The Glory of Preaching by Clarence DeLoach and Jay Lockhart

The Glory of Preaching

The letters of 1 & 2 Timothy and Titus were written by Paul to two preachers of the Gospel. Yet, Christians who are not preachers or teachers have found encouragement, instruction, and guidance from these three letters. The Glory of Preaching, a new book written by Clarence DeLoach and Jay Lockhart and published by The Jenkins Institute (www.thejenkinsinstitute.com), is a similar composition.

The Glory of Preaching focuses especially on the power and need for expository preaching in the contemporary world. “Expository” means sermons or lessons that expose the text. They are lessons which present the biblical message as it was intended in language that is relevant to the modern world. Major sections include: “The Glory of Preaching,” “The Case for Expository Preaching,” and “Examples of Expository Sermons.”

Everyone needs to grasp the importance of expository study – whether you are a preacher, a Bible class teacher (even for young people), or simply a Christian who tries to share God’s message with others. This book will help you in your personal Bible study, learn how to understand a passage, get to the main point, and be better prepared to share God’s message with others. Utilized properly, it could be a manual on soul-winning.

If you are an “average” Christian, get the book for that purpose – to guide your personal Bible study and help you learn better how to understand and explain God’s word. It will also help you understand who a preacher is and what he is really supposed to be doing. You’ll appreciate your preacher more and understand the expectations from God that rest on his shoulders.

If you are a Bible class teacher, get the book to help you teach. One point I have found particularly helpful is a list of questions to ask at the end of the lesson that aid in application: Is there a lesson to be learned? Is there a blessing to be enjoyed? Is there a command to be obeyed? Is there a sin identified to be avoided? (and six others). These are in a chapter written by DeLoach (pg. 82).

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If you are a preacher (or preach occasionally) or you have a preacher who already gives biblically-based, exegetically sound lessons, get this book (for him). With 16 chapters and 13 examples of expository sermons, you would have 29 sermons to deliver to God’s people. That’s seven months of sermons! That’s worth the price of the book.

“God has made His preachers accountable, not to an eldership, a church, and a human institution, but to God alone, who calls and empowers him to preach and who will ultimately judge him” (DeLoach, 46).

Or, to put it in Paul’s words to Timothy: “Keep a close watch on yourself and on the teaching. Persist in this, for by so doing you will save both yourself and your hearers” (1 Timothy 4:16).

The Glory of Preaching can help you fulfill Paul’s command to Timothy. I recommend the book.

–Paul Holland

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