The Preaching Life
J. G. Morrison was the leader of the Laymen’s Holiness
Association that united with the Church of the Nazarene in 1922. A close
ministry partner of Dr. Morrison, named Ira E. Hammer, wrote this article
seven years later, and it appeared in the June 12, 1929 edition of the
Herald of Holiness. It is entitled, “The Preacher With His Books.”
While the language is not gender inclusive, his advice is still relevant
for us today.
John Wesley taught that one must be well informed in order
to live properly. No man in his generation did so much to stimulate thought
and true education as did Wesley. To live godly one must think deeply,
broadly, and study continuously.
Wesley was a prodigious reader. With his strenuous labors
of travel, preaching and the exacting care of all the churches, it was
necessary for him to do much of his reading on horseback as he rode the
long circuits of his preachers. Yet he read much and read carefully. Not
only did Wesley read much but he wrote much. Few literary men exceeded
him in the volume of his excellently written works of highly literary
standard.
The Methodist circuit riders of Wesley’s day were
constantly urged by their great leader to read, study, meditate, and fill
the mind with useful knowledge that they might the more efficiently preach
the Word of God to all men. He expected his preachers to rise at four
in the morning that the early hours might be devoted to prayer, study,
and meditation.
Brethren of the ministry, we are as highly responsible and
go forth with as great a commission as did the men called of God to preach
the unsearchable riches of Christ in those heroic days. Nor are we comparatively
better equipped to do so, for the education of the common people of those
days was far below that of the same class today. Go where we may we must
preach to people, young and old, who have been trained to think closely,
logically, and surprisingly often, very profoundly. A preacher is always
a teacher and that of the most sacred truths. How then shall we teach
unless we learn to think, independently of written matter, clearly, logically,
and profoundly? This does not come to one with a smattering of reading
only. We must read for information. Read for both beauty of expression
and thought. Read for depth of comprehension. Read for inspiration. Saturate
your reading with prayer and real communion with the Holy Spirit whose
presence in your heart quickens your perception, broadens your concept,
intensifies the beauty, illuminates the vision and clarifies your comprehension
of what you read.
District Superintendent W.D. Shelor recently said, “No
man who will read three or four hours a day will be at a loss what to
preach.” The preacher should be systematic in the use of his time.
Set out to accomplish as much study, as much reading, as much prayer as
you may and let nothing easily persuade you to give it up for something
else. These matters are foundational and not only affect your immediate
usefulness, but all your future ministry as well.
Reading this article made me wonder, what are preachers
reading today that the Holy Spirit is working through to, “quicken
perception, broaden concepts, intensify beauty, illuminate vision, and
clarify comprehension”?
We would like to hear from you. What books are you reading
that are nurturing your preaching and nourishing your soul? Send us a
list of the top five most influential books you have read in recent years
to mail@preachersmagazine.org. We will publish some of your lists in our
Pentecost 2007 edition.
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