Introduction
“Practice what you preach” has become an adage so overused that it is in danger of becoming a cliché. Yet now more than ever, preachers need to recognize the importance of walking the walk, not just talking the talk. Putting one’s feet where one’s mouth is, the preacher becomes a genuine representative of Christ and a role model for the congregation. When the preacher’s lifestyle and comportment corresponds with the substantive content of sermons, the preacher acts with integrity and thereby ensures the trust of the community. In Preaching That Changes Lives, Fabarez (2002) discusses the ways preachers change lives, starting with their own. Vines & Shaddix (1999) dedicate an entire section of Power in the Pulpit to how preachers can develop their bodies and their minds, as well as their souls. Likewise, Lloyd-Jones (2011) claims that integrity needs to be reintroduced to the role and function of the preacher. Preachers must embody the principles of Christian living and Christian virtues to accomplish the goals of their mission.
The Importance of Humility
The process of self-preparation for a preacher is ongoing. Not a one-time learning experience, becoming a preacher is instead a matter of lifetime personal spiritual, social, and psychological development. The preacher continually engages in an honest process of self-reflection, accomplished by deep meditations on scripture and how scripture relates to one’s own life, soliciting and listening to advice from others, and also reflecting back on one’s own sermons. These and related processes of self-reflection encourage self-awareness through the act of humility, a central tenet of Jesus’s teaching. “Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love,” (Ephesians 4:2). If a preacher is to put into practice and embody Biblical teachings, he must remain “completely humble and gentle,” able and willing to make necessary changes to lifestyle and behavior to better reflect the principles being promulgated. Pride is the opposite of humility. As Fabarez (2002) points out, “Jesus reveals what may be the single most important insight into why some preachers don’t practice what they preach. It is pride,” (p. 27). Preparing to preach means putting aside pride and recognizing that while the word of God is infallible, the preacher is not.
The Pitfalls of Perfectionism
“We are imperfect beings,” and to recognize such is an important part of cultivating humility (Vines & Shaddix, 1999, p. 106). When considering the importance of lifestyle and behavior to preaching, the preacher also need to retain the humility needed to recognize their own sin and also be willing to take action to change. After all, the preacher aims to deliver life-changing sermons; those same sermons need to change the preacher’s life too. The preacher can aim for perfection as an idealized goal but perfection is neither possible nor expected of a preacher; command of the Bible is, and the preacher’s primary objective is to deliver the Word of God in a serious and expository manner.
When preparing to preach, it is also important to concentrate far more on the content and meaning of a sermon than on some imaginary idea of perfect delivery. Lloyd-Jones (2011) warns preachers to be far less concerned about their showmanship, or “ceremonial form and ritual” and more concerned about accuracy and Biblical truths (p. 24). Likewise, Vines & Shaddix (1999) show how the preacher’s sermon is not an informal conversation but a formal discourse. Even though preaching is about the pure, objective delivery of God’s word in the form of an expository sermon, though, the preacher nevertheless needs to put the word of God into direct action. There are theological and practical reasons for why the preacher should cultivate the right state of mind, body, and soul.
Theological Bases for a Preacher’s Integrity
References
Bible: NIV
Fabarez, M. (2002). Preaching that changes lives. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson
Lloyd-Jones, M. (2011). Preaching & preachers: 40th anniversary edition. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan
Vines, J. & Shaddix, J. (1999). Power in the pulpit: How to prepare and deliver expository sermons. Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers
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