John Henry Jowett on what a preacher is and what he does.
John Henry Jowett (1864-1923)
The Secrets of Effective Preaching: Sin & Sympathy
What Preaching is Not.
I am happy to think
that in the discharge of the duty which I have undertaken to-day there are two
things which, even if I possessed them, would be sorely and painfully out of
place. This is no occasion for the artifices of a swelling rhetoric, nor does
our subject afford any welcome to the exercises of jesting, When a body of men
is assembled for the purpose of considering the apparent inefficacy of their
preaching, the proper atmosphere for such deliberations is to be found, not in
the light excitabilities of a public meeting, but in the deep and awe-inspiring
solemnities of public worship. We must approach the great theme in the attitude
of groping supplicants, and not with the presumptuous steps of detached and
distant critics. We shall see further if we are upon our knees. Our vision may
be intensified by penitential tears. Our questions must be asked in the spirit
of eager worship. Our self-examination must be made in the light of His
countenance. We must "inquire in His temple" (Psa. 27:4).
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that in order to be the preacher God wants us to be we must pray about our attitude and compassion.)
What is a Preacher?
The preacher, what is he? Behind the one word
"preacher" of the New Testament Scriptures there are half a dozen original
words, each with its own distinctive suggestion, each contributing its own item
of color to the description of the mighty office. The preacher is a
herald, a public crier, a man with an imperial proclamation, charged
with a message which must be announced from the house-tops with all the urgency
of a sovereign command. The preacher is an evangelist, with a message
which is almost a song, full of sweetness and of light, the speech of the wooer,
laden with tenderness, and bright with the promise of gladsome days. The
preacher is a logician, engaged in strenuous reasonings, seeking to
gather together the loose and incoherent thoughts of men, and bind them into
firm and well-knit spiritual decision. And the preacher is a
conversationalist, who sometimes lays aside the spacious function of the
public minister, and, discarding the formalities of linked and well-connected
discourse, engages in homely dialogue, in fireside speech with his fellow-men.
Such is the variously colored office which lies behind the complex and
suggestive word "preacher." We must take the essential significances of a king's
herald, a tender wooer, a strong logician, and a familiar friend, and in their
wealthy combination we shall obtain a vision of the ideal preacher of the gospel
of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that the preacher, though called by various names in the Bible, has several key roles in the ministry.)
What is the Preacher's function?
The preacher, what is his
function? Let us rehearse a classic passage from the Epistle to the Romans.
"Whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. How then shall
they call on Him in whom they have not believed? and how shall they believe in
Him of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear without a preacher?"
(Romans 10:13-14). Reverse the order of the sequence. How then runs the vital
procession? Preaching, hearing, believing, calling, saving! What are the extreme
terms of the series? Preaching, saving. The ultimate aim of all true preaching
is the salvation of men. Salvation from what? Salvation from sin? Yes. Salvation
from hell-fire? Yes. Salvation from infirmity? Yes. From moral stuntedness and
spiritual immaturity? Yes. From all arrested growth in the direction of the
divine? Yes. The strenuous purpose of all vital preaching is to lift men out of
the bondage of sin and dwarfhood, and to set them in the fine spacious air and
light of the free-born children of God.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that the ultimate aim of all true preaching was to lead people to Christ. John Henry Jowett taught that it is our job to help set people free from the bondage of sin and draw them to the freedom in Christ.)
Is Sin really so Bad?
1. Now, here let us begin our quest into the
comparative inefficacy of our preaching, and may the Holy Spirit illumine for us
the secret chambers of our life. Do we keenly realize the horrors of the
bondage from which we seek to deliver men? Has sin become a commonplace?
Does it no longer fill us with poignant pain? Has it shed some of its
loathsomeness, and has our repulsion been relaxed? Can we now toy with terrors
before which our fathers shrank aghast? The questions are surely not altogether
irrelevant, and may be warranted by many of the conditions in which we are
placed. There is proceeding in our time a certain toning-down of language, which
may be wise or unwise, but which is not altogether without suggestion. We do not
like some of the stern, bare, jagged words which our fathers used in their
description of sin. And so we are very busy filing and smoothing the sharp
edges, and diluting their somewhat loud and glaring color. I am not afraid of
changes in phraseology if the change do not indicate a degeneracy from decisive
strength into a mincing dilettantism. The substituted word may be more cultured
and refined, but if its content be thin and impoverished, I am afraid of the
change.
"Vile and full of sin I am." The word "vile" may offend my ears, but what is
the reason of the offence? When I see the excision of the word "vile," and the
substitution of the word "weak," I am afraid of the tendency, because it seems
to suggest a relaxing of our conceptions of the enormity of sin.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that in his day there was a tendency to belittle sin. John Henry Jowett preached of the dangers of this practice.)
