I have had an article published on wesleyansermons.com. Here’s the link:
http://wesleyansermons.com/2017/05/01/preaching-and-the-ministry-of-remembrance-mark-schnell/
Eclectic thoughts on preaching, woodworking, grilling and life in general
I have had an article published on wesleyansermons.com. Here’s the link:
http://wesleyansermons.com/2017/05/01/preaching-and-the-ministry-of-remembrance-mark-schnell/
“So I will always remind you of these things, even though you know them and are firmly established in the truth you now have. I think it is right to refresh your memory as long as I live in the tent of this body, because I know that I will soon put it aside, as our Lord Jesus Christ has made clear to me. And I will make every effort to see that after my departure you will always be able to remember these things.” 2 Peter 1:12-15 (NIV)
As a preacher and as a teacher of preachers I affirm that preaching has many important functions within the body of Christ. At its best it follows the challenge of the Apostle Paul as he instructs preachers to correct, rebuke and encourage those they preach to. The best kind of preaching also inspires people to realize and embrace their worth and equality as image bearers of God. The best preaching challenges systems of injustice and oppression. And, of course, the most significant function of preaching throughout the history of the church is the message of salvation — to share the truth of the Gospel — a new life that only comes through the sacrifice, resurrection and indwelling of the Savior Jesus Christ.
But, a beautiful reality of preaching is that this latter function inspires and empowers the former functions too! Lives can be transformed because of Christ. Because of him there is hope for today and tomorrow. Racism and oppression must end because we all have equal worth and are equal recipients of the love and sacrifice of Christ. And because of Christ and the indwelling power of the Holy Spirit, we no longer have to remain captive to old ways of thinking and living. The best preaching embodies all these functions and shares the message of the Gospel boldly.
[pullquote align=”full” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]And because of Christ and the indwelling power of the Holy Spirit, we no longer have to remain captive to old ways of thinking and living. The best preaching embodies all these functions and shares the message of the Gospel boldly.[/pullquote]
A function of preaching that isn’t spoken of as often, though, is the ministry of remembrance. Almost all preachers will have the privilege at times to preach the message of Christ to people that do not yet believe in him. You know, we call them the unchurched, non-believers, the unsaved. Some preachers even have the daunting but important task of preaching almost solely to people like this. The reality, though, is that most local church preachers will do the majority of their preaching to believers. You know, we call them the saints, the saved, the regular attenders. It’s easy to look at these people and to get caught up wondering what we’re going to tell them each week. What can we possibly say that they haven’t heard before? Some of the folks we preach to have heard hundreds of sermons, some of them have been hearing them for longer than we’ve been alive! How are we going to come up with a new word to speak to these folks? If you’ve found yourself wondering things like this my next sentence ought to make your day. You don’t have to!
One of the powerful functions of preaching is reminding people what they already know. Finding new ways to express timeless truths can be a very good thing, but fretting about what truth to share is a needless burden. Most people can relate to the practice of hungrily opening a refrigerator door time after time as though between trips it might miraculously fill itself. But carrying the burden of what truth to preach is like opening a fully stocked fridge and then closing the door only to complain about not having anything to eat. The great news for us preachers is that God has provided all the source material we need in his Word. The fridge is full!
[pullquote align=”full” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]The great news for us preachers is that God has provided all the source material we need in his Word. The fridge is full![/pullquote]
A preacher’s ministry of remembrance speaks words of truth to people that may have heard those same words a hundred times before. While that may sound redundant at best and boring at worst, life is not a static thing. We forget what we know when times are tough. A man dying of thirst forgets what it feels like to have cool water sliding down his throat. A person plodding through a Midwestern winter might forget what it feels like to bury their toes into a warm, sandy beach. A person being abused by a family member can be reminded through the preaching ministry of remembrance that they have ultimate worth in God’s eyes. They can be reminded that they are not alone, both spiritually and physically, because of the local church body. When someone is wondering how they will put food on the table or pay the rent, they can be reminded that God sees them and cares for all their needs.
Then on the flipside, those in the church can be reminded that they are often the avenue of God’s provision for those around them. We all know it: sometimes life can seem more than we can bear. Sometimes the things people know, even the things they’ve built their lives on, are forgotten in the fog of loss and adversity. Sometimes they can’t see the forest of God’s love and care for the trees of pain and trouble. But the ministry of remembrance shares truth that never grows old or stale. It cuts through the fog of pain and discouragement with the light of God’s active presence.
[pullquote align=”full” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]But the ministry of remembrance shares truth that never grows old or stale. It cuts through the fog of pain and discouragement with the light of God’s active presence.[/pullquote]
It pulls people out of the bog of complacency and empowers them for action. The ministry of remembrance can be one of your most important roles as a preacher of the Gospel.
