Login Video Help for Logging In   E-mail Password Video Help for finding your Password 
illustrationssermon buildersmediapreaching skills
help & info
 search 
by: Topic | Word or Phrase | Author



• Browse Preaching Skills 
• Lectionary 
 1 of 2

PREACHING SKILLS
Haddon Robinson on Preaching the Gospel Today
How to stay on course with your most important message


Topics: Christ-centered preaching; Culture; Focus; Gospel; Hearers; History of preaching; Interpretation; Relevance; Theological preaching

Editor's note: When planning our current theme of "Getting the Gospel Right," we knew we needed to turn to one of the most trusted voices in the world of preaching—Haddon Robinson. Here are the insights and concerns he shared with us about the current state of preaching the gospel.

Preaching Today: What's good about how preachers today are presenting the gospel?

Haddon Robinson: Many are preaching the gospel without using theological lingo. They are giving the old message in fresh, vital ways with different images and in ways that connect with folks who have not yet come to faith. They have a greater consciousness of what it means for people to be lost, and they're able to speak to that condition effectively.

Many in our culture are conscious they are lost, though not necessarily that they are non-Christians. They sense they are like sheep who have wandered off. They didn't intend to. They got taken up with a tuft of grass here and another tuft of grass there, and they looked up and realized they were lost. Scads of people feel that but don't have any notion the church could speak to them. Many non-Christians are asking our questions but don't believe we have the answers. But there are preachers speaking to them in effective ways.

What concerns you about how preachers present the gospel today?

The flipside of what I said above is we can be so eager to speak to people in our society, that in the end we have not really preached the gospel. We have only touched a felt need. What is sometimes offered as the gospel is more of a psychological approach to make people feel good.

Use any method you can to get the gospel across to people in our society, but beware of the danger of preaching a different gospel.

Another concern is that in the past preachers were more concerned with helping people begin the Christian life. They would ask questions like, "When did you trust Christ?" Now there's not much emphasis on starting the faith. Many young preachers are rebelling against the kind of preaching they heard in their youth in which at the end of the sermon, the preacher said, "Give your heart to Christ," without clearly giving the gospel. But by rejecting a truncated, superficial gospel, young preachers may not be giving a clear call to come to faith in Jesus Christ. The reality is, as an adult you don't just drift into the Christian life. There is a place where it begins. That doesn't mean everybody is conscious of when they cross the line, but they better cross that line.

Is there any great void you see in our preaching of the gospel?

Yes—we don't preach the gospel! As I listen to some preachers, if I were an outsider, I honestly wouldn't know what I was to respond to. I don't hear the terms of becoming a Christian.

For example, the big issue the gospel addresses is how a holy God could have anything to do with the likes of us. The issue in Romans is: How can God be just and still be the justifier of the ungodly? How can a just and holy God declare sinners to be righteous? That is a key issue, but I don't find that being talked about much. I hear: "Jesus loves you, and he wants the best for you. He certainly doesn't want you to be sick, doesn't want you to be poor. It certainly isn't his will that you suffer." But you can't read the New Testament and make statements like that.

We want to reach people, but the clear terms of the gospel are seldom enunciated. It's probably an exaggeration, but I don't think in my lifetime I've heard twenty messages that I would say were clear gospel messages. If you didn't know any jargon, didn't have any religious background—if you came to church and wanted to know how to have a relationship with a holy God—the sermon would not tell you.

We'd be wise to tell our people that on every eighth Sunday, we're going to make every effort to clearly present the gospel. We should tell them, "If you have friends who are on their way to faith, by all means bring them!" If we do our job right, two things will happen: the unchurched who come will hear the gospel clearly, and our own people will hear it, too. The assumption that the guy who regularly sits in the eighth row has the gospel straight is not a good assumption.

Do you think the majority of preachers really understand the gospel?

I sometimes wonder. We don't understand grace. Much of our preaching tends to be moralistic—you must, you should—such that listeners would never guess they need the life of Christ surging through them if they are to live that kind of life. As Augustine said, "Give what you command, and command what you will." Even when we understand the gospel, we keep losing it. It's amazing how easy it is to turn the gracious terms of the gospel into commands. So no, I'm not sure how many preachers fully understand the message. I don't mean they themselves are not Christ-followers, or they don't have a grasp of some of the message. But getting the gospel right takes a great deal of thought and theology, in the best sense, so we can make it clear to non-Christians.

next page … |  1 of 2




 reader reviews
Average Rating:  by 6 members. (Members, please login to rate this item.)

K. Pattison   (Registered User)Posted: June 02, 2008
Right on, it is sometimes difficult for established comfortable preachers to recognize that we now live in the mission field and we need to study that field. Those who come to the church are also comfortable. If we do not know how to communicate the gospel to today's world we are only preaching to the choir and the choir has not been trained to sing to the neighborhood. As usual, Dr Robinson's insight focuses us on what we have been sent to do even as it is uncomfortable.. Pat

Harry Shields   (Registered User)Posted: May 31, 2008
As always, Haddon communicates truth ACCURATELY and CLEARLY. Before we ever get up to preach, we had better know what the Bible reveals about God, about fallen human beings, and God's plan for saving this fallen humanity. Without those three things in view, we will fail to communicate the gospel clearly. Thanks Haddon for your ministry to so many of us over the years. Harry

Michael Stern   (Registered User)Posted: June 02, 2008
Thanks Haddon...your wisdom continues to shape my thinking. It would be great to become more efficient on how to connect these felt needs with our 'real needs', like Tim Keller has developed so that the Gospel is seamlessly integrated with the necessary awe factor. I know it is harder to do than I care to think about.


Sponsored by Tyndale


Sign up for a membership:

Monthly
Yearly



Free Newsletters
Preaching Connection
(weekly)  
Leadership Weekly  
Faith Visuals
(weekly)  

RSS Feeds  
Illustrations
Sermon Builders
Media
Preaching Skills

Hot Topics
Holiday Shopping
Advent/Christmas

December 7, 2008
Second Sunday of Advent
Isaiah 40:1-11
Psalm 85:1-2
2 Peter 3:8-15a
Mark 1:1-8


The Practical Journal for Church Leaders

Subscribe to Leadership journal

PT Recommends