to the audio is from my sermon at Northbrook.]
Audio available here.
What is Worship?
The word “worship” comes from the word “worthship.” It was originally a title given to a person who had worth or significance. It came to be used to describe the act of ascribing worth to a person.
At its simplest, to worship God is to declare and to display the worth of God. It is to speak and show what is glorious about God. And, the New Testament informs us that what is glorious about God is revealed supremely in the person and work of Jesus Christ.
In John 1:14, the Apostle John tells us that “the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.” Moses had asked to see God’s glory but could not. God hid him in the cleft of a rock and spoke. Jesus Christ has come revealing to us the worth of God.
Therefore, to declare what is excellent about God is to preach Christ. And, to show what is excellent about God is to show forth Christ.
This, I believe, is what Paul is getting at when he defines Christian worship in Romans 12:1-2:I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.Paul is essentially exhorting his readers to respond to the Gospel by displaying the excellencies of God in Christ by living lives that are conformed to the will of God.
Paul’s appeal to worship is “by the mercies of God.” That is, in light of the Gospel that he has just spent eleven chapters expounding, here is how believers are to live. And, had we more time to explore the book of Romans, we would see that being conformed to the will of God in our lives is simply being conformed into the image of Christ, living out the Gospel in every aspect of our lives.
From this, we can make our definition of worship more explicit to Christians:Christian worship is the response of the believer to the Gospel by presenting the whole self to God as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God.What is Corporate Worship?
Corporate Christian worship is the gathering together of God’s redeemed people to respond to the Gospel of Jesus Christ by presenting their whole selves to God as a living sacrifice, seeking by faith to be conformed into the image of Christ.
In corporate worship, the body of Christ presents itself as a living sacrifice. The local church gathers to hear the Gospel and to respond to the Gospel together with their whole selves (heart, soul, mind and strength) in the ways that God has proscribed in his word (preaching, reading Scripture, prayer, singing, observing the ordinances, etc.).
What is Primary in Corporate Worship?
That leads to the question at hand: What, if anything, is primary in the act of corporate Christian worship?
That question is important because our answer will determine the shape and substance of our worship gatherings. If we believe that singing, evangelism, or the ordinances are primary, our services will reflect that emphasis.
I believe that the Bible teaches that preaching is the primary act of corporate worship in the church—and therefore, we should embrace and encourage the primacy of preaching in our corporate worship.
What is Preaching?
Before we move, let me give a brief (and, for now, undefended) definition of Christian preaching:Christian preaching in corporate worship is the proclamation of the text of the Bible, through the explanation and application of its meaning, to the assembled followers of Christ, so that they might love God and glorify him with everything that they are as they are conformed into the image of Christ.Why is Preaching Primary in Corporate Worship?
There are a host of places we could go in the New Testament to defend this idea (John 4; 14; Hebrews; 1 Tim; 2 Tim; Acts). But, for our purposes, I’m focusing on Colossians 1:24-29 because I think that it touches upon most of the reasons that preaching is so important.
From this passage, I want to make several observations about the place of preaching in Paul’s ministry. Some of these points will deal with the primacy of preaching and others will show that preaching is itself an act of worship. When taken together, these observations lead to the conclusion that preaching is both an act of worship and primary in corporate Christian worship.
1) Preaching was primary in the ministry of the Apostle Paul, who called for it to be primary in the life of the local church.
In verse 25, Paul says that God has given him a “stewardship” and of which he became a servant (minister). This ministry had one primary purpose—“to make the word of God fully known,” (literally, to “fulfill the word of God”).
So, primary in Paul’s ministry was the preaching of the Gospel. Christ sent Paul to preach the Gospel (1 Cor 1:17). Even as the word of the Lord was a burning fire in Jeremiah's bones, the preaching of the Gospel was a necessity for Paul, he was compelled to do it (Jer 20:9; 1 Cor 9:16; Acts 20:24).
And this was not merely evangelistic preaching. This was preaching “for the sake of his body, that is, the church.” Paul preached to believers so that he could “present everyone mature in Christ” (28). In both evangelism and discipleship, preaching was primary in Paul’s ministry.
