Wednesday, April 8, 2015

What makes a preacher?


This past Sunday I attended services in a ‘Church’ building of a denomination I’d never visited before. I went not for the denomination, not for the beliefs of the people there but because my husband wanted to listen to the man giving the sermon that day.

This man wasn’t a preacher as the world defines a preacher. He hasn’t been to a seminary, doesn’t have any kind of degree in preaching, but he delivered the message that day…and I understand he does this on a fairly regular basis…so in my mind that makes him a preacher no matter what the world thinks.

And I must admit that this man delivered the best sermon I’ve ever had the privilege of listening to in person. He stuck mainly to Scripture and added very little else. There were moments where he stated his opinion, moments where he added this or that, but for the most part he used Scripture. And delivered a powerful message. One I found myself wishing I had a copy of so that I could listen to it again. And again.

It was a sermon that left me wanting to listen to him preach again…and again. That hasn’t happened very many times in my life. I’m impressed with very few preachers.

Not all that long ago we visited another church where we were left wondering what the point to the sermon was at the end of the service. That sermon was delivered by a preacher, one that…I assume…holds a certificate that says he’s a preacher.

Of the two sermons I much prefer the one by the man that truly isn’t a preacher by the world’s standards.

It leaves me wondering…what makes a man a preacher?

What exactly is a preacher? I’ve never questioned that before. Growing up in and out of ‘church’ buildings, having set through more Sunday services than I can count I had a good idea of what a preacher was long before I understood what he did. He was the man that got up in front of all those people, all dressed in their best clothes, and talked for a long time. At some point I began to understand that the talking he was doing was teaching from the Bible.

Of course, knowing what I know now about Scripture….I have to wonder how much of what was said in all those numerous services was truth as the Scriptures teach it.

Because all the lessons I learned in my years and years of Sunday services left me reeling and reevaluating once I could see the truths in Scripture.

And 99% of those preachers delivering those sermons held a certificate from a seminary that should have been a guarantee that that man…the one so many people entrust their souls to…is telling them straight.

I sometimes attend a ‘church’ that has over 1000 people in attendance every Sunday. The preacher isn’t an ordained minister. He’s never been to seminary. His sermons are hit and miss on the truth from Scripture. But he is better than those other preachers I grew up hearing. He does at least acknowledge that everything in the Bible is to be believed and applied to our lives. He does see and preach on some of the deeper truths. He uses words like sin and hell.

It’s a big improvement over the sermons of my childhood. Not that I remember any of them. It’s also an improvement over the sermons I heard as an adult in other ‘churches’. But they don’t even come close to the truth, to the value, to the edification of the sermon I heard delivered this past Sunday…or to the ones I occasionally listen to online.

I was once a member of a rather large ‘church’ that had a steadily dwindling congregation. In the five years I went to services there I saw them go through three different preachers. One of the main criteria for their preacher was whether or not he held a certificate from a seminary that lined up with their denominational beliefs. The other most important criteria….whether or not he would let the ‘church’ leadership tell him what to do.

These ordained ministers often delivered sermons that were written by someone else, and usually included a whole lot of personal stories that had little or nothing to do with the topic of the sermon.

Now…my faith wasn’t what it is now back then. I wasn’t drawn to Scripture the way I am now, didn’t see the truth’s in Scripture the way I do now. And I sure didn’t understand the full context of Scripture. But that meant I was easier to please back then. I most likely didn’t sit through a sermon picking apart everything the preacher said, listening for mistakes, cringing when he gets it wrong, and cross checking things in Scripture. Yes…I do that now. Back then I pretty much just took what the preacher said as truth.

After all he was the preacher. If I saw something different than he did, or understood it differently, it must mean I was wrong. Right?

So Sunday after Sunday I sat through those services, listening to that ordained minister preach, listened to him ‘lead his flock’ as so many call it. And…I warmed the pew. Because I got nothing out of those services.

I saw people on the pews taking notes, saw them nodding their heads and agreeing with everything that ordained minister said. They talked about what a great sermon it was.

And I got nothing out of it.

Week after week.

Month after month.

I went because that was what a Christian was supposed to do. Or so I thought. But I walked away each week knowing nothing more after that service than I had when I walked through the doors.

I was simply there.

Was it bad preaching? Maybe. Was it the Lord protecting one of his from false truths? Probably.

Whatever it was though…I know have to ask…what makes a preacher?

Can a man that’s never been to seminary preach as well or better than one that has?

Paul did. In Romans 1 Paul begins by saying…

Paul, a servant of Christ Jesus, called to be an apostle, set apart for the gospel of God…

In 1 Corinthians 1 he says…

Paul, called by the will of God to be an apostle of Christ Jesus…

In 2 Corinthians 1 he says…

Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God…

In Galatians he says…

Paul, an apostle—not from men nor through man, but through Jesus Christ and God the Father, who raised him from the dead

In Ephesians…

Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God

In Colossians…

Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God…

1 Timothy 1…

Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by command of God our Savior and of Christ Jesus our hope,

2 Timothy 1…

Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God according to the promise of the life that is in Christ Jesus,

In Titus 1…

Paul, a servant of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ, for the sake of the faith of God's elect and their knowledge of the truth, which accords with godliness, in hope of eternal life, which God, who never lies, promised before the ages beganand at the proper time manifested in his word through the preaching with which I have been entrusted by the command of God our Savior;

Paul was a bit different. He wasn’t a preacher but an apostle. He was appointed his job by Christ and equipped for it the same way. He was chosen by Christ to do a specific job. Many preachers today will claim that they were ‘called’ by God to preach.