But there is another benefit to the preaching ministry of remembrance. When my father died suddenly at age 56, I was devastated. My world was completely rocked. In the darkness of those days I needed to be reminded again and again that I was not alone, that God knew my pain and that I would see my father again. But I was the pastor of a local church and had no one else to preach to me. But as I faithfully preached the Gospel to my church, that same Gospel was uncovering what I already knew but had become hidden in the midst of my grief. My own words were speaking to me week after week. No, check that. God was speaking to me through my own preaching! “I am here. I know your pain. You are not alone. I will bring you through.” As I was engaging in the ministry of remembrance to my church through the Gospel, God was speaking through that same Gospel and refreshing my memory.
The simple fact is this — the truth that you preach that refreshes the memories of your people will often be the very words you need to hear more than anyone else. The line between preacher and preached to dissolves in the ministry of remembrance through the power of the Gospel.
[pullquote align=”full” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]The line between preacher and preached to dissolves in the ministry of remembrance through the power of the Gospel.[/pullquote]
Through another of God’s great mysteries we can be both speaker and listener at the same time. There are many functions of preaching, but in the preaching ministry of remembrance you can both practice and receive the Gospel at the same time.
I didn’t start out after my first theological degree at age 22 thinking that preaching would be my main ministry passion, it just developed that way over time. It’s a realization that God has gifted me to do that task, and when I am preaching I just “know” that this is what I’m made for. One of my main joys is watching the light bulbs click on in people’s faces when God has used me to help them see his grace in the Bible and I can actually see them realize how the Bible applies to them. Amazing. I like to tell people jokingly that in my sixteen years of being a pastor I did all the other stuff during the week so they’d let me preach on Sunday. I loved pastoral ministry, so that’s a joke, but there’s a good bit of truth there too. So after those years of ministry, advanced degrees approaching six figures in cost that are specifically in preaching, and then being a professor of preaching, with hopefully much more of that to come, I know that I am a preacher. I love it, I’m passionate about it, and I’m dedicated to it.
But you know where my main ministry is right now? Do I preach to hundreds, or even thousands each Sunday? No, my main ministry right now is being a Sunday school teacher to anywhere between four and ten 3rd and 4th graders at College Wesleyan Church.
[pullquote align=”full” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]You might say, “Wait, that’s not preaching! Isn’t your giftedness, passion and education wasted in that setting?! Don’t you feel less fulfilled?” Let me answer those questions three ways.[/pullquote]
NUMBER ONE: I absolutely do not feel wasted or unfulfilled in that setting, just the opposite! I’m not going to lie and paint myself as a hero. It took me several months to settle into this calling and it was a bit rough on me at first, especially as a person with ADHD in a room with “energetic” kids. I also felt a bit sheepish when my preaching professor colleagues would see me in my class, this was in my mind and nothing they projected, but I felt like maybe I was a scrub and this was the only gig I could get(that was the devil talking, btw). But after a while I started to realize how important that role is. I started to watch the light bulbs clicking on for “my” kids as I worked to make God’s Word relevant to them and taught them about God’s active and persistent grace. Each Sunday we do a brief review of the things we’ve been talking about in the weeks before and the kids are getting it! Not only the details of the Bible, but they are getting the theology behind the stories. I always teach the Bible story or passage and then talk about what it tells us about God and how he relates to us, and then what that passage says about how we should relate to God and others. They are getting it. Man, I love that. Wasted? Are you kidding me?! I want to be right where I am right now.
NUMBER TWO: My church had a need, simple as that. Our children’s ministry director, Jil Mazellan, put out the word that she needed Sunday school teachers and when we heard we prayed about doing it. But not a long time. It was obvious that because there was a need, and we were free during that hour at church, and had the aptitude to lead the class we said yes. We didn’t need to seek God’s will for weeks before jumping aboard. We already knew it’s God’s will to communicate his love and his Word to everyone, especially children, and so we knew that it was God’s will for us to do this. (Read that last line again, please) So, Sharie, is the creative director for the class — she’s the friendly, peaceful, focusing and encouraging presence, and I do most of the talky-talky stuff. How long will we be Sunday school teachers? I don’t know — a few more months, twenty years, time will tell. I suppose it depends on how long there is a need, and when and if God directs us in another direction for ministry. But we’re going to do it right now and trusting God to guide and empower us.
NUMBER THREE: It’s not about me anyway. Ministry is not about me being fulfilled or happy. No, Obi Wan, I don’t need to trust my feelings! Ministry, like love, is not built on feelings. The fulfillment and satisfaction of seeing results does happen and it gives me a boost, you’d better believe it. But those things are just the icing on the cake of what God is doing in the lives of those kids. I thank God for the good feelings that come from teaching those kids, but that’s not what it’s about ultimately. It’s not about me, it’s about God’s Word and God’s love and those things intersecting with the lives of a bunch of bouncing, energetic, sometime frustrating, always fun-loving, question asking, rabbit trail inducing, spiritually hungry children of God. God is blessing Sunday school and I want to be right there, a part of what his will is and what he is blessing.
[pullquote align=”full” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””]Yeah, I’m a preacher — but…I’m God’s child first and I follow his will. I serve HIM. I follow him to the pulpit if he leads there, absolutely. But I also follow him to the classroom, or the parking lot, or the offering basket or communion tray, or the choir room, or…[/pullquote]
Application Steps: