The Bible is written in several genres, from poetry, to letter, to proverbs, to narrative. The diversity in which God has opted to communicate reminds us that he has spoken in many times in many ways through the prophets (Hebrews 1:1). It’s easy to fall into the error that it’s all just words on a page, but we can’t forget that it’s real people in real life circumstances meeting the real God and feeling real emotions, and it’s written for our sanctification (2 Timothy 3:17)!
How we speak these oracles of God ought to be derived from the
text. If the speaker is angry (Numbers 11:10-15, Matthew 23), get angry! If the
speaker is weeping (John 11:32-36, Proverbs 25:20), then be sad! If there is
mocking (1 Kings 18:27, 1 Kings 22:15, John 11:37), then be incredulous! If the
speaker is hopeless (2 Samuel 13:12-13, Jonah 2, John 21:17), make sure your
voice is full of compassion! How much is lost on our hearers because we aren’t
invested in the story?
As we read, preach, and share the Word of God, we ought to
be passionate in the sharing, not just the words, but the power behind them.
Many revivalists have called this “Unction.” In fact, Leonard Ravenhill said
that the most important thing a preacher can get is unction, a Spirit given
passion to know and share the truth. The opposite of unction is a passionless
pulpit that treats the Bible like a textbook at best, and a burden at worst. He
said the tragedy of the age “is that we have too many dead men in the pulpits
giving out too many dead sermons to too many dead people.”
As a chaplain, in and out of the pulpit, we have access to
the very power that can quicken a dead soul. If that doesn’t excite you, and
your excitement is not contagious, then maybe you’re in the wrong profession.
Get on fire for God, and people
will come to watch you burn. ~ Leonard Ravenhill
Key Verse: Do not be slothful in zeal, be fervent in spirit,
serve the Lord. Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in
prayer. ~ Romans 12:11-12
More:
1. Jonathan Edwards is famous at the beginning of his ministry
for reading his manuscripts. Chief among these manuscripts was “Sinners in the
Hands of an Angry God” which did much to start the First Great Awakening in the
colonies that would grow to become the United States of America. Which is more
important: Passion in the preaching or doctrinal fidelity in the preaching? Are
the two mutually exclusive? Make it your goal to be passionately faithful as
you are faithful to the Bible.
2. I had the privilege of preaching to a large crowd on a
street corner on a warm Florida night. One man, leaning against a traffic light
pole, was especially engaged in listening. When I concluded the sermon I offered
an invitation for further conversation; as he approached I asked, “Do you
believe it?” He said, “I don’t, but it sounds like you do, so maybe I should.” When
you preach, does it sound like you believe it?
3. Chaplains who find their authority outside of God and the
Bible find it hard to be passionate for the things of God. Voddie Baucham makes
the point that some of them say they just don’t have any passion, yet he gives
multiple examples (smashing your thumb with a hammer, hitting a golf-ball poorly,
and a favorite team losing) that show that passion is not the problem,
misguided passion is. Chaplain, you’re a passionate person, so if you have a
hard time getting passionate about God’s Word, could it be that you have yet to
understand its power?
4. Further Resources:
The Visual Bible: Matthew. Directed by Regardt van
den Bergh. Performed by Richard Kiley and Bruce Marchiano. Visual Bible
International, 1993. DVD.
Robinson, Haddon, and Torrey Robinson. Passion in the
Pulpit: How to Exegete the Emotion of a Text. Chicago: Moody Publishers,
2003.
Vines, Jerry, and Adam Dooley. Passion in the Pulpit: How
to Exegete the Emotion of Scripture. Chicago: Moody Publishers, 2018.
Baucham, Voddie. “Go Home and Love Your Wife!” YouTube
Video, Jan 15, 2013. https://youtu.be/P4yS1Fzn3GM