Increasingly I am much encouraged by some of the
conversations that I am having with various Pentecostal pastors around the
nation. It is becoming more and more
common that I am finding men who are paying the price with discipline and
diligence to really dig into the Word so that their preaching has taken a
different direction. This direction
change is coming because of the challenges that we are facing in our culture
and the deep moral depravity that is assaulting the church. We also have to contend more and more with
the onward advancement of various world religions that are making inroads to
the United States. Our preaching has to
change to meet those challenges for we can no longer afford to simply preach to
the moment so that people get out of their seats and flutter about for a little
while to satisfy some shallow emotional need they need to feel better about.
Friday, October 30, 2015
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Isn't That Something?
I have been revisiting some of my journal scribblings
from the last four years or so and have found a variety of thoughts I had
written down. Some of those scribblings
had to do with little mental or spiritual stimulations that I thought I would
put on this blog. This post comes about
from three different entries that I have merged together. The first one was from Eugene Peterson’s very
fine memoir, The Pastor and the other
two were blog entries that Thom Rainer had written which dealt with pastoral
ministry. Peterson’s angle was that
pastors have fallen into the trap of being turned into church growth gurus and
it has cost them the priority of their own spiritual life of prayer, personal
Bible reading/study (you would be shocked how many pastors don’t read the Bible
on a regular basis), and the practice of spiritual disciplines which include
the previous two and a host of others. His
fear was that pastors are being turned into executive automatons who can drive
cattle about on a range but have lost the art of leading sheep through still
pastures. Rainer wrote about the
dilemmas pastors face in the church
which contribute to great dilemmas in the
soul of the pastor. The best way to
describe it would be to say that the little foxes have gained an entrance and
they are spoiling a harvest.
Monday, October 19, 2015
Only 30%
Several weeks ago I had a very thought provoking discussion
with my brother about Pentecostal preaching.
In 1992 my parents gave Mark a new Thompson Chain reference Bible for
Christmas. It wasn’t too long after that
he began to use this Bible as his primary Bible as his everyday carry. He used it for devotional matters, he used it
at Texas Bible College in the classroom, and he also used it to preach. One of the other things he did with this
Bible was underline every sermon he heard during a twenty-year period. After retiring this Bible in 2012, he
discovered something very interesting about this Bible. He went back and looked at all of the
Scriptures that he had underlined when he was listening to preachers. He noted that during that twenty-year time
period that he had heard approximately 3,500 messages. This came from a variety of places. Obviously the bulk of these came from the
local churches where he had attended during that twenty-year time period. There were other unique places where he had
listened to preaching. He had been in
multiple chapel services at TBC, he had gone to several of the larger
Pentecostal churches in the Houston area, and he had been to various
conferences although he had not attended as many as I have through the years.
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