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How to Listen to a Sermon
By George Whitefield
Keys for getting the most out of what the preacher
says
Jesus said, "Therefore consider carefully how
you listen" (Luke 8:18). Here are some cautions and directions,
in order to help you hear sermons with profit and advantage.
1. Come to hear them, not out of curiosity, but from
a sincere desire to know and do your duty. To enter His house merely
to have our ears entertained, and not our hearts reformed, must
certainly be highly displeasing to the Most High God, as well as
unprofitable to ourselves.
2. Give diligent heed to the things that are spoken
from the Word of God. If an earthly king were to issue a royal proclamation,
and the life or death of his subjects entirely depended on performing
or not performing its conditions, how eager would they be to hear
what those conditions were! And shall we not pay the same respect
to the King of kings, and Lord of lords, and lend an attentive ear
to His ministers, when they are declaring, in His name, how our
pardon, peace, and happiness may be secured?
3. Do not entertain even the least prejudice against
the minister. That was the reason Jesus Christ Himself could not
do many mighty works, nor preach to any great effect among those
of His own country; for they were offended at Him. Take heed therefore,
and beware of entertaining any dislike against those whom the Holy
Ghost has made overseers over you.
Consider that the clergy are men of like passions
with yourselves. And though we should even hear a person teaching
others to do what he has not learned himself, yet that is no reason
for rejecting his doctrine. For ministers speak not in their own,
but in Christ’s name. And we know who commanded the people
to do whatever the scribes and Pharisees should say unto them, even
though they did not do themselves what they said (see Matt. 23:1-3).
4. Be careful not to depend too much on a preacher,
or think more highly of him than you ought to think. Preferring
one teacher over another has often been of ill consequence to the
church of God. It was a fault which the great Apostle of the Gentiles
condemned in the Corinthians: "For whereas one said, I am of
Paul; another, I am of Apollos: are you not carnal, says he? For
who is Paul, and who is Apollos, but instruments in God’s
hands by whom you believed?" (1 Cor. 1:12; 2:3-5).
Are not all ministers sent forth to be ministering
ambassadors to those who shall be heirs of salvation? And are they
not all therefore greatly to be esteemed for their work’s
sake?
5. Make particular application to your own hearts
of everything that is delivered. When our Savior was discoursing
at the last supper with His beloved disciples and foretold that
one of them should betray Him, each of them immediately applied
it to his own heart and said, "Lord, is it I?" (Matt.
26:22).
Oh, that persons, in like manner, when preachers
are dissuading from any sin or persuading to any duty, instead of
crying, "This was intended for such and such a one!" instead
would turn their thoughts inwardly, and say, "Lord, is it I?"
How far more beneficial should we find discourses to be than now
they generally are!
6. Pray to the Lord, before, during, and after every
sermon, to endue the minister with power to speak, and to grant
you a will and ability to put into practice what he shall show from
the Book of God to be your duty.
No doubt it was this consideration that made St.
Paul so earnestly entreat his beloved Ephesians to intercede with
God for him: "Praying always, with all manner of prayer and
supplication in the Spirit, and for me also, that I may open my
mouth with boldness, to make known the mysteries of the gospel"
(Eph. 6:19-20). And if so great an apostle as St. Paul needed the
prayers of his people, much more do those ministers who have only
the ordinary gifts of the Holy Spirit.
If only all who hear me this day would seriously
apply their hearts to practice what has now been told them! How
ministers would see Satan, like lightning, fall from heaven, and
people find the Word preached sharper than a two-edged sword and
mighty, through God, to the pulling down of the devil’s strongholds! |