"A guilty, poor, and helpless worm, on Thy kind arms I fall." I may not like
the severe and humbling term "worm," but what is the reason of my dislike? Is it
that I have acquired a less stringent conception of sin, and are these graphic
terms too bold and severe? Do we require a milder phraseology because our enemy
is less appalling? Is the yearning for more exquisite refinement the expression
of spiritual culture and growth, or is it the evidence of partial benumbment?
The answer must be found in the secret places of the individual life.
There is a fountain filled with blood Drawn from Emmanuel's
veins; And sinners, plunged beneath that flood, Lose all their guilty
stains.
I tell you frankly I don't like the figure which runs through the verse.
There are many to whom it is almost offensive. Its elaboration creates almost a
repulsion. But while I dislike the figure, I want my dislike to be safe and
illumined. If I drop the particular phraseology, I want to retain the tremendous
sense of sin which lies behind it. If I refine the word, I don't want to gild
the sin. If I obtain a more cultured vehicle, I want it to express the same
horrible and loathsome presence. I covet no phraseology which will lend
respectability to sin. It is possible to obtain finer poetry at the expense of
convicting power. We may intensify the polish and glitter and lose the
lightning.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that some were offended by certain hymns and phraesology about sin. But John Henry Jowett preached that we must not, whatever we do, give sin respectability.)
Polished and dilettante speech will not satisfy us if we are profoundly held
by a sense of the exceeding bitterness and loathsomeness of sin. Does that sense
pervade our preaching? Do we impress the people with the feeling that we are
dealing with trifles, or with blinding and appalling enormities? There is a word
in the Book of Ezekiel which often rings through my soul when I am preparing the
message for my people. "And he called to the man clothed with linen, which had
the writer's inkhorn by his side; and the Lord said unto him, Go through the
midst of the city, through the midst of Jerusalem, and set a mark upon the
foreheads of the men that sigh and that cry, for all the abominations that be
done in the midst thereof" (Ezek. 9).
"Set a mark upon all that sigh and that cry" for the sin of the city. Upon
how many of our foreheads would the man with the inkhorn set his mark? "That
sigh!" It is a secret pain. It expresses itself in involuntary sighs. Whenever
the thought crosses the mind, it throws a cold shadow over the heart. "And when
He beheld the city, He wept over it" (Luke 19:41). "And that cry." It shapes and
colors their prayers. You can find their profound sense of the world's sin in
the nature of their supplications. They cannot keep it out of their prayers.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that God takes note of the preachers who sigh and cry for the sin of their people and their community.)
Are we so crushed and burdened by the horrors of sin? Is it the staple of our
prayers? Is it the burden of our sighs? Does it ever cause the loss of an hour's
sleep? Or is sin an unaffrighting and undisturbing commonplace with which we
have become so familiar that it never startles us into pain? If sin has become a
commonplace, our preaching has become a plaything. If we do not feel its
horrors, we shall lose the startling clarion of the watchman. There will be no
urgency in our speech, no vehemence, no sense of imperious haste. If we think
lightly of the disease, we shall loiter on the way to the physician. If we do
not feel the heat of the consuming and destructive presence, we shall not labor,
with undivided zeal, to pluck our fellow-men as brands from the burning. If our
sense of sin is lax, we may find in that laxity one of the causes of ineffective
preaching.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that if we really believed in the seriousness of sin, we would pray more seriously for our people.)
Do we have Compassion on the Sinner?
2. Are we possessed of a
spirit of sensitive sympathy? I am not surprised that in his enumeration of
the graces of a sanctified life the Apostle should put in the primary place a
heart of pity. "Put ye on compassion" (1 Peter 3:8). It is part of the essential
equipment of every true preacher of the gospel of Christ, and it is a part of
our equipment which may be most easily and perilously destroyed. It is one of
the gravest perils of the Christian ministry that we are in such continuous and
imminent danger of losing the power of our compassion.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed there was power in Godly compassion for our people and the lost. John Henry Jowett preached that he was afraid the we were losing that compassion.)
When first I entered the Christian ministry I used to have a wondering fear
whether my untried faith would be able to bear continual revelations of
suffering and sorrow and bereavement and death. Would my sensitive sympathy
engender painful doubt and encourage spiritual revolt? But now the problem has
been altogether changed. The searching question is not now whether my faith can
persist through continued manifestations of the darker experiences of life, but
whether my faith can keep alive through a calm and undisturbing familiarity with
them. We have to be familiar with experiences whose infrequent visits bring
benediction and softening influence to others. That which makes the rainy season
in other lives constitutes our drought. An infrequent contact with sorrow may
enrich the compassions; constant familiarity with it tends to dry them up.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that compassion was important in ministering to people in the struggles of life.)
