The prophet Jeremiah received a clear and divine call from God
in Jeremiah 1:4-9. Those of us who are proclaimers of the Gospel
must too be assured of a divine call, a divine purpose and the
unction of the Holy Spirit.
Many of theological minds have explored the call to preach. In
this article, the second in a series on The Jeremiah
Factor, I want to share some insights on the subject.
Jim Shaddix, associate professor of preaching at New
Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, said in his book The
Passion Driven Sermon, Preaching should be driven by a
passion for the glory of God.
Calvin Miller, professor of Beeson Divinity School in
Birmingham, Ala., and author of The Sermon Maker, said,
The call is that for which we can die. Knowing what we will
die for gives us the primary clue of what we should live for.
Called to preach! That is the basic thing at last. Let a man be
sure of that and keep his certitude by obedience and he will have
the answer to all doubts that dog the steps of a preacher
regarding his vocation. Only a divine commission can justify
that.
Answering the call of our Creator is the ultimate
why for living, the highest source of purpose in human
existence, said author Os Guinness in the book, The Call.
Apart from such a calling, all hope of discovering
purpose, (as in the current talk of shifting from success
to significance,) will end in disappointment, he
explained. Calling is the truth that God calls us to
Himself as decisively that everything we are, everything we do
and everything we have is invested with a special devotion and
dynamic lived out as a response to his summons and service.
The acclaimed 19th century preacher Charles Spurgeon noted
that while all believers are called to communicate the Gospel,
there is a special calling for those who teach and bear
rule in the church and are supported by the church.
In his book, Lectures to My Students, Spurgeon outlined
several considerations to determine if one has Gods special
calling:
an intense, all absorbing desire for the work. Do
not enter the ministry if you can help it.
an aptitude to teach, as well as sound judgment, solid
experience, gentle manners, a loving spirit, firmness and
courage, tenderness and sympathy; and
the fruit of evangelism.
Charles Bugg, dean of Gardner-Webb University Divinity School
and author of Preaching From the Inside Out, defines
preaching as more than a craft or an art or a profession.
It is more than the shaping of some words designed to dazzle the
ears of hearers.
Preaching, he said, grows out of the ministers own
experience with the living God. As preachers, we stand inside the
faith. We are not objective. We bear witness to what has changed
our lives.
He added, Good preaching is a response to the gracious,
loving God who is the source and strength of all our ministry. We
recognize our dependence upon God. Our whole life becomes a
response to this God who shares life in Jesus Christ. Our
preaching of the Good News is a response to the Good News which
we have heard and are hearing through His Spirit.
Preaching is a calling from God; thus, the preacher
places ultimate reliance upon the Spirit of God.
A call to preach is more than a general call to all
believers, said Erwin Lutzer, pastor at The Moody Church in
Chicago since 1980, in chapel at Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary. All believers are called to follow Christ, he said, but
a call to preach is a special calling.
Preaching from 2 Timothy 1:9 in a message titled, Was
You Called or Did You Just Went? Lutzer explained that Paul
went into the ministry not because he read a want ad but
because he was called by God. In his own words, he said he
was appointed by God as a preacher, apostle and teacher.
There are many people who may be gifted but are not
specifically called to the ministry of heralding the Word of
God, Lutzer continued. It is also more than a desire
to preach. You dont preach the Word because you feel a
little more comfortable doing that than something else.
The definition of a call is simply an inward conviction
birthed by the Holy Spirit and confirmed by the Word of God and
the body of Christ.
This is part of an ongoing series on The Jeremiah Factor.