Thursday, March 26, 2026
The Pulpit
"We had another scolding, as usual!" We will
not repeat more, save to say that if people
should not talk publicly in that way, nei
ther should we preachers provide the temp
tation for them to do so.
It is true that the man of God must "re
prove, rebuke, exhort," but that is only
part of the apostolic admonition. These
things are to be done "with all longsuffer-
ing and doctrine" (2 Tim. 4:2). In the
R.S.V. the words are rendered "be unfail
ing in patience and in teaching."
"Not a Throne"
The pulpit is not a place from which
the minister dispenses orders and inces
santly reproves both the faithful and the
unfaithful. If he would fill his sermons
with the "teaching ("didache")" of Christ,
the reproof would go silently home to the
heart of the hearer through the compell
ing power of truth. Cracking the whip,
haranguing the people, denunciatory
speech aimed at everything and everybody,
cheapens the pulpit and disgusts the peo
ple. It is a poverty-stricken pulpit where
the preacher's only weapon is a whip.
These habits can be cured if a man will
think, study, and preach the great and posi
tive themes of the Word of God, of which
the Lord Jesus Christ is the beginning and
the end.
Thomas Chalmers (1780-1847), Scottish
preacher and theologian, was the brilliant
pastor of a Scottish church when he was
only twenty-three. His small congregation
loved him, but could not understand why,
after a hard week's work, they came to
church only to hear the marvelous young
preacher thundering away against all kinds
of sins as though the members had spent
the week in open shame. This went on
from 1803 to 1811, when a sudden change
came.
Chalmers ceased to thunder against the grosser
crimes and against the iniquities of Napoleon, but
every day he had something fresh to say about the
love of God, about the cross o£ Christ, and about
the way o£ salvation.1
Chalmers' explanation was that in 1811
he was converted after eight years of what
has been called "whiplash preaching." He
carried with him into a wider ministry of
preaching, teaching, and writing the les
sons thus learned among the humble Scot
tish cottagers, where the last four years of
his preaching produced many a trophy of
redeeming grace.
John Bunyan (1628-1688) was once a
"whiplash" preacher, and says:
THE MINISTRYI went for the space of two years crying out against
men's sins and their fearful state because of them.
After which the Lord came in upon my own soul
with peace and comfort through Christ. He gave me
many sweet discoveries of blessed grace through
Him. Wherefore now I altered my preaching and
did much labour to hold forth Christ in all His of
fices, relations and' benefits unto the world. After
this God led me into something of the mystery of
the union with Christ.2
We have long had before us such ad
monition as the following:
It is natural for some to be sharp and dictatorial,
to lord it over God's heritage; and because of the
manifestation of these attributes, precious souls
have been lost to the cause.3
Perhaps some of us need to drop the
whip, and, abasing ourselves at the foot of
the cross, learn anew that love is Christ's
most potent weapon, that truth as it is in
Him is the great sanctifier of the soul,* and
the Holy Spirit the greatest corrector of
wrong 5 and the one guide into all truth.6
No! The pulpit is "not a throne"!
There is no denying that some pages in
Christian history reveal certain preachers as
setting themselves up as the last word on
every question under the sun even those
that have no legitimate place in God's pul
pit.
"Not a Judgment Bar"
The pulpit is not a judgment bar before
which any and every question of human
controversy can be decided. Failure to
grasp this will find the preacher in deep
water. He does not know everything and
is not expected to. His textbook, the Bible,
does not answer all human problems. It is
a textbook of the science of salvation, and
not a vade mecum to every question under
the sun.
How often preachers have allowed them
selves to be drawn into political contro
versy to the detriment of their success as
pastors and evangelists! Christian workers
of all classes should not be drawn "into
debate or controversy on political or other
questions." 7 To counsel and advise on
great moral issues before the public is one
thing; to press a certain solution dogmat
ically and publicly is quite another.
The pulpit must of necessity be a place
where controversial issues are dealt with.
In a certain sense the main issues of Chris
tianity are controversial. Sin, atonement,
redemption, the deity and nature of Christ,
the inspiration of Scripture, the eschatology
NOVEMBER, 1961
of Scripture these are all issues from
which we must not, dare not, shrink. Here
is a warning word from the famous W. H.