This is not surprising, since preaching was primary in the ministry of Moses and the prophets, of Jesus’ public and private ministry, of the Apostles in the book of Acts and in the life of the early church.
Preaching and Preachers
Paul insisted that preaching be primary in the ministry of pastors. Timothy is to “devote [himself] to the public reading of Scripture, to exhortation, to teaching” (1 Tim 4:11-13). He is to present himself to God “as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth” (2 Tim 2:15). Paul writes solemnly in 2 Timothy 4:1-2:I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by his appearing and his kingdom: preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching.To preach is to “herald.” It is to stand up and declare with authority, “Hear ye! Hear ye! Thus says the King!” and then to explain what the King’s declaration says and means for the lives of the people.
Paul commands Titus (Titus 2:15) to “declare these things; exhort and rebuke with all authority. Let no one disregard you.”
Paul insists that Timothy and Titus train and appoint other men in this task. Paul tells Timothy to take what he had heard from him and to “entrust” it “to faithful men who will be able to teach others also” (2 Tim 2:2). And Paul left Titus in Crete to “appoint elders” who would be “God’s steward[s]” (Titus 1:5-7). As stewards, pastors then follow in Paul’s responsibility to “make the word of God fully known.”
Preaching, then, continues to be primary in the ministry of pastors. And, if preaching is central to the ministry of a church’s overseers, we can expect it to be central to the life of the church.
2) Preaching creates, sustains and defines the people of God.
In his introduction, Paul described how the Colossians became “saints and faithful brothers in Christ.” It was through Epaphras preaching “the grace of God in truth” (1:5-7). The preaching of the Gospel made them God’s people.
Remaining in that faith is the defining characteristic of God’s people. They are reconciled to God through Christ’s death and resurrection (the message preached), “if indeed you continue in the faith, stable and steadfast, not shifting from the hope of the gospel that you heard” (21-23).
This was the case throughout the Old Testament. The universe was created and is sustained by the Word of God’s power. Moses, the Psalms, and the Prophets all declared that God’s people had their life in the God’s Word (Dt 32:47; Ps 119; Isaiah 55).
Who can forget Ezekiel 37, where the Lord illustrated through the preaching of the prophet in the Valley of Dry Bones how he would redeem his people.
Jesus claimed (John 5:24), “…whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life.”
Throughout the New Testament, we find that God saves people through his Word. The Ephesians were sealed in Christ, when they “heard the word of truth” (Eph 1:13). Peter told his readers that they were “born again…through the living and abiding word of God,” which is the Gospel (1 Pet 1:23-25). And James says that “[the Father] brought us forth by the word of truth” (James 1:18).
Furthermore, God normally works to save people through the preached Word. Paul writes that “it pleased God through the folly of what we preach to save those who believe” (1 Cor 1:21). That is why Paul was “eager to preach the gospel to you also who are in Rome.” He was convinced that the Gospel “is the power of God for salvation” (Rom 1:15-16). Apart from the preaching of the Gospel, those who had not heard of Christ could not be saved, for “faith comes through hearing and hearing through the word of Christ” (Romans 10:14-17).
This is a startling claim when it is considered. Paul is declaring that the means God uses to save people is preaching. A fallen, sinful man speaking and heralding the Word of God is the instrument that God uses to call the dead to life.
Sustained and Defined
True Christians are also sustained and defined by the preaching of the Word.
In verses 22-23, Paul states that the Colossians have been reconciled to God in Christ, “if indeed you continue in the faith, stable and steadfast, not shifting from the hope of the gospel that you heard.” Paul writes as though he fully expects them to remain in Gospel. Nevertheless, we are reminded that the people of Jesus Christ remain in his word.
Jesus taught as much. His sheep hear his voice and follow him (John 10:27). Thus a people who refused to listen to his voice are those who are not his sheep. Jesus said (John 8:31), “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples.” In John 14-15, Jesus repeatedly emphasizes that his disciples are those who remain in his word.
