Preaching: A Divine Miracle Through the Holy Spirit
Devotional
Day 1: Preaching as a Divine Miracle
Preaching is not just a human endeavor; it is a divine miracle that requires the power of the Holy Spirit. The preacher's role is to see, savor, and show Christ in His true glory, which is impossible without the Spirit's intervention. This task transcends mere rhetoric or oratory skills, as it involves facilitating a genuine encounter with Jesus. The ultimate goal is for the congregation to see Christ for who He truly is, savor His infinite worth, and live lives that reflect His beauty and greatness. Preaching, therefore, is a unique, divine act that cannot be achieved through human means alone. [04:48]
1 Corinthians 2:4-5 (ESV): "And my speech and my message were not in plausible words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, so that your faith might not rest in the wisdom of men but in the power of God."
Reflection: In what ways can you rely more on the Holy Spirit rather than your own abilities when sharing your faith with others?
Day 2: Expository Exaltation
The act of preaching involves expository exaltation, where the preacher not only explains the Word but also exults in it, leading the congregation to do the same. This process is not merely about delivering a message but about experiencing and expressing the joy and glory of God's Word. It requires the sovereign, life-giving work of the Holy Spirit to move beyond human capabilities. The preacher's task is to guide the congregation into a shared experience of exulting in the truth of Scripture, which can only be accomplished through divine assistance. [05:10]
Nehemiah 8:8 (ESV): "They read from the book, from the Law of God, clearly, and they gave the sense, so that the people understood the reading."
Reflection: How can you cultivate a deeper joy and excitement in your personal Bible study that might overflow into your interactions with others?
Day 3: APTAT: A Practical Approach
APTAT is a practical approach to preaching in the power of the Holy Spirit: Admit your inability, Pray for divine assistance, Trust in God's promises, Act in faith, and Thank God for His work. This method is not only applicable to preaching but to all aspects of the Christian life. It encourages believers to live in the power of another, not in their own strength. By acknowledging our limitations and relying on God's promises, we open ourselves to the Spirit's work in our lives, enabling us to act in faith and gratitude. [13:49]
2 Corinthians 12:9 (ESV): "But he said to me, 'My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.' Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me."
Reflection: What is one area of your life where you need to admit your inability and ask for God's help today?
Day 4: Channel of the Holy Spirit
The essence of preaching is to become a channel through which the Holy Spirit works miracles in the hearts of the listeners. This requires a deep reliance on God's promises, which are made available to us through the gospel. By hearing and believing these promises, the Spirit is supplied, and miracles occur. The preacher's role is to facilitate a divine encounter where the Spirit moves, transforming lives and glorifying God. This transformation is not the result of human effort but the work of the Spirit through the preached Word. [26:24]
Galatians 3:5 (ESV): "Does he who supplies the Spirit to you and works miracles among you do so by works of the law, or by hearing with faith?"
Reflection: How can you position yourself to be a channel of the Holy Spirit's work in your community or family?
Day 5: Hearing and Believing God's Promises
By hearing and believing God's promises, the Spirit is supplied, and miracles occur. This is the heart of preaching: to facilitate a divine encounter where the Spirit moves, transforming lives and glorifying God. The preacher's task is to present the promises of God in such a way that the congregation is moved to faith, allowing the Spirit to work powerfully in their lives. This process is not about human persuasion but about the Spirit's transformative power through the Word. [28:10]
Romans 10:17 (ESV): "So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ."
Reflection: What specific promise of God can you meditate on today to strengthen your faith and invite the Spirit's work in your life?
Sermon Summary
In today's message, I explored the profound and paradoxical nature of preaching, emphasizing that it is a task humanly impossible without the power of the Holy Spirit. Preaching is not merely an exercise in rhetoric or oratory; it is a divine miracle that requires the preacher to see, savor, and show Christ in His true glory. The ultimate goal is to bring people to a genuine encounter with Jesus, to see Him for who He truly is, to savor His infinite worth, and to live a life that reflects His beauty and greatness.
The act of preaching is a miracle in itself, not just a pursuit of miracles. It involves expository exaltation, where the preacher not only explains the Word but also exults in it, leading the congregation to do the same. This cannot be achieved through human means alone; it requires the sovereign, life-giving work of the Holy Spirit. Without the Spirit's intervention, preaching is ineffective, as it is not a mere subset of human rhetoric but a unique, divine act.
I introduced the acronym APTAT as a practical approach to preaching in the power of the Holy Spirit. This involves admitting our inability, praying for divine assistance, trusting in God's promises, acting in faith, and thanking God for His work. This method is not only applicable to preaching but to all aspects of the Christian life, as we are called to live in the power of another, not in our own strength.
The essence of preaching is to become a channel through which the Holy Spirit works miracles in the hearts of the listeners. This requires a deep reliance on God's promises, which are made available to us through the gospel. By hearing and believing these promises, the Spirit is supplied, and miracles occur. This is the heart of preaching: to facilitate a divine encounter where the Spirit moves, transforming lives and glorifying God.
