Power Through Prayer
Chapter 3
The Letter Killeth
During this affliction I was brought to examine my life in relation
to eternity closer than I had done when in the enjoyment of health. In this
examination relative to the discharge of my duties toward my fellow creatures
as a man, a Christian minister, and an officer of the Church, I stood approved
by my own conscience; but in relation to my Redeemer and Saviour the result was
different. My returns of gratitude and loving obedience bear no proportion to
my obligations for redeeming, preserving, and supporting me through the
vicissitudes of life from infancy to old age. The coldness of my love to Him
who first loved me and has done so much for me overwhelmed and confused me; and
to complete my unworthy character, I had not only neglected to improve the
grace given to the extent of my duty and privilege, but for want of improvement
had, while abounding in perplexing care and labor, declined from first zeal and
love. I was confounded, humbled myself, implored mercy, and renewed my covenant
to strive and devote myself unreservedly to the Lord. -- Bishop
McKendree
THE preaching that kills may be, and often is, orthodox -- dogmatically,
inviolably orthodox. We love orthodoxy. It is good. It is the best. It is the
clean, clear-cut teaching of God's Word, the trophies won by truth in its
conflict with error, the levees which faith has raised against the desolating
floods of honest or reckless misbelief or unbelief; but orthodoxy, clear and
hard as crystal, suspicious and militant, may be but the letter well-shaped,
well-named, and well-learned, the letter which kills. Nothing is so dead as a
dead orthodoxy, too dead to speculate, too dead to think, to study, or to
pray.
The preaching that kills may have insight and grasp of principles, may be
scholarly and critical in taste, may have every minutia of the derivation and
grammar of the letter, may be able to trim the letter into its perfect pattern,
and illume it as Plato and Cicero may be illumined, may study it as a lawyer
studies his text-books to form his brief or to defend his case, and yet be like
a frost, a killing frost. Letter-preaching may be eloquent, enameled with
poetry and rhetoric, sprinkled with prayer spiced with sensation, illumined by
genius and yet these be but the massive or chaste, costly mountings, the rare
and beautiful flowers which coffin the corpse. The preaching which kills may be
without scholarship, unmarked by any freshness of thought or feeling, clothed
in tasteless generalities or vapid specialties, with style irregular, slovenly,
savoring neither of closet nor of study, graced neither by thought, expression,
or prayer. Under such preaching how wide and utter the desolation! how profound
the spiritual death!
This letter-preaching deals with the surface and shadow of things, and not the
things themselves. It does not penetrate the inner part. It has no deep insight
into, no strong grasp of, the hidden life of God's Word. It is true to the
outside, but the outside is the hull which must be broken and penetrated for
the kernel. The letter may be dressed so as to attract and be fashionable, but
the attraction is not toward God nor is the fashion for heaven. The failure is
in the preacher. God has not made him. He has never been in the hands of God
like clay in the hands of the potter. He has been busy about the sermon, its
thought and finish, its drawing and impressive forces; but the deep things of
God have never been sought, studied, fathomed, experienced by him. He has never
stood before "the throne high and lifted up," never heard the seraphim song,
never seen the vision nor felt the rush of that awful holiness, and cried out
in utter abandon and despair under the sense of weakness and guilt, and had his
life renewed, his heart touched, purged, inflamed by the live coal from God's
altar. His ministry may draw people to him, to the Church, to the form and
ceremony; but no true drawings to God, no sweet, holy, divine communion
induced. The Church has been frescoed but not edified, pleased but not
sanctified. Life is suppressed; a chill is on the summer air; the soil is
baked. The city of our God becomes the city of the dead; the Church a
graveyard, not an embattled army. Praise and prayer are stifled; worship is
dead. The preacher and the preaching have helped sin, not holiness; peopled
hell, not heaven.
Preaching which kills is prayerless preaching. Without prayer the preacher
creates death, and not life. The preacher who is feeble in prayer is feeble in
life-giving forces. The preacher who has retired prayer as a conspicuous and
largely prevailing element in his own character has shorn his preaching of its
distinctive life-giving power. Professional praying there is and will be, but
professional praying helps the preaching to its deadly work. Professional
praying chills and kills both preaching and praying. Much of the lax devotion
and lazy, irreverent attitudes in congregational praying are attributable to
professional praying in the pulpit. Long, discursive, dry, and inane are the
prayers in many pulpits. Without unction or heart, they fall like a killing
frost on all the graces of worship. Death-dealing prayers they are. Every
vestige of devotion has perished under their breath. The deader they are the
longer they grow. A plea for short praying, live praying, real heart praying,
praying by the Holy Spirit -- direct, specific, ardent, simple, unctuous in the
pulpit -- is in order. A school to teach preachers how to pray, as God counts
praying, would be more beneficial to true piety, true worship, and true
preaching than all theological schools.
Stop! Pause! Consider! Where are we? What are we doing? Preaching to kill?
Praying to kill? Praying to God! the great God, the Maker of all worlds, the
Judge of all men! What reverence! what simplicity! what sincerity! what truth
in the inward parts is demanded! How real we must be! How hearty! Prayer to God
the noblest exercise, the loftiest effort of man, the most real thing! Shall we
not discard forever accursed preaching that kills and prayer that kills, and do
the real thing, the mightiest thing -- prayerful praying, life-creating
preaching, bring the mightiest force to bear on heaven and earth and draw on
God's exhaustless and open treasure for the need and beggary of man?
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