Apart from the preaching of the Word of God, God’s people do not exist. Therefore, the preaching of God’s Word is primary in the creation and on-going existence of the church.
3) The preaching of God’s Word is God speaking.
In verse 25, Paul says that what he proclaimed and made fully know was “the word of God.” Paul’s message did not originate with Paul. He proclaimed God’s word.
That is the task of every preacher—to make known what God has said. And that is what the preacher’s word is when the message is faithfully proclaimed. Paul gave thanks for the Thessalonians because when they heard Paul preach, they recognized it as God’s word:1 Thessalonians 2:13 And we also thank God constantly for this, that when you received the word of God, which you heard from us, you accepted it not as the word of men but as what it really is, the word of God, which is at work in you believers.In one sense, Paul’s preaching was unique. He was an apostle—hand-picked by the Risen Lord Jesus Christ to be his authorized representative. The preacher today is not an apostle. Nevertheless, the one who preaches the Word of God is to preach “with all authority” (Titus 2:15) because the content of his preaching is the authoritative Word of God.
The content of preaching is not to be the invention of the preacher. It is the careful explanation of what the inspired, authoritative, written Word of God says. And, by way of extension, so far as what the preacher proclaims is what is taught and contained in the Word of God, then he is proclaiming God’s truth, God’s word.
Worship
It is here that we can stop and meditate on the fact that preaching is primary in Christian worship.
First, how could we assign a higher place to anything else than God speaking? If the sermon is the point at which we hear the voice of God speaking to his people, what more could we long for, short of the personal presence of our Lord himself?
Second, when you value something, you demonstrate its worth by desiring and seeking to have it out. When you value a person, you demonstrate their value by focusing your attention on them. When we turn to the sermon, we come worshipping. We come expecting and desiring and longing for God to speak. It is an act of worship to sit and desire God to speak.
More than our desire to speak in song or in prayer or in confession of our faith, we desire God to speak to us. That is an act of worship. As Al Mohler writes:Worship is not something we do before we settle down for the word of God, it is the act through which the people of God direct all their attentiveness to hearing the one true and living God speak to his people and receive their praises. God is most beautifully praised when his people hear his word, love his word, and obey his word.A preoccupation with ourselves, with us speaking and doing, betrays a love for self. (Is it possible to come to church because I love me, and not God?)
We live in self-absorbed, narcissistic culture. Preaching is a counter-cultural act in which the congregation reverently pauses and humbly confesses, “What we need most is not to speak. What we need most is to hear. Our ideas are not supreme. God’s ideas are truth and life.” That is what the act of listening to a sermon is—a humble demonstration of the worth of God. It is worship.
This means that the sermon should be approached with great reverence on the part of the preacher and the congregation. The congregation should approach the sermon with hearts and minds ready to receive, obey and realign with God’s word. The preacher should come reverently with a readiness to deal honestly with the text; to deal reverently with God’s word, not flippantly, dismissively or with disrespect.
4) God dwells in and with his people through his Word.
In verse 27, Paul writes that what he makes known is the mystery of “Christ in you, the hope of glory.” Paul proclaimed the glorious message that God would dwell within his people, within all believers, directly and personally.
This is what Jesus promised in John 14, where he says that the Spirit of truth “will be in you” and that he and the Father “will come…and make [their] home” in the believer. The Triune God of the Bible now dwells within his people as the guarantee of the hope of glory that awaits them in the future.
But that raises the question of how God dwells in the midst of his people. The Bible does not give us a metaphysical explanation of in-dwelling. However, the Bible does make a strong connection between the word of God and the presence of God.
In the beginning of John’s Gospel, Jesus Christ is introduced as “the Word”—“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God” (John 1:1). And it is the Word that “became flesh and dwelt among us.” God dwells with us through the incarnate Word.
In John 14-15, Jesus makes repeated connections between his disciples abiding in his Word and his presence amongst them:John 14:21 Whoever has my commandments and keeps them, he it is who loves me. And he who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him and manifest myself to him.Paul makes the same connections. Later in this letter to the Colossians, in Colossians 3:16 and Ephesians 5:18-20, which we will examine in the next session. For now, it is worth noting that the main difference in these parallel passages about singing is the central command.