Key Takeaways
1. Preaching is a divine miracle, not just a pursuit of miracles. It requires the preacher to see, savor, and show Christ in His true glory, which is impossible without the Holy Spirit's power. [04:48]
2. The act of preaching involves expository exaltation, where the preacher not only explains the Word but also exults in it, leading the congregation to do the same. This cannot be achieved through human means alone. [05:10]
3. APTAT is a practical approach to preaching in the power of the Holy Spirit: Admit your inability, Pray for divine assistance, Trust in God's promises, Act in faith, and Thank God for His work.[13:49]
4. The essence of preaching is to become a channel through which the Holy Spirit works miracles in the hearts of the listeners. This requires a deep reliance on God's promises, which are made available to us through the gospel. [26:24]
5. By hearing and believing God's promises, the Spirit is supplied, and miracles occur. This is the heart of preaching: to facilitate a divine encounter where the Spirit moves, transforming lives and glorifying God. [28:10] ** [28:10]
According to 1 Corinthians 2:14, why is the natural person unable to accept the things of the Spirit of God? How does this relate to the sermon’s emphasis on the necessity of the Holy Spirit in preaching? [01:26]
In Galatians 2:20, Paul speaks about being crucified with Christ. How does this verse illustrate the paradox of living by faith, as discussed in the sermon? [09:24]
What does Galatians 3:2-5 suggest about the relationship between hearing with faith and the supply of the Spirit? How does this connect to the sermon’s message on preaching in the power of the Holy Spirit? [26:24]
The sermon mentions the acronym APTAT. What does each letter stand for, and how is it applied to preaching? [13:49]
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Interpretation Questions:
How does the sermon describe the role of the Holy Spirit in transforming preaching from a human act into a divine miracle? What implications does this have for how we understand the act of preaching? [07:42]
The sermon emphasizes the importance of "seeing, savoring, and showing" Christ. How do these three actions relate to the purpose of preaching as described in the sermon? [04:02]
In what ways does the sermon suggest that the act of preaching is a unique miracle, distinct from other forms of communication or rhetoric? [05:31]
How does the sermon explain the concept of "expository exaltation," and why is it considered essential for effective preaching? [05:10]
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Application Questions:
Reflect on a time when you felt inadequate for a task. How can the APTAT approach help you rely on God's strength rather than your own in similar situations? [13:49]
The sermon discusses the importance of trusting in God's promises. Identify a specific promise from Scripture that you can hold onto this week. How will you remind yourself of this promise daily? [24:34]
Consider the idea of "seeing, savoring, and showing" Christ in your daily life. What practical steps can you take to deepen your relationship with Christ and reflect His glory to others? [04:02]
The sermon highlights the necessity of the Holy Spirit in preaching. How can you invite the Holy Spirit to guide and empower your interactions with others this week? [07:42]
Think about a recent sermon or message you heard. How did it help you encounter Christ more deeply? What elements of the sermon contributed to this experience?
The sermon mentions the importance of hearing with faith. How can you cultivate a habit of listening to God's Word with an attitude of faith and expectation? [26:24]
Reflect on the concept of "expository exaltation." How can you apply this idea to your personal study of the Bible, ensuring that you not only understand the Word but also delight in it? [05:10]
Sermon Clips
The act of preaching and the aim of preaching are humanly impossible; they are only possible in the power of the Holy Spirit. So this message is about how you preach in the power that is not your own, which is a very strange thing if you stop and think about it. [00:00:16]
In my mind, the chief end of preaching is to bring people—this is impossible—to bring people to see Jesus for who he really is, to savor him for the value that he really has, and to show him to the world that way. That's the goal of preaching in my mind: seeing, savoring, showing. [00:03:50]
What makes preaching unique is that it's a miracle. It's not just after miracles; it is a miracle. So my book, "Expository Exaltation," as much—that's my two-word definition of preaching: expository, that are seen in the book; exaltation, it's a savoring, leaping over what you've seen in the book. [00:04:48]
Without sovereign, life-giving, blindness-removing, heart-illumining, glory-revealing work of God's Spirit, preaching doesn't happen. It doesn't exist. Preaching is not a subspecies of rhetoric in the university; it's unique in the universe. I try to unpack why and how that is biblically in the book. [00:07:18]
The essence of preaching is to become a channel through which the Holy Spirit works miracles in the hearts of the listeners. This requires a deep reliance on God's promises, which are made available to us through the gospel. By hearing and believing these promises, the Spirit is supplied, and miracles occur. [00:26:24]
APTAT is a practical approach to preaching in the power of the Holy Spirit: Admit your inability, Pray for divine assistance, Trust in God's promises, Act in faith, and Thank God for His work. This method is not only applicable to preaching but to all aspects of the Christian life. [00:13:49]
Trust is the act through which God has promised to pour his Holy Spirit explicitly. I'm gonna read you Galatians chapter 3, verses 2 through 5, and show you why it's been one of the most important texts in the Bible for me to understand the Christian life and preaching. [00:24:34]
Does he who supplies the Spirit to you and works miracles among you do so by works of the law or by hearing with faith? That is important because I want to know how is the Holy Spirit supplied to me such that miracles are wrought in this church like raising the dead. [00:26:24]
The way you preach so that the Spirit is supplied, Galatians 3:5, the Spirit is supplied and works miracles among you, is by hearing a promise with faith. I'm sticking the word promise in. The text says hearing with faith, and I'm saying contextually it's mainly gospel. [00:31:13]
I want to bring about the seeing, the savoring, the showing of Christ for who he really is, as valuable as he really is, beautiful, glorious, great as he really is. I want that to happen in me. I want it to happen in my hearers. That's what preaching is. It doesn't happen apart from the Holy Spirit. [00:05:10]
Preaching is a supernatural miracle becoming a means of miracles. The miracle is the preacher seeing what's here and savoring what's here—that's called exultation, expository exultation—and then saying or showing what's here. The other miracle is the people seeing with the eyes of their hearts the truth of Christ. [00:48:10]
My conviction has been that preaching is a supernatural miracle becoming a means of miracles. The miracle is the preacher seeing what's here and savoring what's here—that's called exultation, expository exultation—and then saying or showing what's here. The other miracle is the people seeing with the eyes of their hearts. [00:49:33]