Art of Prophesying.: To The Unconverted, Are Both Outstanding Examples
Art of Prophesying.: To The Unconverted, Are Both Outstanding Examples
Art of Prophesying.: To The Unconverted, Are Both Outstanding Examples
I. Introduction.
A. Last week, we consider Puritan preaching.
1. What the Puritans believed regarding it: The way Christ communicates to His
church.
2. How it came about: Zwingli’s preaching through Matthew; William Perkins’
Art of Prophesying.
3. The principles behind it: primacy of the intellect, the supreme importance of
preaching, belief in the life-giving power of the Word, belief in the sovereignty
of the Holy Spirit.
4. And what kind of preaching these produced: expository, doctrinal, orderly,
popular, Christ-centered, experimental, piercing in its application, powerful in
its manner.
2. It is the insights the Puritans gained that we’ll consider this evening.
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b. This is the kind of evangelism that originated with Charles Finney in the
1820s.
(i) He introduced protracted meetings and the “anxious seat,” a pew that was
left empty where those concerned for their salvation could come at the end
of the meeting for counseling. This was the forerunner of the altar call.
(ii) At the close of his sermons, Finney would say, “There is the anxious
seat; come out, and avow determination to be on the Lord' s side.”
(iii) These were Finney’s so-called “new measures.”
c. Finney, who had been a schoolmaster and a lawyer, was converted at 29.
(i) Afterwards, he went straight into evangelistic work.
(ii) He claimed to hold to Edwards’ belief that revivals were periodic
visitations from God, but questioned Edwards’ view that man cannot
produce them, as well as Edwards’ belief in the total inability of man –
that fallen man cannot repent, believe or do anything spiritually good
without God’s saving grace.
(iii) He believed that depravity was universal – that man was constantly
inclined towards sin – but he was Pelagian in his conviction that everyone
is able to turn whole-heartedly to God once they are convinced it is the
right thing to do.
(iv) And so he believed the whole work of the Spirit in conversion was to
impress on the mind the reasons for repenting and surrendering to God. In
other words, he believed it amounted to nothing more than moral
persuasion.
(v) Man can always reject these arguments and go to hell in spite of God,
but the stronger the arguments and persuasives are, the more likely they
will break down man’s resistance.
(vi) And so Finney used every emotion producing means at his disposal to
get man to change his mind.
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2. The Puritans, on the other hand, believed that “the conversion of a sinner is a
gracious sovereign work of divine power,” and so they evangelized accordingly.
a. They believed in effectual calling – the work of the Spirit which accompanies
the external call of the Gospel.
(i) The Puritans, in The Westminster Confession, put it this way: “All those
whom God hath predestinated unto life, and those only, He is pleased,
in His appointed and accepted time, effectually to call, by His Word
and Spirit, out of that state of sin and death in which they are by
nature, to grace and salvation by Jesus Christ; enlightening their
minds spiritually and savingly to understand the things of God;
taking away their heart of stone, and giving unto them a heart of
flesh; renewing their wills, and, by His almighty power determining
them to that which is good; and effectually drawing them to Jesus
Christ; yet so as they come most freely, being made willing by His
grace” (10.1).
(ii) They also wrote in the Shorter Catechism, “Effectual calling is the
work of God's Spirit, whereby, convincing us of our sin and misery,
enlightening our minds in the knowledge of Christ, and renewing our
wills, he doth persuade and enable us to embrace Jesus Christ, freely
offered to us in the gospel” (31).
(i) It is a work of divine grace. Man cannot do this for himself or for
someone else. It is the first thing God does in applying redemption to
those for whom it was purchased. It is His giving His Holy Spirit to
unite the sinner with Jesus Christ, thus essentially raising him to life,
on the basis of what Christ has done. It is purely of God’s free mercy
and grace in Christ.
(ii) It is a work of divine power. It is the Spirit who does this work,
acting on the mind giving both understanding and conviction, and on
the heart, changing its character from loving sin to loving God, thus
“making the sinner both able and willing to respond to the gospel
invitation.” And so He persuades the mind (something Arminians and
Pelagians believe), but does so by changing the heart, giving the sinner the
ability to embrace what he hears (something they both deny).
(a) John Owen writes, “The work of grace in conversion is constantly
expressed by words denoting a real internal efficacy; such as
creating, quickening, forming, giving a new heart. . . . Wherever
the work is spoken of with respect unto an active efficacy, it is
ascribed unto God. He creates us anew, he quickens us, he begets us
of his own will; but when it is spoken of with respect to us, there it
is passively expressed; we are created in Christ Jesus, we are new
creatures, we are born again, and the like; which one observation is
sufficient to evert [overthrow] the whole hypothesis of Arminian
grace.”