John 14:23 If anyone loves me, he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him.
All the elements of those two verses are the same, as regards addressing each other in songs and having thankful hearts. The only thing that changes is that instead of writing, “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another,” Paul writes, “be filled with the Spirit.” One can draw the conclusion that being filled with the Spirit is closing linked to, if not the same as letting the word of Christ dwell in you.
Scripture seems to teach that the primary way the Spirit speaks to God’s people, comforts God’s people, guides and directs God’s people, transforms the minds of God’s people, and conforms God’s people into the image of Christ—is through the external, written, Spirit-inspired words of Scripture.
Worship
The application that we should take away from this is that Christ is present among his people through the preaching and teaching of his Word. And, where his word is absent, Christ is absent.
How is this truth related to worship? If worship is the acknowledgement and display of the worth of God, then we show God’s worth through both our desire for him to be with us and our enjoyment of his presence.
Do you desire the presence of God? A.W. Tozer once lamented:It is now common practice in most evangelical churches to offer the people, especially the young people, a maximum of entertainment and a minimum of serious instruction. It is scarcely possible in most places to get anyone to attend meeting where the only attraction is God. One can only conclude that God’s professed children are bored with Him, for they must be wooed to meeting with a stick of striped candy in the form of religious movies, games and refreshments.The presence of God should be the primary attraction in every local congregation. Would you attend a meeting where the only attraction is God? That is the heart of Christian worship—to focus on the glory of God and conform our lives to reflect its worth.
The greatest thing that could be said about any church is that it is a congregation amongst which God dwells. But, this cannot be said about a church where the Bible is not faithfully preached. For it is only amongst those who abide in Christ’s Word that Christ promises to come and dwell.
If we are a people who worship God, who desire God to be present among us, then we must be a people who desire to hear God’s Word read, taught and preached to us—for in and through this the presence of God is mediated.
5) Preaching most clearly puts on display the redemptive work of God in Jesus Christ.
Paul states that he preaches in order to “make the word of God fully known.” And again, that word is “Christ in you, the hope of glory.” In verse 28, Paul summarizes the content of his preaching—“Him we proclaim.” In Colossians 2:2, God’s mystery is “Christ.”
The message that is preached is simply Christ. And, what a message it is! If it does not excite you, you are not a Christian!
As Paul writes in Colossians 2:3, “all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge” are hidden in Christ. When Paul preaches Christ, he preaches him as a treasure-chest full of the riches of God.
When Paul preaches Christ, he preaches him as “supreme.” In Colossians 1:15-20, Christ is the image of the invisible God. Christ is the creator of all things in heaven and on earth. Christ is before all things. Christ holds all things together. Christ is the head of the church. Christ is the firstborn from the dead. In Christ the fullness of God was present, reconciling the world to himself, making peace by the blood of the cross.
When Paul preached, everything that he proclaimed was Christ. He told the Corinthians, “For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified” (1 Corinthians 2:2). And yet, Paul could tell the Ephesian elders that he proclaimed “the whole counsel of God” (Acts 20:27). That is not a contradiction to say that he proclaimed “the whole counsel of God” and yet knew nothing “except Jesus Christ and him crucified.”
That is because Paul understood that all of God’s purposes and plans find their fulfillment in the person and work of Jesus Christ. All of God’s promises are “yes and Amen” in Christ. Everything in all of Scripture had pointed forward to Jesus Christ—the Son of God in the flesh, living a perfect and sinless life of obedience and worship unto to the Father, to lay down his life on the cross as a substitutionary sacrifice to atone for sin and redeem him people, to rise from the dead, to ascend into heaven and be exalted to the right hand of God from where he would pour out the promised Holy Spirit into all who would repent and believe, and to come again to rule forever. Everything once written pointed to this. And everything that Paul preached flowed out of it.
