Make the Bullet Hit the Target
It is obvious from Scripture that God requires us
not only to preach to sinners, but also to teach them.
The servant of the Lord must be “able to teach,
patient, in meekness instructing” those who oppose
them (2 Timothy 2:24,25). For a long while I thought
I was to leap among sinners, scatter the seed, then
leave. But our responsibility goes further. We are to
bring the sinner to a point of understanding his need
before God. Psalm 25:8 says, “Good and upright
is the LORD: therefore will he teach sinners in the
way.” Psalm 51:13 adds, “Then will I teach
transgressors your ways; and sinners shall be converted
to you.” The Great Commission is to teach sinners:
“teach all nations ...teaching them to observe
all things” (Matthew 28:19,20). The disciples
obeyed the command “daily in the temple, and in
every house, they ceased not to teach and preach Jesus
Christ” (Acts 5:42, emphasis added).
The “good-soil” hearer is he who “hears
...and understands” (Matthew 13:23). Philip the
evangelist saw fit to ask his potential convert, the
Ethiopian, “Do you understand what you are reading?”
Some preachers are like a loud gun that misses the target.
It may sound effective, but if the bullet misses the
target, the exercise is in vain. He may be the largest-lunged,
chandelier-swinging, pulpit-pounding preacher this side
of the Book of Acts. He may have great teaching on faith,
and everyone he touches may fall over, but if the sinner
leaves the meeting failing to understand his desperate
need of God’s forgiveness, then the preacher has
failed. He has missed the target, which is the understanding
of the sinner. This is why the Law of God must be used
in preaching. It is a “schoolmaster” to
bring “the knowledge of sin.” It teaches
and instructs. A sinner will come to “know His
will, and approve the things that are more excellent,”
if he is “instructed out of the Law” (Romans
2:18). See Acts 20:21 footnote.
|