(b) Thomas Watson wrote, “Ministers knock at the door of men’s
hearts, the Spirit comes with a key and opens the door.”
(c) This work of the Spirit is always effective, it “removeth all obstacles,
overcomes all oppositions, and infallibly produces the effect intended.”
(d) It is irresistible, not because God drags sinners to Christ against their
wills, but because it changes their hearts so that they come freely.
(e) The Puritans took seriously the fact the Bible says man is dead in sin
(Eph. 2:1), and that he is totally unable to do anything pleasing to God
(Rom. 8:7).
(f) God was the only one strong enough to break the power of sin. Only
the One who has life in Himself can raise the spiritually dead to life.
(iii) Effectual calling is a work of divine freedom. God alone has the power
to effect it, when He is pleased to do so. As Paul writes in Romans 9:16,
“So then it does not depend on the man who wills or the man who runs, but
on God who has mercy.”
(a) Owen expounds this in his sermon on Acts 16:9, entitled, “A vision of
unchangeable, free mercy in sending the means of grace to undeserving
sinners.” He tells us plainly that God is not only sovereign in where the
Gospel reaches, but also in whom will respond to it. He writes, “All
events and effects, especially concerning the propagation of the gospel,
and the Church of Christ, are in their greatest variety regulated by
the eternal purpose and counsel of God. . . . In this chapter. . . the
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c. Another thing we need to realize about Puritan evangelism was that they had for
the most part captive audiences.
(i) Church attendance was part of national life in those days, and their
evangelizing of those present was part of their work of building the whole
congregation up in Christ. It consisted of three things:
(a) To explain to everyone their great need to be converted and saved.
(b) To explain to them the great love of God, that He sent His Son to die
for sinners, and of Christ, who calls all burdened souls to come to Him
for salvation.
(c) To explain the ups and downs we face as we move from our blissful
ignorance about our spiritual condition to a knowledgeable, self-
abasing, whole-hearted faith in Jesus Christ.
(ii) They dealt with this third theme by continually emphasizing four truths:
(a) “The duty of receiving Jesus Christ as Saviour and Master; the
danger of settling in religion for anything less; the impossibility of
coming to Christ without renewing grace; and the necessity of seeking
that grace from Christ's own hand.”
(b) They exhorted sinners to come to Christ in their pulpits and in their more
personal dealing, but they didn’t believe sinners necessarily had the ability
to do so.
(1) They didn’t command them to decide for Christ at that moment, or tell
them they were giving them the opportunity to do so.
(2) This was Finney’s greatest weakness – believing that it was in
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no action is surely remarkable! The plain fact is that Baxter insulted people,
treating them as knaves or fools, and that has never been the way to win
friends. Whether different behaviour or absence on Baxter’s part could have
altered any part of the wretched run of events (rejection, ejection, and
persecution of Puritan pastors) between the Restoration (1660) and the Act of
Toleration (1689) is doubtful, for passion, interest and distrust ran very high.
The fact remains, however, that Baxter’s well-meant but censorious
interventions regularly deepened division, as when in 1690 he published The
Scripture Gospel Defended to stop Tobias Crisp’s sermons from causing
trouble and thereby wrecked the ‘Happy Union’ between Presbyterians and
Independents almost before it had begun.
d. “As a pastoral evangelist, however, Baxter was incomparable. His
achievement at Kidderminster was amazing. England had not before seen a
ministry like it, and by the late 1650s Baxter was a widely acclaimed role-
model for pastors throughout Puritan England. Kidderminster parish con-
tained about 800 homes and 2,000 adults, most of them in the town itself, and
Baxter saw himself as spiritually responsible for them all. It appears that the
majority came to a solid Christian faith under Baxter’s ministrations. How
did it happen? It has been said that there are three rules for success in the
pastorate: the first is, teach; the second is, teach; and the third is, teach!
Baxter is an outstanding instance of a man who observed these rules. A
schoolmaster by instinct and prior experience, Baxter usually called himself
his people’s teacher, and teaching was to his mind the minister’s main
business. So, in a whole series of complementary ways, he gave himself to
this task.
e. “In his regular sermons (one each Sunday and Thursday, each lasting an
hour) he taught basic Christianity.
f. “In addition, he held a weekly pastor’s forum for discussion and prayer; he
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person of Richard Baxter we meet a terribly frank and earnest Christian who
thinks, talks and behaves with perfect consistency at this point, being content
to accept any degree of discomfort, poverty, overwork, and loss of material
good, if only souls might be saved. When one knows one is going to be
hanged in a fortnight, said Dr Johnson, it concentrates the mind wonderfully;
and when, like Baxter from the time of his majority, one lives with one foot
in the grave, it imparts an overwhelming clarity both to one’s sense of
proportion (what matters, and what does not), and also to one’s perception of
what is and what is not consistent with what one professes to believe.
