Menu
Repent Or Go on to Hell
E.A. Johnston
0:00
0:00 5:34
E.A. Johnston

Repent Or Go on to Hell

E.A. Johnston · 5:34

E.A. Johnston passionately warns that without true repentance and preaching that convicts the conscience, people risk eternal damnation.
In this urgent and powerful sermon, E.A. Johnston addresses the spiritual famine of hearing God's word in modern churches. He challenges the common trend of teaching without preaching, emphasizing that only convicting, God-centered preaching can awaken sinners to their peril and lead them to repentance. Johnston calls listeners to confront their sin, repent, and trust in Christ to avoid eternal hell. His message is a passionate plea for true gospel preaching that transforms hearts and saves souls.

Full Transcript

We live in a day, friends, much like the Jews in the days of Amos, where there is a famine in the land, a famine not of bread, but for hearing the word of God. There are several reasons for this. A famine of hearing God's word is a direct result of the churches being under a remedial judgment from God because they refuse to preach the gospel in its purity and proper order.

Most of our pulpits today don't have any preaching at all, but merely teaching, teaching informs and preaching transforms. And the dearth of preaching and the prominence of teaching is why we have such well-informed but unconverted church members who have never had their conscience cut by the Holy Spirit, nor their hearts broken under the hammer of God's authoritative word. Yet we read in Jeremiah 23, 29, it's not my word, like as a fire, sayeth the Lord, and like a hammer that breaks the rock in pieces.

It's nice to hear about the canons of Dort and the Reformation, but teaching religious history to lost people won't help them in eternity. It will merely harden them in their sins. Men and women and boys and girls must be brought to the brink of eternity beneath searching sermons that probe the heart and discover all false refuges that men hide under.

Let me ask you, friends, what does a fire do? A fire does two things. It awakens and alarms. If your house was on fire while you slept in your bed, your neighbors would pound and pound on your door to awaken you to your danger.

Once you were awakened, then you would become alarmed. This is what the preaching of the Word of God will do, preached in its proper order and in its purity. It will search the conscience like a fire, revealing sin and warning of hell.

Once men see their danger of dying in their sins and being sent to hell, then they can be brought to seek an interest in Christ whose blood can cleanse the deepest stain of sin. But first, men must be awakened to their lost condition, to see their danger before they will seek a refuge in a Savior from sin. Then, hearts must be broken beneath the hammer of the Word of God to bring men to humility in seeking God and repentance from sin.

Today, many pastors fear their congregations more than God and will not preach anything disruptive to them. Why risk getting the good deacons mad at you when it's easier to teach nice little messages that don't disturb anyone? The problem is they don't save anyone either. But if we maintain our pulpits as teaching lecterns that merely inform, then we risk sending our educated congregations to a burning hell.

Most folks today don't need to hear about the doctrine of lectern as much as they need to repent. It's repent or just go on to hell. Men today live like Cain as they raise all the canes they can because they are renegades fleeing from the face of a holy God.

They will hide in every false refuge and remain in carnal security until a preacher comes along who is willing to fear God more than men and preach the old God-centered gospel that saves, preach a barbed-wire gospel that cuts the conscience and disturbs souls, where spirit-anointed preaching that calls sin black and hell hot and warns men of their duty of repentance and their utter necessity of regeneration. Then the Word of God can be used by the Spirit of God to bring hearts under the hammer of God's Word so false foundations can be broken up and sinners brought to see their need of a bloodstained Savior from sin in the person of the Lord Jesus Christ. You must repent or just go on to hell.

It is my prayer that God in his mercy will awaken you to your danger and peril of dying in your sins and that he will grant you the grace of repentance and faith for his namesake and for his glory. Amen.

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • Current spiritual famine for hearing God's word
    • Churches under remedial judgment for impure gospel preaching
    • Difference between preaching and teaching
  2. II
    • Preaching as a fire that awakens and alarms
    • Necessity of awakening to danger of sin and hell
    • Role of the Word to break hearts and bring humility
  3. III
    • Fear of man hindering bold preaching
    • Danger of educated but unconverted congregations
    • Call to preach a God-centered, convicting gospel
  4. IV
    • Urgent call to repent or face hell
    • False refuges and carnal security compared to Cain
    • Prayer for God’s mercy to grant repentance and faith

Key Quotes

“Most of our pulpits today don't have any preaching at all, but merely teaching, teaching informs and preaching transforms.” — E.A. Johnston
“You must repent or just go on to hell.” — E.A. Johnston
“The Word of God can be used by the Spirit of God to bring hearts under the hammer of God's Word so false foundations can be broken up.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Examine your heart honestly to see if you have truly repented and trusted Christ.
  • Support and encourage preaching that convicts and transforms rather than just teaching.
  • Do not fear the truth of God's Word but allow it to break false securities and lead to humility.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main problem E.A. Johnston identifies in churches today?
He identifies a famine of hearing God's word due to churches focusing on teaching rather than preaching that convicts and transforms.
Why does Johnston emphasize preaching over teaching?
Because preaching transforms hearts by awakening and alarming sinners, while teaching merely informs without producing repentance.
What does Johnston say about fear of man in preaching?
He warns that many pastors fear upsetting their congregations more than fearing God, leading to soft preaching that fails to save.
What is the ultimate call of this sermon?
The urgent call is for listeners to repent or face eternal hell, emphasizing the necessity of a broken heart and faith in Christ.
How does Johnston describe the effect of true preaching?
True preaching acts like fire and a hammer, cutting the conscience and breaking false foundations to reveal the need for salvation.

Everything we make is available for free because of a generous community of supporters.

Donate