A few dear preachers today are kicking over the traces and demanding liberty for their people. It costs! It costs tremendously, but it will pay big dividends when God’s payday comes.
5. Nathan Preached to a Big Shot About His Sin
Nathan was an unpopular preacher. He did not get an honorary degree from the University of Jerusalem, but he got his man! His text was: "Thou Art the Man!"
That type of preaching has never been popular. It is not popular today, and the man who is preaching that kind of Gospel is not a popular preacher. Today, in this modern, liberal age, the preacher is not supposed to point people out or to call their names. They might get offended!
Nathan preached his sermon to a big shot—none other than the king himself. He preached him a red-hot sermon in language easily understood, and then looked him straight in the eyes and said, "Thou art the man"! (II Sam. 12:7).
They all looked alike to Brother Nathan. Big shots or little shots—it made no difference to Nathan. He had a message from God to deliver, and he delivered it just exactly as he received it from God.
Every minister of the Gospel has a message to deliver, and woe be unto the preacher who fails to deliver it just as the Lord God has laid it down.
SAD, BUT SO: The minute some poor little fellows get a little recognition from the big boys, they forget God and His desires. They bow and stoop and sell out to the machine in order to get a position of prominence.
What kind of a God do some people believe in? If God can save a young man and call that young man to preach His Word, don’t you believe GOD will give him a place in which to deliver the message? I DO!
Jesus said to His disciples in Mark 11:22, "HAVE FAITH IN GOD"! If we put our trust in God, if we seek first His kingdom, then He will take perfect care of the rest (Matt. 6:33). The disciples informed the rulers in their day, "We ought to obey God rather than men" (Acts 5:29).
God give us more preachers who will first listen to God for the message, then deliver the message of God just as God gives it! The place to find that message is in the Word.
6. Elijah Was Against the Prophets of Baal
Elijah is our sixth unpopular preacher. He wouldn’t get to first base with the modern program. He would have been called a "prophet of gloom"—a fellow who always looks on the dark side—a "calamity howler."
Elijah would have never gotten an invitation to preach the associational sermon. He preached coming judgment. He even went so far as to preach that there would be no rain for three years. He even said that there would be no dew.
Preacher Elijah even prayed that God would shut up the heavens and withhold the rain (Jas. 5:17). You did not find Preacher Elijah going around over the country, praying, "God bless our land." He knew that God could not bless it unless they repented.
God can’t bless our fair country today unless we come to our senses and confess our sins; and it needs to begin in the pulpit in many places, and it must begin in the pulpit if it ever reaches the pew. A preacher who does not preach the judgment of God needs to go to the altar and confess his sins. "God is love" (I John 4:
. He is also "a consuming fire" (Heb. 12:29).
Elijah was quite a preacher, but he was very unpopular (I Kings 17:1). Read the story of his life in the Old Testament.
7. Micaiah Was Not for Sale
The seventh unpopular preacher whom we will discuss is Micaiah. This poor fellow would today be called "uncouth." They would say today, "Brother Micaiah, you should get a little more training; it would help you to express yourself better and give you a better understanding of the brethren."
You see, Micaiah’s text was: "Your Prophets Are Liars!" (II Chron. 18:22). Such language today would certainly be outlawed by the "learned." "The very idea—calling the brethren liars!" But Micaiah did it!
We still have fellows wearing priestly garb and parading as ministers of the Gospel who are just plain liars. Paul describes them in II Corinthians 11:13–15. The Devil is nobody’s fool. He works from within. He tries to get into the pulpit. And, sad but so, he has done so in many places.
Micaiah got in jail for preaching the truth of the Lord (II Chron. 18:12–34), but he was one of those fellows who was not for sale!
I know some who used to be balls of fire; now they don’t have enough fire to warm a chigger’s feet. I used to pray with some of the fellows in school when their car payments were due and they did not know from where the money to make the payments was coming. You could hear them praying for a city block—just plain praying. Of course, some of the fellows are doctors now. Somebody gave them D.D.’s somewhere along the line, and for some reason, they don’t pray or preach as they did when we were in school in the hills.
The price tags on some fellows are so low that they would not even be of service in a five-and-ten-cent store. But Micaiah was not for sale. He preferred jail to selling his Lord down the river.
8. Jeremiah Preached Continually on Judgment Coming
Jeremiah, the weeping prophet! (There have not been enough tears in some pulpits in ten years, if they were all in a bottle, to put out the cigarette in the parson’s mouth. And that—the cigarette habit—is an indication of one reason why there are no more tears in the pulpit today. Cigarette-puffing preachers just do not weep over sinners.)
Jeremiah had a fire in his bones. "But his word was in mine heart as a burning fire shut up in my bones" (Jer. 20:9). The only fire which some modern preachers have is shut up in bone pipes in their mouths. Their hearts are as cold as the modernistic seminary from which they received their degrees. Jeremiah received his B.A. degree from God Almighty: "B-e not A-fraid"! (Jer. 1:
.
Poor Jeremiah would have a hard time getting a church in the "machine" of today. Every sermon he preached was on backsliding and judgment. "Judgment! Judgment! Judgment!" was his text. He would be accused of being in a rut today. The modern society crowd would declare that his sermons sounded like a broken record.
Most preachers do their best to get up a brand-new sermon for every service, but in most places that is not at all necessary. The same ones need to be preached over and over and over again—that is, if it is Gospel. The majority of folks pay very little attention to the sermon—and a good percentage do exactly nothing about it! Therefore, we need to preach and preach and preach and preach the message of His bidding, fearing only God, until the people do something about it!
The preacher who hammers and hammers and hammers until a little Gospel soaks in, may not be popular with the people of this modern era, but he is popular with God—and that is all that counts anyway.
They put Preacher Jeremiah in a pit, but God removed him. I would much rather be in a pit for God’s glory than to be on a pedestal and be compromising with a bunch of scissor-tail, coat-wearing liberals and dancing to the music of some denominational machine.
Thank God for prophets who can weep and season their sermons with tears which flow from hearts broken over the sins of their people! We’ve heard a lot about the water in the baptistry, but what we need is to see a little water in the eyes of brokenhearted preachers; and when we see it there, we will see tears around an old-fashioned mourners’ bench. But, of course, that is not popular either; not in this day of liberalism.
I have written this message primarily for believers; but if you have read these lines and you are not saved, God grant that right now you will confess your sin and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and be saved.