Worship
What does this point have to do with worship? It means that preaching puts on display—in a clear and compelling way as no other act can—the most beautiful thing imaginable, which is Christ. Preaching offers to the Christian listener that which he desires more than anything else in all the world—God in Christ. Preaching holds up the jewel of the Gospel and turns it this way and that so that every facet of it may shine forth with all its splendor.
It is an act of worship for the preacher to hold out the beauty of God in the Gospel—and to rejoice over it as he does.
And, it is an act of worship for the congregation to come desiring to see Christ lifted up and held forth in all his splendor.
Expository Worship
Of course, this means that Christian preaching must be a certain kind of preaching. It must be careful, expository preaching that explains the meaning of passage in the context of the Bible. The preacher must understand how all of Scripture fits together, so that he can show forth the beauty of Christ from every passage of Scripture, which is how Christ (Luke 24:27) and the Apostles preached.
6) Preaching is the primary means for presenting Christians “mature in Christ.”
In verse 28, this is Paul’s goal in preaching, to “present everyone mature in Christ.” It is through the preaching of the Word of God that believers grow into full maturity.
Jesus prayed in John 17:17, “Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth.” And Paul told Timothy (2 Timothy 3:16-17) that “all Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work.”
Worship?
But what does this have to do with worship?
First of all, it is an act of worship to live a life conformed to the image of Christ, which is what God does through preaching.
As we saw earlier, in Romans 12:1-2, Paul teaches that our act of worship is responding to the Gospel by presenting the whole self to God as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God. This is done by being conformed not to the world but to the image of Christ, which takes place through the renewal of the mind so that we know what God desires. Preaching is the primary means that God uses in the corporate gathering to renew the mind.
But, someone might argue that preaching is merely a means to worship, not an act of worship. But, this is a wrong conclusion.
The desire to present yourself or to present another as a living sacrifice to God is itself an acknowledgment of God’s worth, an act of worship. It is an act of worship to labor to conform another to God’s will, which is what preaching is. It is an act of worship to desire and strive to be a living sacrifice, which is what listening to preaching is.
As we seek to mature others in Christ through preaching or as we seek to be mature through the listening to preaching, we are acknowledging the worth of God. We are worshiping.
7) Preaching involves authority.
In verse 28, Paul says that his preaching involves “warning everyone” or “admonishing every man.”
Admonishing has to do with exhortation, with getting in a person’s face and spelling out the implications that the message has for their life. It involves rebuking sin and calling for repentance.
Paul emphasized this aspect of preaching in instructions to Timothy and Titus:2 Timothy 4:1-4 …preach the word…reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching.Likewise, Paul also says that his preaching includes “teaching everyone with all wisdom.” Teaching involves instruction, declaring that this is true and this is not true. It involves proclaiming that there is a right way to live and a wrong way to live. Paul emphasized this aspect of preaching (1 Tim 4:11-13).
Titus 2:15 Declare these things; exhort and rebuke with all authority. Let no one disregard you.
Both admonishment and teaching imply that the message has authority over the receiver. Giving admonishment and teaching requires that the preacher recognize God as the one who has all authority. It requires recognizing that God has authority over him as he preaches and over his audience who listens.
Receiving admonishment and instruction also requires that the audience, the listener, recognize that God has authority over him and is to be heard and obeyed.
Authority and Worship
What do admonishing, teaching and authority have to do with worship?
Authority is not popular. Admonishment is not comfortable. People get upset and offended when they are told what to do, especially when they are told that they are in the wrong.
Therefore, preaching requires that the preacher worship—that he recognize and proclaim the supreme worth of God, that God is to be valued and respected more than his audience. It requires that values God over man, which is an act of worship.
Likewise, it requires humility on the part of the listener to receive admonishment and teaching. The one listening to the sermon worships God by confessing that God is to be valued over himself. A congregation is worshipping when it honors the authority of the Word of God and understands that God is speaking to them through the proclamation of God’s Word.
8) Preaching displays and rests in the power (and wisdom) of God in Christ.
In verse 29, Paul describes his preaching ministry in an odd way. He says that he pursues the maturity of every believer through “toil” (or, labor). He describes it as a struggle. And yet, Paul says that he struggles “with all his energy that he powerfully works within me.”
