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Jesus Taught Us How To Preach Series
Contributed by Paul Barreca on Nov 23, 2015 (message contributor)
Summary: We have all experienced that it is much easier to talk about witnessing than to actually witness. Today we will discover that the instructions Jesus gave help to remove the pressure and guilt that Christians sometimes feel about witnessing.
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Jesus told us to “be his witnesses.” We have all experienced that it is much easier to talk about witnessing than to actually witness. Today we are going to study the Commands of Christ that are related to our witness. We will discover that the instructions he gave really help to remove the pressure and guilt that Christians sometimes feel about witnessing.
I think that we feel pressure and guilt about witnessing because we fail to read all of Christ’s instructions. Since it is Thanksgiving week, I found these examples of not following the instructions. These are calls answered at the Butterball turkey hotline that is open on Thanksgiving. 50 volunteers operate the phone bank. Readers Digest provides us with their must humorous calls.
1. After discovering a turkey from 1969 in his dad’s freezer, an Alabama man called the Talk-Line to ask about the best way to cook the 30+ year-old bird. The volunteer instructed him that first step was to purchase a fresher fowl! This same gentleman also had in his freezer: the top of his wedding cake and a snowball from every snowstorm he'd experienced in Alabama.
2. When a Talk-Line staffer asked a caller what state her turkey was in (meaning how thawed was it) the caller responded with, “Florida.”
3. A woman in her seventies, cooking Thanksgiving dinner for the first time, called for help because her mother said she was tired of cooking and it was time her daughter learned how to prepare the Thanksgiving meal.
4. Another gentleman called to tell the operator he cut his turkey in half with a chain saw and wanted to know if the oil from the chain would adversely affect the turkey.
5. A lady from Colorado called about “how to thaw” her frozen Butterball. She proudly shared the fact that her turkey was stored in a snow bank outside! It had snowed the night before and it then dawned on her that she didn’t have a clue which snow bank her turkey was in. She hung up to go find the turkey.
If we have trouble following the instructions on baking a turkey, we might need to review Christ’s instructions on loving others and preaching the gospel!
Tom Blackaby’s book, “The Commands of Christ, puts every command of CHRIST into six main categories:
Coming to Christ
Christ as Lord
Character
Loving Others
Preaching the Gospel
Cautions
This type of study helps us in two ways:
1) RELATED commands that help further explain the central command
2) CHRIST’S EXAMPLE
Today we are studying the command to Go and Make Disciples. “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”” (Matthew 28:19–20, NIV84)
The central part of this command is the main verb, “make disciples.”
Three participles add further explanation to this verb.
The first is “go.” This appears as another verb in our English translations, but in the original language it is a participle. It carries the idea that we are to be witnesses everywhere we go. In every aspect of life. We are to be witnesses when we go to the grocery store, when we go to school, when we go to work, when we go to the gym, every place where our feet take us is a place where we carry the gospel
In addition to carrying the gospel with us in every aspect of life, the church is also commanded to develop plans and strategies to take the gospel to places that the normal course of life will not take us. The church in Antioch did this in Acts 13, and they sent Paul and Barnabas on the church’s first missionary journey. That same mission attitude is to prevail among us today.
The second participle is the word baptize. This adds emphasis to the evangelistic portion of the Great Commission, because baptism requires that we share the gospel.
The third participle is the word “teaching.” This emphasizes the discipleship aspect of the Great Commission.
The necessity of preaching the gospel is accentuated by the Apostle Paul who said,“Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel!” 1 Corinthians 9:16
Let’s examine the related Commands that demonstrate HOW we are to preach the gospel.
We are to preach the gospel selflessly. John 21:15 When they had finished eating, Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon son of John, do you truly love me more than these?” “Yes, Lord,” he said, “you know that I love you.” Jesus said, “Feed my lambs.”
We are to preach the gospel tenderly. Matthew 10:42 And if anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because he is my disciple, I tell you the truth, he will certainly not lose his reward.”