Jump Start # 4052
2 Timothy 4:5 “But you be sober in all things, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry.”
In the early to mid 1800s, the fire of reform and restoration was burning widely across the Ohio Valley. Whole congregations were turning away from centuries old creeds and dogmas and following the New Testament as the only pattern for worship. Denominational names were being dropped and congregations governed by shepherds, partaking of the Lord’s Supper every Sunday and teaching immersion as the means to contact the blood of Christ, sprung up everywhere. In school houses, under trees and in open fields the Gospel true message was being preached. Historically, this is known as “The Second Great Awakening.”
However, the old religious practices that were dear to so many were held tightly by denominational preachers. They fought against the restoration. Debates were held. Ugly things were said. Many were losing control of their congregations and losing their positions and jobs.
In 1842, John T. Johnson, one of the early restoration preachers, wrote a letter to Alexander Campbell’s Millennial Harbinger. In that letter, Johnson said, “Were it not for the preachers, Christians would unite upon the Bible alone in less than a year, in my judgment.”
Were it not for the preachers…
What a sad statement. Those who ought to help people more than anyone else in seeing the truths of God’s word, were the very ones standing in the way. They had closed their eyes to the truth and their minds to reason. They held on to their dead creeds until there was nothing left for them.
Yet, that statement, ‘were it not for the preachers,’ is something that we ought to consider as well.
I wonder:
- Were it not for the preachers, would more really study the Bible these days? Have we gotten into the comfortable habit of allowing our preachers to tell us what to believe. They spend the day studying. They know words that we do not know. They tell us and so we believe. Being spoon fed is necessary for babies, but the mature needs to feed themselves. This is a dangerous practice and it allows error to come in unnoticed.
The Bereans searched the Scriptures daily to see if what they were hearing was true (Acts 17:11). Who were they checking out and considering? It was Paul. It was an apostle. They wouldn’t just take his word as truth. They needed to know themselves.
Are you still bringing your Bible to worship? Are you still using a pen to take notes, underline things and to do more thinking on later? Our preachers can help us so much, but they can’t tell us what to believe. Shepherds are to be able to teach, feeding the flock. This means that they need to know the word. Parents need to know the word.
- Were it not for preachers, would we be more active? Have we assumed visiting the hospital, making phone calls to check on people falls under the descriptive work that preachers are to do? And, since they do that, we don’t have to. We are paying them to do these things. And, as long as they do them, all is fine. We need the preacher at the surgery waiting room. Why? In all the years, I’ve never had a surgeon consult with me about what he was going to do. The comfort and assurance to a worried family comes from the Scriptures and being brethren, not because one is a preacher. This is something all can do.
- Were it not for preachers, would many problems not be problems at all. Sometimes we preachers bring up things that no one is thinking about, answering questions that no one is asking and because we have heard of something in one corner of the kingdom, we introduce that into another corner. The age of “brotherhood papers” is a thing of the past and maybe that’s good. Most of the articles were written by preachers. Most of the stirring of the pot was done by preachers. Rather than doing kingdom work, may spent their time doing “brotherhood work.” The problems in one congregation do not have to be the problems in all the congregations. Staying busy doing what you are supposed to do often keeps problems from getting on the radar.
Were it not for preachers…what an interesting thought.
Roger
