Preaching: It is Possible to Preach and Not Believe (Tozer)

Tuesday is for Preaching

So, affectionately longing for you, we were well pleased to impart to you not only the gospel of God, but also our own lives, because you had become dear to us.

1 Thessalonians 2:8

Preaching: A Genuine Gift

“Let me shock you at this point. A naturally bright person can carry on religious activity without a special gift from God. Filling church pulpits every week are some who are using only natural abilities and special training. Some are known as Bible expositors, for it is possible to read and study commentaries and then repeat what has been learned about the Scriptures.

Yes, it may shock you, but it is true that anyone able to talk fluently can learn to use religious phrases and can become recognized as a preacher.

But if any person is determined to preach so that his work and ministry will abide in the day of the judgment fire, then he must preach, teach and exhort with the kind of love and concern that comes only through a genuine gift of the Holy Spirit–something beyond his own capabilities.”

—AW Tozer; Tragedy in the Church: The Missing Gifts, pp. 21-22.

Don’t go about your study, your prayer, your preaching this week without a firm reliance upon the Spirit of God. Woe to us, if we open the word of God, for the people of God, for the work of God with only our human abilities, talents, training and efforts. Listen to Tozer. Don’t grow your church on your personality but on the person and work of the Holy Spirit upon the hearts of His people.


One thought on “Preaching: It is Possible to Preach and Not Believe (Tozer)

  1. Amen. When I first decided to follow God to seminary I thought I was clever enough to make interesting sermons. It was a blessing at the beginning of my second semester when the Living God freed me from that. We have GOOD news. 🙂

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