To ministers let me say this as strongly as I can. Preach
Christ, preach Christ, preach Christ. Get out of your offices and get into your
studies. Quit playing office manager and program director, quit staffing
committees, and even right now recommit yourselves to what you were ordained to
do, namely the ministry of the Word and sacraments. Pick up good theology books
again: hard books, classical texts, great theologians. Claim the energy and
time to study for days and days at a time. Disappear
for long hours because you are reading Athanasius on the person of Jesus Christ
or Augustine on the Trinity or Calvin on the Christian life or Andrew Murray on
the priesthood of Christ. Then you will have something to say that’s worth
hearing. Remember that exegesis is for preaching and teaching; it has no other
use. So get out those tough commentaries and struggle in depth with the texts. Let
most of what you do be dominated by the demands of the sermon as if your whole
life and reason for being is to preach Christ, because it is. Claim a new
authority for the pulpit, the Word of God, Jesus Christ, over you and your
people. Commit yourself again to ever more deeply becoming a careful preacher
of Christ. Don’t preach to grow your congregation; preach to bear witness to
what the Lord is doing, and let him grow your church. Dwell in him, abide in
him, come to know him ever more deeply and convertedly. Tell the people what he
has to say to them, what he is doing among them and within them, and what it is
he wants them to share in. He is up to something in your neighborhood, if you
have the eyes to see and the ears to hear. Develop a Christological hermeneutic
for all you do and say. Why? Because there is no other name, that’s why.
--Andrew Pervis
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