And the elders of the Jews builded, and they prospered through the prophesying (preaching) of Haggai the prophet and Zechariah the son of Iddo. And they builded, and finished it, according to the commandment of the God of Israel, and according to the commandment of Cyrus, and Darius, and Artaxerxes king of Persia.
Ezra 6:14 (KJV)
Preaching that prospered the people.
I am intrigued by this concept.
How can I do the same?
How can I preach so that it is prosperous to those who hear it?
What can I do to make sure that my preaching is benefiting those in attendance?
I don’t know about others, but I have a goal not to waste anyone’s time with my preaching.
Folks work hard all week and have many obligations on their time. I certainly don’t want them to view time spent listening to my message as time that is wasted.
It seems to me a worthy goal to value other people’s time as much as I would like them to value mine.
Not only do I fear that I might waste their time, but I also fear that I would not connect with them. I’m concerned that somehow, even though I am preaching the truth, and even though I believe I have an understanding to share from the Lord, that yet, I am not able to communicate that understanding in a manner that listeners can receive it. I’ve come to recognize that my knowing their need and knowing the truth is simply not enough to communicate to everybody.
Some folks simply think differently than I do.
Some people have different values than I do.
Some attendees focus on things that I do not.
I fear that these genuine and real differences would hinder me from prosperous preaching.
Maybe this story will better illustrate my point.
“A woman in NYC walked into a bar waving a dollar bill and shouting, “Quiero Cambio.” No one knew what she was saying. One patron tried to calm her down, but in her excitement she poked him in the face. The police were called, and she was sent to Bellevue hospital, where she was sedated and spent the next few days.
When a Spanish-speaking social worker arrived, she huddled with the patient, and seconds later raced out the door to her car and drove furiously to the Bronx.
There, in an old tenement building, she found three children who had died of dehydration. Their mother was in the bar trying to get change to call a doctor. The children died because no one spoke their language.” (Dan Reeve, Shepherding the Poor, Beacon. May/June 2002)
When attempting prosperous preaching, that’s the lady that I’m concerned about.
Her need was genuine. In fact, she knew she had a need and she even knew what that need was.
Her desire was authentic. She left her house on her own. Of her own accord she ventured out looking for help. Her real desire had driven her to action.
Her need could have been supplied. Her need was not unrealistic. Her answer was readily available, and easy to supply.
Yet, desire, need, nor a ready-answer was enough to guarantee her satisfaction. What she really needed was someone who spoke her language. What she needed was someone who could communicate with her; someone who could understand her. Unfortunately, she didn’t find what she really needed. And her children perished.
As a preacher, a professed communicator, I am bothered by this story. I know that there are sinners in our world, in our neighborhoods, at our workplaces that are just as genuine, just as needy and just as desperate as this woman. I am convinced that there are people who really would like to find answers to their problems.
And as this Hispanic lady who ventured into the bar, I think about an unbeliever who would wander into a church where I happened to be ministering, and I fear that she would find similar circumstance.
I fear that a desperate soul would come to a church searching for relief, and instead find a culture that speaks an entirely different language. God forbid that a person would be crying out for help, and I am totally unable to understand his need.
I pray that people don’t feel so frustrated by their church experience that they lash-out. Not with a fist, but with an attitude that drives them away from the church.
Some might say….
“Well, she’s in the United States now. We speak English here. And if she had learned our language, then everything would have been fine……”
Without getting into all the politics of such a mindset, I wonder if we sometimes subconsciously adopt a similar attitude in the church.
“Hey, if you need salvation, learn to speak the language of the preacher, you’re in a Christian church now. We speak Christianese here.”
“And if you really want help, you’ll learn to understand our vernacular.”
I believe that prosperous preaching addresses people where they are, not from where I am. Prosperous preaching works hard to understand the language, thoughts, attitudes, & experiences of the one who doesn’t understand Christianity. We’ll not wait for them to understand us to find their answers, rather, we are intent on doing all we can to understand them.
I have spent my entire life in the church.
Pentecostalism is all that I know.
I was raised speaking this language.
As such, it is so easy for me to slip into wording, phrases and concepts in my speaking that readily speaks to saints, but would seem like a foreign language to a sinner. I feel like the more I use this ‘foreign’ language the more likely I am to alienate unbelievers.
Consider:
When leading a service, I encourage and direct the assembly to participate in the worship, but do the words of the choruses connect with all people, or do they more directly relate to saints?
I find it so easy to preach that God delivers from illicit sex & illegal drugs. And while this is true, are these the vices that all sinners are struggling with?
Do I also preach about deliverance from pride, anger, & depression?
I wonder what a sinner thinks when I say that God wants the “backslider” to come home?
What is a backslider? Is that some kind of skateboard trick?
What does the guest think when I address ‘sanctification’?
Sanctification? Is that like pasteurization?
I’ll not run through a list of nitpicking terms, however in sharing these, my intent is to provoke our thoughts concerning preaching.
Is my preaching truly prosperous to the people?
Wouldn’t it be a shame if a desperate person couldn’t relate to our message, could not understand our direction, and rather than hanging around, trying to learn the language, decided instead to go somewhere else, and even accept less truth, simply because it was shared in their own language?
God, help our preaching to be prosperous.