The Puritans and the Ministry (2)
Rev D J MacDonald
4. The primacy of preaching
By the primacy of preaching the Puritans meant that preaching was the
most important part of a minister’s life. Whatever gifts, learning or attainments
a minister possessed were to be used to the great end of making him a preacher.
The Apostle says, "Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel" (1
Cor 1:17). This does not mean that baptism is not important but that preaching
is more important2. Paul himself states this again when he says, "Woe
is me if I preach not the gospel". The importance of preaching and the
preparation for it, as seen in the writings and the practice of the Puritans,
is summed up succinctly in the words of J C Ryle: "Some may be ready to
say, ‘I have been working for God the whole of the week. I have been attending
the school, visiting from house to house, distributing tracts, and if my sermons
on the Lord’s day are not quite what they might be, at any rate I have not
been idle’. We should remember that all work of this description, if it interferes
with the preparation of our sermons, is work ill spent."3 How
many of us would be glad to say, "We have spent this week visiting from
house to house, distributing tracts etc"? How much more worldly is what
occupies too much of our mind during the week, and how can we make it an excuse
for our lack of sermon preparation?
Henry Smith (1550-91) Lecturer at St Clement Danes, London, writes, "If you must
take heed how you hear, then we must take heed how we preach. Therefore
Paul putteth none among the number of preachers but those who ‘divide the Word
aright’ (2 Tim 2:15), that is, in right words, in right sense and in the right
method; and because none can do this without study and meditation, therefore
he teacheth Timothy to ‘give attendance to doctrine’, that is, to make a study
and labour of it. For as Peter saith that in Paul’s epistles there be many
things hard to understand, so in Peter’s, John’s and James’s epistles there
be many things too which David before called the wonders of the law, and Paul
called the mystery of salvation and Christ calleth a treasure hid in the ground." "Wheat
is good," Smith continues, citing Amos 8:6, "but they that sell the
refuse thereof are reproved. So preaching is good, but this refuse of preaching
is but swearing, for one takes the name of God in vain, the other takes the
Word of God in vain. As every sound is not music, so every sermon is not preaching,
but worse than if he read an homily. For if James would have us consider what
we ask before we pray, much more should we consider before we come to preach."4
In stressing the importance of preaching, Perkins says, "The first title
of a minister of God is messenger. He is the messenger of the Lord of
hosts. In Revelation the ministers of the seven churches are called the angels
of these churches; in one place a minister is an angel of God, and in the other
place, the angel of the church – that is, an angel or messenger sent from God
to the church. This point has widespread application:
"Firstly, for ministers themselves. You must understand your duty. Ministers
are messengers: that is the very nature of their calling. Therefore you must
preach God’s Word as God’s Word and deliver it just as you received it. Ambassadors
do not carry their own message but the message of their lords and masters who
sent them. Similarly, ministers carry the message of the Lord of hosts and
are therefore bound to deliver it as the Lord’s and not their own. God’s Word
is pure. It must therefore be purely studied and delivered. Let all those who
are God’s angels – and desire to be honoured as His angels and ambassadors – fulfil
the responsibility of God’s angel lest, as many men mar a good tale in the
telling, they take away the power and the majesty of God’s Word in the way
they deliver it.
"Secondly, if ministers are God’s angels they must preach God’s Word
in a way that expresses and demonstrates the Spirit of God. To preach in the
demonstration of God’s Spirit is to preach with such plainness, and yet with
such power, that even the least intellectually-gifted recognise that it is
not man but God who is teaching them. Yet at the same time the conscience of
the mightiest may feel not man, but God, reproving them through the power of
the Spirit. It is taken as high commendation in the world’s eyes when they
say of a preacher, ‘He is a real scholar’, because he is scholarly, well-read,
has a retentive memory and a good delivery. But what commends a man to the
Lord his God and his own conscience is that he preaches with a plainness suitable
to the ability, and so powerfully to the conscience of a wicked man that he
realises that God is present in the preacher.