In my early ministry my heart used to melt at every funeral over which I had
to preside. I could not read the burial service without tears. It may be that it
is part of the gracious ministry of God that with the process of the years this
burden should be eased, but I do not want the ease if it means the loss of a
sensitive compassion. I would rather covet the tears, and the choked speech, and
a body tired and drained twice and thrice a week, than enter into a familiarity
with sorrow which estranges me from the sore and stricken hearts of my
fellow-men. If our compassion fail, our power is gone. If we do not feel with
our fellows, we shall never be their guide.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that empathy was powerful and needed in the ministry.)
"Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not love, I
am nothing" (1 Cor. 13). If I lose my sympathy, I lose my vision. Sympathy is
the parent of discernment; the finer the sympathy, the more exquisite the
discernment. "When he was yet a long way off, his father saw him" (Luke 15:20).
That is the kind of vision which as a preacher I covet: the fine, sensitive
sympathy which can discern the first faint stirrings in a brother man's heart
when he is just inclining towards the divine. Before the divine movement in his
soul is expressed in speech, before it is even registered in his face, nay, when
the face indicates rather a sterner revolt than an incipient surrender, when the
man is yet "a long way off," I want to feel the remote awakening by the power of
an exquisite compassion.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that many preachers were out of touch with the struggles of their people. John Henry Jowett preached that the preacher may get out of touch because of a drought of experience with them or because of over exposure to them.)
If men can feel that we know their very breathings, and that we thrill to the
deepest and most secret movements of their spirits, they will permit us to be
their guides and friends. But if our compassions are dried, our people will know
our benumbment, and our preaching will fall like a shower of hard gravel rather
than as a shower of soft and refreshing rain. If our familiarity with the shadow
has impoverished our compassion, let us get the stream renewed. "In His love and
in His pity He redeemed them" (Isa. 63:9). A reverent intimacy with the Lord
will deliver us from the hardening influence of ceaseless familiarity with
grief. He will "come down like rain" (Psa. 72:6). He will "open rivers in high
places, and fountains in the midst of the valleys" (Isa. 41:18). "The desert
shall become a pool, and the dry land springs of water." If we have lost our
sensitive sympathy, we may find in the loss some explanation of our ineffective
preaching.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that the people will sense our lack of compassion and it will be evident in our preaching. John Henry Jowett preached that the remedy for this lack of compassionate preaching is to go humbly to the Lord and ask for it again.)
The wooing note.
3. Is the wooing note present in our
preaching? - If we do not realize the horrors of sinful bondage, and
sympathize with the bound, the tender notes of the lover and the wooer will be
absent from our speech. Is not our preaching too unbrokenly severe? Is there not
too much that savors of the judgment-seat, and too little that breathes the
winsomeness of the fireside? "Out of the throne proceeded lightnings and
thunderings" (Rev. 4:5). Yes; but out of the throne there proceeded also "a pure
river of water of life, clear as crystal" (Rev. 22:1), the soft, tender,
healing, sustaining influences of grace. I think that in our teaching and
preaching the thunder and lightning are apt to be more frequently conspicuous
than the gracious shining river.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that if we do not have a sense of the seriousness of sin, we will not lovingly plead with people to come from their sin to the Lord.)
We want more tenderness in our speech, the tones of love and of sensitive
yearning. We want less scolding and more pleading, less driving and more wooing.
"Compel them to come in" (Luke 14:23). I am glad that the somewhat
harsh word has been excised from the Revised Version, and that in its place we
have the soft and welcome word "constrain." "Constrain them to come
in." Woo them into the kingdom!
Go back to your wooing days; think of all the little devices - all of them
legitimate - employed in order to woo the affections of the one you loved.
Think, too, of the little tendernesses paid, all the kindly abounding services
rendered, when even the flickering response seemed to be a repulse. How you
multiplied your attentions and nursed the gracious awakening! Every great
preacher is a wooer. If we turn to the Old Testament Scriptures, we might expect
the wooing note to be absent. Amos is severe in speech, stern in expostulations,
multiplying his denunciations, yet you find that even stern, thundering Amos
sometimes lays aside his thunder and begins to woo. And as for Hosea, he is the
wooer from beginning to end. Turn to Isaiah, and at the end of the chapter in
which there is poured out abounding denunciation and woe you will find that he
lays it all aside and begins with, "Comfort ye, comfort ye my people" (Isa.
40:1). He was a great wooer.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed every great preacher in the Bible was one who lovingly entreated people to come to Christ.)
We need to woo our people. "Jesus, lover of my soul." Preacher, lover of
man's soul! Let us speak a little more tenderly. Let us drop out the thunder and
put in the constraint, and where the thunder has failed, the lover may succeed.
