From His Heart Daily Devotional 26 February 2022

 

TOPIC: HEY PASTORS, DON’T FORGET YOUR MAIN JOB!

SCRIPTURE: I solemnly charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by His appearing and His kingdom: preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction.
2 Timothy 4:1-2

In 1996, I enrolled as a freshman MDIV student at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest, NC. God had called me into the ministry in the summer of 1995, and the next step on my journey was theological training. After exploring the various Baptist seminaries, Debbie and I felt God leading us to SEBTS.

SEBTS had a storied history. Founded on the campus of Wake Forest University in 1951, the seminary was soon infected with theological liberalism (questioning, diluting, and discounting the veracity of Scripture) that quietly spread for many years. Instead of extolling the truths of the Bible, a growing number of the faculty seemed to revel in “educating” their students on what they considered were errors and fallacies in the Word of God. Thankfully, the course of the school was redirected in the late 1980s. By the time I arrived in the summer of 1996, the school was staunchly conservative in its theology, and every professor on campus was a solid, Bible-believing Christian educator.

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My Old Testament Professor, Dr. Stephen Andrews, experienced the days of liberalism at SEBTS. He recounted a true story from a seminary chapel service that occurred in the 1980s. Tragically, the chapel speaker opted to forgo the Bible in order to tell a story from Geoffrey Chaucer involving a man named Chanticleer and his dung cow. My prof was incredulous and heartsick as he thought, what have we become as a seminary? Why are we replacing the Word of God for a story about a dung cow?

Many churches today do the very same thing as was done at SEBTS in the 1980s. They jettison the clear command to “preach the word” in order to inject feel good fables and myths that appeal to a self-centered crowd. Our nation is filled with “dung cow” sermons that teach a hipper, cooler, more palatable form of inoffensive Christianity. Like Lite Beer from Miller, this type of preaching “tastes great and is less filling”—the only problem is it doesn’t save!

THE JOB OF EVERY PASTOR/PREACHER

The Bible makes it crystal clear that the job of every pastor is to love the Lord and His people, be an example to the flock, and preach the Word of God without stutter, stammer, apology, or equivocation. Preachers are not to tickle ears with myths but step on toes with truth. According to 2 Timothy 4:2, the Scripture reproves and rebukes before it exhorts. According to 2 Timothy 3:16, the Bible is “profitable for teaching” (it tells you what is right), “for reproof” (it tells you what’s not right), “for correction” (it tells you how to get right), and “for training in righteousness” (it tells you how to stay right).

In these last days in which we live, it is critical that we throw away the “dung cow” sermons and start preaching the Word of God, letting the chips fall where they may. Will the world like it? No! Will it be offensive to their Romans 1 mindset? Yes! Will it expose the darkness? It always does!

I am often reminded of the prayer the apostles prayed when threatened by the Sanhedrin to quit preaching Jesus: “And now, Lord, take note of their threats, and grant that Your bond-servants may speak Your word with all confidence” (Acts 4:29). May that be our prayer in these dark days in which we live. May we be faithful to shine for Christ, share His story, and straightforwardly warn those on the broad road to flee from the wrath that is to come.

Love,

Pastor Jeff Schreve,
From His Heart Ministries