“‘O sirs,’ cries Baxter to his clerical colleagues (laymen will do well to
listen, too), ‘surely if you had all conversed with neighbour Death as
oft as I have done, and as often received the sentence in yourselves,
you would have an unquiet conscience, if not a reformed life, as to
your ministerial diligence and fidelity: and you would have something
within you that would frequently ask you such questions as these: ‘Is
this all thy compassion for lost sinners? Wilt thou do no more to seek
and to save them? . . . Shall they die and be in hell before thou wilt
speak to them one serious word to prevent it? Shall they there curse
thee for ever that thou didst no more in time to save them?’ Such cries
of conscience are daily ringing in my ears, though, the Lord knows, I
have too little obeyed them. . . . How can you choose, when you are
laying a corpse in the grave, but think with yourselves, “Here lieth the
body; but where is the soul? and what have I done for it, before it
departed? It was part of my charge; what account can I give of it?” O
sirs, is it a small matter to you to answer such questions as these? It
may seem so now, but the hour is coming when it will not seem so. . .’”
“Nobody can say that Baxter was not real; and who will question our need
of such reality today, and in the ministry most of all?
‘Let them that have taken most pains in public, examine their people,
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and try whether many of them are not nearly as ignorant and careless
as if they had never heard the gospel. For my part, I study to speak as
plainly and movingly as I can. . . and yet I frequently meet with those
that have been my hearers eight or ten years, who know not whether
Christ be God or man, and wonder when I tell them the history of his
birth and life and death as if they had never heard it before. . . . But
most of them have an ungrounded trust in Christ, hoping that he will
pardon, justify and save them, while the world hath their hearts, and
they live to the flesh. And this trust they take for justifying faith. I
have found by experience, that some ignorant persons, who have been
so long unprofitable hearers, have got more knowledge and remorse
in half an hour's close discourse, than they did from ten years'public
preaching. I know that preaching the gospel publicly is the most
excellent means, because we speak to many at once. But it is usually
far more effectual to preach it privately to a particular sinner. . . .
“Alas! How few know how to deal with an ignorant, worldly man, for
his conversion! To get within him and win upon him; to suit our
speech to his condition and temper; to choose the meetest subjects,
and follow them with a holy mixture of seriousness, and terror, and
love and meekness, and evangelical allurement-oh! who is fit for such
a thing? I profess seriously, it seems to me, by experience, as hard a
matter to confer aright with such a carnal person, in order to his
change, as to preach. . . . All these difficulties in ourselves should
awaken us to holy resolution, preparation, and diligence. . .”
that I desire, and am charged to seek, namely, the conversion of all the people
whose pastor I am? Have I set myself, as Baxter set himself, to find the best
way of creating situations in which I can talk to my people personally, on a
regular basis, about their spiritual lives? How to do this today would have to
be worked out in terms of present circumstances, which are very different
from those Baxter knew and describes; but Baxter' s question to us is, should
we not be attempting this, as a practice constantly and inescapably necessary?
If he convinces us that we should, it will surely not be beyond us to find a
method of doing it that suits our situation; where there’s a will, there’s a way!
m. “Baxter’s basic principle is that in the life of the church evangelism must be
a matter of constant priority. He works this out within the clericalist frame of
reference that the Puritans inherited from the Middle Ages and maintained
against lay-led anarchy, as they saw it, during the Interregnum (the years
between the execution of Charles I and the restoration of Charles II to the
throne; 1642-1660); so naturally he limits his discussion to the pastor’s role,
and represents evangelistic ministry to the captive congregation and its
individual members as the pastor’s exclusive responsibility. The evangelism
Baxter envisages is catechetical and heavily didactic, and that emphasis
reflects the deep doctrinal ignorance which at that time characterised the lay
people of semi-rural Worcestershire, apart from some exceptional folk in his
own congregation. Nowadays, things are different: the churches of the West
are minority enclaves within secular communities; evangelism focuses on
those who do not yet come to church; and knowledgeable laymen share in it,
as they should. In bringing Baxter’s approach to bear on today’s situation we
must not lose sight of these differences. But the things that Baxter writes
about-the need for pastors seriously to watch over themselves, and seriously
to discover and minister to the spiritual needs of each member of their flock,
taking pains to ensure first and foremost that these members are all
thoroughly converted and truly regenerate-still apply; and this is where
evangelism of the Puritan type finds its initial focus, in this or any age.
n. “Said G.K. Chesterton: it is not that Christianity has been tried and found
wanting, but that it has been found hard, and not tried. Are we not compelled
in honesty to say the same about Puritan evangelism?”