In short, preaching is hard work. It is difficult. It is discouraging. It is disheartening. It brings the preacher to the end of himself. The task of preaching makes the preacher painfully aware that he a jar of clay, weak, fragile and powerless in himself.
In 2 Corinthians 2:16, Paul asks, “Who is sufficient for these things?” The implied answer is that no one is sufficient, apart from the grace of God. (Preaching at this conference reminds me of my insufficiencies! I’m an unknown, young pastor from Iowa!)
Likewise, in 1 Corinthians, Paul says that his preaching was not “with lofty speech or wisdom.” In fact, his preaching of a crucified Messiah was weakness in the eyes of the Jews and foolishness in the eyes of the Gentiles.
But “God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong.” God chooses to work through weak, powerless, foolish things, “so that no human being might boast in the presence of God.”
God makes the ministry of preaching a ministry that no man can accomplish through his own strength, so that it will be obvious to both the preacher and his audience that it is God’s power at work.
Paul knows that the fulfillment of his ministry, both in the act of preaching and the results, are “his energy that he powerfully works within me.”
And so, preaching is an act of worship, when the preacher humbly preaches the word, in season and out of season, trusting that God will empower and uphold him.
9) Preaching involves a high cost—sufferings, afflictions, toil and struggling.
The mention of “toil” and “struggling” in verse 29 takes our minds back to verse 24, where Paul writes of his “sufferings” and his “afflictions.” Paul says that he “fills up what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions.” This does not mean that Paul adds to the atoning value of Christ’s death on the cross. What he means is that the message of Christ’s afflictions must be spread and proclaimed through messengers who suffer as Christ did.
The one who would be Christ’s ambassador will look like Christ. The messenger looks like the message. Preaching the Gospel requires and involves great suffering.
Paul emphasized this repeatedly in 2 Timothy, telling Timothy:2 Timothy 1:8 Therefore do not be ashamed of the testimony about our Lord, nor of me his prisoner, but share in suffering for the gospel by the power of God...Paul wrote this as he himself prepared to die for the Gospel.
2 Timothy 2:3 Share in suffering as a good soldier of Christ Jesus.
2 Timothy 4:5 As for you, always be sober-minded, endure suffering, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry.
The blood of martyrs has been the seed of the church. The Gospel has always gone forth through God’s persecuted people and suffering servants. The preacher whose ministry is absent of suffering is a minister whose ministry is absent of Christ.
This is worship because…
The suffering and hardship involved in preaching make it an act of worship because it displays the high worth of God. The willingness the gather to engage in this task when it can and does cost both the preacher and the listener their lives, demonstrates that the worth of God is greater than the value of one’s own life.
Every time that a congregation gathers to submit itself to the word of God and a preacher ascends the pulpit to declare the Word of God, a question is present: What do we value most? Do we value the approval of the world, comfort and safety? Or do we value the person, work and will of God revealed in Jesus Christ?
The willingness to suffer for preaching proves that the preacher and the congregation believe everything we’ve seen already—that God’s word is the source of our life and sustains it; that God is present with his people and speaks to them through his word; that God’s word will conform us into God’s image and has authority over us.
Applications
If all this is true, then both the pastor and the congregation must insist that the first priority of pastoral ministry be the preaching of the Word—and insist that it be honored as such.
Both the congregation and the pastor should be careful to remove any obstacle that would prevent the preacher from given adequate attention to the preaching of the Word—for therein lies the life of the congregation and their enjoyment of the presence of God.
Both the congregation and the pastor should give adequate preparation to the preaching of the Word. The preacher should spend his time carefully meditating on the Word of God and preparing to make it plain to the congregation. The Christian should get plenty of rest on the night before, examine his heart, focus his mind, and treat preaching as an opportunity to hear God and experience the presence of Christ.
The congregation should be like the people in Ezra’s day and demand of the preacher, “Bring us the Book!” because the greatest thing that we could ever have is God in our midst speaking to us.