Not only in the Old Testament Scriptures, but right through the Bible, you will
find this wooing and constraining note. I am perfectly sure it has been too
absent from my ministry. Months ago I determined that there should be more of
the tender lover in my pulpit speech, more of the wooing note of the Apostle
Paul, more of the gentleness and tender constraint of my Lord.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that if the thundering in the puplit is not working, we should try loving people to Jesus.)
The New Testament Emphasis.
4. Let me ask one other question.
Has our teaching and preaching the New Testament emphasis? You think I
ought to put that first. I do not want to put it first, and I will tell you why.
I do not want to give it undue emphasis, lest I appear to suspect my brethren. I
do not think they are far away from the great cardinal verities of the Christian
faith. I believe they are very near the center, and they keep to what they
conceive to be the primary realities of our religion. But even though we be
agreed upon it in our own practice, there is no harm just here to re-emphasize
our belief and practice. Wherever in the Scriptures the preacher has to proclaim
great and imperative duty, it always finds its root very near to the Cross.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that the New Testament emphasis of preaching was preaching the cross of Christ.)
When the Apostle Paul is proclaiming what appears to be a commonplace duty,
he goes back for the roots right to Calvary's Tree. "Husbands, love your wives,
even as Christ also loved the Church, and gave Himself for it" (Eph.
5:25). And if he is talking about the eating of meats, he proclaims his
injunction from the Cross. "Destroy not him with thy meat for whom Christ
died" (Romans 14:15). When he is proclaiming a duty he links it to the
Crucifixion, to the crucified Christ. He drives all his duties home with the
power of the Gospel of the crucified Christ. All his tools are armed with one
handle.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that even when you are preaching of the duties of the Christian, you should preach Christ.)
I do not know anything more ineffective and more provoking than to have a
gimlet (hand tool for boring holes) with no handle to it. You cannot drive a pricker (awl for making small holes) far without a handle,
and you cannot get a gimlet into the wood without a handle; and you cannot drive
a duty, you cannot prick man's conscience to the very core, unless you handle
the duty as Paul handled it, and drive it home by the power of the crucified
Christ. And, therefore, I put the searching question, Have we got that emphasis
in our teaching, and do we make it quite clear and apparent? When we have
proclaimed a duty, is the dynamic just as manifest? When we present an ideal,
are the resources as conspicuous? Do we link all our imperatives to the power of
the Gospel of Christ?
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that we should link all our Christian duties to the power of the Gospel. John Henry Jowett taught that we should preach accordingly.)
Do we Enjoy Preaching?
One other question, and I have done. My
brethren in the ministry, do we appreciate our own message? Do we look as though
we revelled in it? There is nothing so helps a man to a good meal as to sit down
with a man who enjoys a good appetite. And there is nothing so alluring to
people, when we desire to show them how gracious the Lord is, as to let them see
we revel in the diet.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that people can tell if we enjoy preaching and enjoy the food we are feeding them.)
"Blessed is the man whose delight is in the law of the Lord" (Psalm 1). And
why is he blessed? Because his delight is contagious, his enthusiasm is
catching. When we see a man bubbling over and delighting in God, we ourselves
begin to be unsealed. A minister's enthusiasm will be found contagious among his
people. "Thy word is sweet." When we say it, do we look as if we knew it? "Thy
word is sweet." Do we proclaim the sentence with a sour face? "My meditation of
Him shall be sweet" (Psa 104:34). When our people see that we delight in the
feast, they will sit down at the same table.
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that our delight in the law of the Lord will be contagious and rub off on our people.)
Hate Sin, Love Sinners.
Let us, in conclusion, subject ourselves to
a rigorous cross-examination. Do I hate all sin? "The fear of the Lord is to
hate evil" (Prov. 8:13). Do I feel sin to be loathsome? Am I possessed of a
tender sensitiveness, that can discern even the faintest movings in the hearts
of my people, and which will reveal to me their inclinations long before they
receive any outward expression? And, Lord Jesus, have I been a wooer, a lover,
and are any in Thy kingdom because they were just enticed into it by the tender
persuasiveness of my life and speech? And have I linked the proclamation of
duties to the love of Calvary? And has my teaching had New Testament perspective
and proportion, and have I evinced delight in my own message? May the Good Lord
grant that to all these great questions we may be able to give an affirmative
response!
(Note: John Henry Jowett believed that we should ask ourselves the hard questions about ourselves and our own preaching. John Henry Jowett taught that to be good preachers we should ask if we really hate sin and love sinners. Is the compassion obvious and do we really try to draw and encourage people to come to Christ with love. He taught that we should love the Word and preach it with excitement.)
An Address on preaching delivered by John Henry Jowett before the Free
Church Congress, Cardiff, Wales, March 1901, printed as Chapter 20 in "Apostolic
Optimism", London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1901
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