People gathered—not in an air conditioned auditorium in comfortable seats, but on a hillside in open air to sit on the grass—all to hear Jesus. They were captivated by His words and “astonished at his teaching.” It was the greatest sermon ever preached by the greatest Man who ever lived.
We will not preach a sermon to compare to that one, but there are some things we can learn that will help us be more like Jesus in our preaching. Let me begin with the foundational principle mentioned in these verses. It is stated positively and negatively.
The negative aspect stated was, “not as their scribes.” The manner of the scribes was to do meticulous research and ground their authority in what other scholars had said—to quote from this rabbi or that rabbi as they droned on. While there is nothing wrong with quoting commentators and doing research as to what others have said about the text, when we get up to preach it is likely no one will be impressed by the underpinnings of the sermonic house you have constructed. If you moved into a new home, would you expect to take people into the crawl space, shine a spotlight, and say to your friends, “Would you look at those floor joists! Man, they nailed them! Have you ever seen any like them?” Rather, I would expect you to show them the rooms and furnishings where you will live.
That brings me to the positive dimension of this—that the people were impressed “for he was teaching them as one who had authority.” Our Lord’s authority did not rest in human opinion about God, but in heavenly revelation of God. Now, before you protest that Jesus had the advantage of being God—I know. He spoke directly from the Father for whatever the Father said to Him, He spoke. This we cannot claim and we cannot do.
Yet, we do have His Gospel. We have the Word of God. Our authority rests in God, if we begin with study of the text for God’s Spirit to teach us and guide us into all truth. Then as we preach, we expound the text—with illustration and application that connects eternal truth with the daily life of the audience. Jesus certainly did that—using salt and light to explain influence and fowl and flower to discuss faith, for instance. People will respond to such clarity and authority.
Let us preach with the confidence that Christ indwells us to speak through us and that we have an authoritative Word that when proclaimed in the unction of the Spirit will make an impact.
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