"Thirdly, there is an important application to hearers. They are taught
here that if their ministers are angels sent to them from God then they should
hear them gladly, willingly, reverentially and obediently because they are
sent from God, and it is His message they deliver. All Christians must do this,
not only when the doctrine which is preached pleases us, but also when it cuts
across our corruption and is completely contrary to our dispositions. It may
be highly distasteful and hurt our natural desires, but since it is a message
from our God and King and the teacher is the messenger of that God, both he
and it must be received with respect and with an obedience that comes from
our hearts and souls. This is the reason why respect and honour should be given
by all genuine Christians to God’s ministers, especially when they adorn their
high calling with a holy life: they are the angels of God, delivering the messages
and charges they have received from God.
"The minister of God is also an interpreter. He is someone who
is able to deliver the reconciliation made between God and man; that is, first
of all, he is someone who can expand and explain the covenant of grace, and
rightly lay down how reconciliation is accomplished. Secondly, he is someone
who can properly and accurately apply the means for its outworking. In Revelation,
John receives from Christ. He must take the book – that is, the Scripture – and
eat it. Then, when he has eaten it, he must go to preach to peoples, nations
and tongues (Rev 10:8-11). Through John, Christ teaches His Church in a permanent
way that ministers are not fit to preach to nations and to kings until they
have eaten the Book of God, that is, until above and beyond all learning that
man can impart, they are also taught by the Spirit of God Himself. It is this
teaching that makes a man a true interpreter. Without it he cannot be one.
How can anyone be God’s interpreter to His people unless he knows the mind
of God Himself? And how can he know the mind of God except by the teaching
of the Spirit of God?
"What I am stressing is this: a minister must be a divine interpreter,
an interpreter of God’s meaning. Therefore he must not only read the book but
eat it. He must not only have the knowledge of divine things flowing in his
brain, but engraved on his heart and printed in his soul by the spiritual finger
of God. To this end, after all his own study, meditation and use of commentaries
and other human helps, he must pray with David, ‘Open Thou mine eyes, that
I may behold wondrous things out of Thy law’ (Ps 119:18).
"Furthermore, since ministers are interpreters, they must strive for
sanctification and holiness in their own lives. In the prophecy of Isaiah,
the Kingdom of Assyria is said to be sanctified, or set apart, to destroy God’s
enemies. If a certain kind of sanctification is necessary for the work of destruction,
how much more is true sanctification necessary for the great and glorious work
of edification of God’s Church?"5
5. Some direct applications of Puritan principles
In 1688 John Flavel addressed an assembly of ministers on the words of the
Saviour in Matthew 24:45: "Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom
his lord hath made ruler over his household, to give them meat in due season?" He
says, "Faithful and wise both make up the character of the complete
gospel minister – his wisdom or prudence enables him to discern, and his faithfulness
obliges him to distribute wholesome food to his flock. Faithfulness or prudence
speaks of diligence. A slothful man cannot be a faithful servant. The labours
of the ministry are fitly compared to the toil of men in harvest, to the labours
of women in travail, and to the agonies of soldiers in the extremity of battle.
Faithfulness involves constancy and steadfastness. ‘Be thou faithful unto death,
and I will give thee a crown of life’ (Rev 2:10). Yea, we must fight in defence
of the truth we preach, as well as study them to paleness and declare them
to faintness.
"Ministerial faithfulness includes our impartially in all the administrations
of God’s house. He that is partial cannot be faithful. How solemnly Paul lays
this charge on Timothy: ‘I charge thee before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ,
and the elect angels, that thou observe these things without preferring one
before another, doing nothing by partiality’ (1 Tim 5:21). Brethren, you will
shortly appear before an impartial judge, see that ye be impartial stewards.
Remember that all souls are rated at one value in your Master’s book. Your
Redeemer paid as much for one as for the other. Take the same care, manifest
the same love, attend with the same diligence the poor and weakest soul that
is committed to your care.
"Ministerial prudence will direct us to lay a good foundation of knowledge
in our people’s souls by catechising and instructing them in the principles
of Christianity, without which we labour in vain. Except you have a knowing
people, you are not liable to have a gracious people. All your excellent sermons
will be dashed to pieces upon the rock of your people’s ignorance. You can
never pitch upon a better project to promote the success of your labours than
catechising." I shall interrupt Flavel here to ask, If this is the stumbling
block to the success of our labours, should it not be identified and the remedy
applied?