. Each of the above verses, or partial verses, were Paul’s introduction of himself. Paul well understood that he was an apostle. He knew his job. He repeatedly introduced himself as…a servant of Christ…set apart for the gospel of God, called by the will of God to be an apostle, set apart by the command of God…. But my very favorite is how he put it in Galatians… Paul, an apostle—not from men nor through man, but through Jesus Christ and God the Father, who raised him from the dead.

He understood.

He got it.

He plainly stated… not from men nor through man… He got his orders, his ordainment, his certification, his right to preach and teach…not from men nor through man but through Jesus Christ and God the Father. He needed nothing else.

And neither did the church he led. They didn’t tell him he had to attend a certain kind of seminary to preach to them, they didn’t require a certification to let him teach them.

He taught. They listened. Because he was chosen by God, because he knew the truth of what he spoke and they wanted to hear it.

We still listen to Paul’s teachings today. Everytime we read anything in Scripture written by him…we listen. Everytime we listen to someone that uses a verse that Paul wrote…we learn from Paul.

Paul wrote 13 of the 27 books in the New Testament. That’s a lot of teaching. Teaching that covers a good part of where Christians today get their instructions on how to live as Christians.

And none of those Christians…at least none I’ve ever met…refuse to listen to Paul because he never went to seminary.

It’s enough to know that he was an apostle, that he walked with Christ, learned from Him, and therefore to know that when Paul says he was entrusted with the gospel to believe him and to listen to what he had to say and to learn from it.

It was enough then.

It’s enough now.

Paul did further explain his position in Titus 1 when he said…

Paul, a servant of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ, for the sake of the faith of God's elect and their knowledge of the truth, which accords with godliness, in hope of eternal life, which God, who never lies, promised before the ages beganand at the proper time manifested in his word through the preaching with which I have been entrusted by the command of God our Savior;

If there was any doubt about Paul’s position he cleared it up there. How much plainer could he have stated it than to say… a servant of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ, for the sake of the faith of God's elect and their knowledge of the truth? Paul, a servant of God, for the sake of the faith of God’s elect. He was a servant not for himself but for God’s elect, for their faith. And if that doesn’t say it plain enough he goes on to say… through the preaching with which I have been entrusted by the command of God.

Through the preaching.

He preached. By his own admission that was what he did. Yet…he never went to seminary, never held a certificate that said he had the right to preach. If ever there was a man that Christians should have refused to listen to it was Paul. After all he had once persecuted Christians to the point of death. And here he was, saved, a different man than he had been, preaching to the very people he had persecuted. And they listened.

We listen.

But if we go by the belief that a man must have completed seminary to be a preacher…then Paul wasn’t a preacher.

One of those three preachers that preached at the ‘church’ I attended years ago was fresh out of the seminary. He had never held a position of preacher before. And he made a big deal of seminary. He talked about it in his sermons. Often. He spoke of the classes he took, of the tests he had to pass, of the things they taught him.

The fact that he had been to seminary was what made him a preacher. In his eyes anyway. But it also was what made him a preacher in the eyes of most of the congregation. If he had stepped onto that stage without whatever certification he’d been issued by the seminary that ‘church’ would have quickly escorted him off and put him back in the congregation.

Because without whatever state or school issued paper a seminary issues…apparently a man can’t be a preacher.

It’s much the same way a couple can’t be married without a state issued marriage certificate.

In the eyes of many the paper makes the position.

But is that what makes a preacher? Can a man preach when he’s never been to seminary? Does the man standing on a street corner telling people about Jesus, reading from Scripture, have the right to call himself a preacher? Does someone’s sweet ole Uncle Joe have the right to say he preaches because he teaches from Scripture when he sits with his family or when he plays dominoes with the men at the restaurant? Is the man standing in the pulpit week after week a preacher if he hasn’t been to and completed seminary?

Not according to some?

As far as I’m concerned I don’t care what you call a person…preacher, teacher, friend, student…if they’re teaching the real truths of Scripture I want to hear them. The person delivering the message can be a preacher or not. I don’t care. I just want to hear what they’re teaching.

But not everyone shares my opinion.

And to some…

If a man isn’t ordained by a seminary…

Then he isn’t a preacher.

But does that make him a preacher? Is that the standard for which we determine whether or not a man knows the Truth? Whether or not he can share it in a way others understand? Or does simply knowing the truths of Scripture qualify him to preach if he so desires,

Or if the Lord desires him to?

 

 

 

 

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