Itching ears abound in our day - those who want to be stroked and coddled even as their soul remains in a state unprepared to meet its maker. What is a preacher to do?
Tickling And Hell
February 14, 2009
Paul in his wildest dreams could not have anticipated the self-esteem movement, and the pressure for present day pastors to preach in a manner that massages the ego, and flatters. "How-to" sermons play right into our needs-based culture.
Martyn Lloyd-Jones was a very influential preacher in London from World War II until the Sixties. Ian Murray, in his two volume biography points out that Martyn Lloyd-Jones believed that modern preaching had gone fundamentally wrong. How so?
".....the first work of the Holy Spirit is to convict of sin and to humble men in the presence of God. He knew that any preaching which soothes, comforts and pleases those who have never been brought to fear God, nor to seek his mercy, is not preaching which the Spirit of God will own"
"The truth that he was going back to a principle once regarded as imperative for powerful evangelistic preaching, namely, that before men can be converted they must be convinced of sin."
"In 1883 C. H. Spurgeon declared: 'In the beginning, the preacher's business in not to convert men, but the very reverse. It is idle to attempt to heal those who are not wounded, to attempt to clothe those who have never been stripped, and to make those rich who have never realized their poverty.'
How did Martyn Lloyd-Jones put it?
"It is made perfectly clear in the pages of the New Testament that no man can be saved until, at some time or other, he has felt desperate about himself."
ML-J continues: "There is something even worse than that aobut the situation as I see it, and that is that present-day preaching does not even annoy men, but leaves them precisely where they were, without a ruffle and without the slighest disturbance...."
"The church is regarded as a sort of dispensary where drugs and soothing mixtures are distributed and in which everyone should be eased and comforted. And the one theme of the church must be 'the love of God.' Anyone who happens to break these rules and who produces a disturbing effect upon members of his congregations is regarded as an objectionable person..."