Flavel continues, "Ministerial prudence discovers itself in the choice
of such subjects as the souls of our people do most require. A prudent minister
will study the souls of his people more than the best books in his library
and will choose, not what is easiest for him, but what is most necessary for
them. Ministers who are acquainted with the state of their flock, as they ought
to be, will be seldom at a loss in their choice of subjects. Prudence will
enable the man of God to give everyone his proper food and medicine in due
season. This will make us spend more hours in our studies that by our labours
we may save ourselves and them that hear us.
"Ministerial prudence will not only direct us in the choice of our subjects,
but also in the language in which we deliver them to our people. A grave and
proper style becomes the lips of Christ’s ambassadors. Prudence will never
allow us to be rude or to engage in flowery expression. We are to strive to
bring down the sublimest mysteries of the gospel to the capacity of the most
unlearned of our hearers. The greatest credit we are to aim at is to approximate
as nearly as possible the praise given to the greatest preacher of all time: ‘The
common people heard Him gladly’ (Mark 12:37).
"Ministerial prudence will direct the servants of Christ to strictness
and gravity in their deportment, to maintain their people’s esteem. Prudence
will not allow the ministers of Christ to intermix themselves with vain company,
take liberty in idle jests and vain stories; nor will it allow on the other
hand a morose and discouraging austerity, but will temper gravity with affability.
"To you that are juniors or students I will address one word of advice:
have a care to avoid that light and airy spirit which is everywhere in this
unserious age. The people have eyes to see what we do, as well as ears to hear
what we say. We should strive to be able to say as Paul did: ‘Those things,
which ye have both learned, and received, and heard, and seen in me, do’ (Phil
4:9).
"Ministerial prudence will send you often to your knees to seek God’s
blessing on your labours. Know that all your ministerial success depends on
this, as it is written: ‘So then neither is he that planteth anything, neither
he that watereth; but God who giveth the increase’ (1 Cor 3:7).
"Ministerial prudence will lead you to cultivate and cherish brotherly
love, for once jealousies, pride, envy or carnal interest get in among the
brethren, no words are able to tell what mischief and sins will break in amongst
them to the dishonour of Christ and the gospel. I do therefore, in the name
of Christ, as upon my bended knees, earnestly entreat and beseech my brethren,
by all the regard they have to the honour of Christ, the souls of their people,
their own comfort, and the success of their labours, that no envyings or strifes
or disparagements be once admitted and named among them."6
I close with a final quotation from Richard Baxter, where he confesses, "Some
of these words of Paul have been so often presented before my eyes and impressed
upon my conscience that I have been much convinced by them of my duty and neglect:
(a) Our general business: Serving the Lord with all humility of mind,
and with tears.
(b) Our special work: Take heed to yourselves, and to all the flock.
(c) Our doctrine: Repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord
Jesus Christ.
(d) The place and manner of teaching: I have taught you publicly, and
from house to house.
(e) His diligence, earnestness and affection: I ceased not to warn
everyone night and day with tears. This is that which must win souls and preserve
them.
(f) His faithfulness: I kept back nothing that was profitable unto
you, and have not shunned to declare unto you all the counsel of God.
(g) His disinterestedness and self-denial for the sake of the gospel: I
have coveted no man’s silver or gold or apparel; yea, these hands have ministered
unto my necessities, and to them that were with me, remembering the words of
the Lord Jesus, how He said, It is more blessed to give than to receive.
(h) His patience and perseverance: None of these things move me, neither
count I my life dear unto me, so that I might finish my course with joy and
the ministry which I have received of the Lord Jesus.
(i) His prayerfulness: I commend you to God and to the word of His
grace, which is able to build you up, and to give you an inheritance among
all them that are sanctified.
(j) His purity of conscience: Wherefore I take you to record this day,
that I am pure from the blood of all men."
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