Griffith Thomas:
We have to take care that we are not mere con
troversialists, for this type of man is one of the
most unlovely, unspiritual, and objectionable of
beings. We must not wage war for the love of it, but
if we find it necessary to wage it, we must do so in
love.8
In the very nature of our position Ad-
ventist preachers, with an unpopular mes
sage, can easily become denunciatory, con
troversial, and condemnatory. So many
things contrary to God's Word have to be
opposed, and the faith once for all
delivered to the saints must be defended
and commended. We have to preach so
that the arrows of the Word reach human
hearts, and it must be done after the divine
pattern in Christ:
Every time He addressed the people, whether His
audience was large or small, His words took saving
effect upon the soul o£ some one. No message that
fell from His lips was lost. Every word He spoke
placed a new responsibility upon those who heard.
And to-day the ministers who in sincerity are giv
ing the last message of mercy to the world, rely
ing on God for strength, need not fear that their ef
forts will be in vain.8
It is possible to make God's pulpit heav
en's trysting place with needy sinners, and
not a judgment bar that metes out nought
but condemnation.
"Not a Theatrical Stage"
Under the pressure of filling the church,
preachers have sometimes resorted to novel
expedients. The preacher who advertised
"How a Man Sinned by Having His Hair
Cut" had a novel title by which to intro
duce Samson; but was it dignified? Did it
add to the attractiveness of the church?
Did it draw others than the curious?
No one likes to listen to the preacher
who stands unmoved and lifeless as a
statue while he preaches. How can men
be on fire with a message impregnated with
life-and-death issues and be statuesque, un
emotional, unmoved, and unmoving? But
when emotion and sensationalism run
riot, then the pulpit degenerates into a
theater.
Surely the House of God is not a Theatre, or a
Concert-Hall, or a Circus, where it becomes the
great object of the proprietor to fill the building,
and make it pay.10
In this age of extravagance and outward show,
when men think it necessary to make a display inorder to gain success, God's chosen messengers are
to show the fallacy of spending means needlessly for
effect. As they labor with simplicity, humility, and
graceful dignity, avoiding everything of a theatrical
nature, their work will make a lasting impression
for good.11
"A Table for Hungry Souls"
One of the great failures in pulpit min
istry today is seen in the quality of its
sermons. In too many cases they cry out to
heaven that preachers Adventist and
non-Adventist alike are not studying the
life-giving Word. Just as surely as this con
tinues the enemy will come in like a dev
astating flood and sweep away the faith
of many. Many persons who remain in
churches served mainly by non-Biblical
preaching become weak in the faith and
are often easy prey for un-Biblical teach
ing. We must "feed the flock of God" 1S or
it will languish.
The table the Lord has prepared for His
people is His will revealed in Holy Writ.
There are only two ways in which God's
people can feast on that Word they study
in private or they listen in public. A small
number do both. Every preacher knows
that private Bible study is almost nonex
istent. In a group of Christian college stu
dents 73 per cent recently admitted they
have never prayed with either one of their
parents, and it is almost certain that the
same confession applies to Bible study.
It therefore remains for the preacher to
help by his sermons, studies, and inter
views to try to fill this terrifying vacuum
in the lives of his people.
The minds of men must be called to the Scrip
tures as the most effective agency in the salvation
of souls, and the ministry of the word is the great
educational force to produce this result.13
The pulpit must become the Lord's
table around which the hungry church
family gathers, and it must here be fed,
inspired, and built up in the "most holy
faith." " Here the Holy Word must be dis
pensed and the holy Christ exalted.
The whole Bible is a manifestation of Christ, and
the Saviour desired to fix the faith of His followers
on the word.35
Preachers who make the sermon hour a
feast of good scriptural things for the hun
gry soul can make the pulpit a dispensary
of redeeming grace for hungry souls, and
a place from which the Redeemer's wel
come voice can be heard from week to
week.
Father of mercies, in Thy Word
What endless glory shines!
For ever be Thy name adored,
For these celestial lines.
Here the Redeemer's welcome voice
Spreads heavenly peace around;
And life and everlasting joys
Attend the blissful sound.
ANNE STEELE