E.A. Johnston passionately calls for a return to the pure, uncompromised gospel preaching that confronts sin, calls for repentance, and proclaims redemption through Christ.
In "The Preacher's Message," E.A. Johnston challenges contemporary ministers and believers to return to the uncompromised gospel preaching of earlier revival days. He emphasizes the necessity of preaching the full counsel of God, including the doctrines of sin, repentance, and regeneration. Johnston warns against diluted messages that produce false converts and calls for a renewed commitment to authentic discipleship and faith in Jesus Christ.
Full Transcript
I believe in many pulpits in our land. We have diluted the gospel message to make it easier for sinful man to swallow. The message of the only believed gospel has been a damning message to millions for the last 70 years.
But back yonder, when the spirit of God was afoot in the land and this country was in the midst of revival and great spiritual awakening, and tens of thousands were being saved, the message that was preached in that day as compared with our day was as different as night and day. Not many are getting saved today, friends, as God is absent from among us, for he ran them off a long time ago. But preaching the gospel, contrary to the one found in my Bible, God used to bless the preaching of his word when old-time preachers proclaimed the great doctrines of the gospel, which are ruin, redemption, repentance, and regeneration, that the gospel in those days was preached in its purity and proper order, that a sinner was first shown his need of a remedy for sin before the remedy was offered, and that the first message of the gospel of the Son of God was that God was a God who must punish sin.
And if you believe that, you could come along and preach the second message of the gospel about a remedy for sin in the person of the Lord Jesus. My message this evening, friends, is entitled, The Preacher's Message, as we are in our series of preaching I believe most seminaries today don't teach a man how to preach the full counsel of God. I believe I know what I'm talking about, for I have two earned doctorates from two different seminaries, and one is a Ph.D. You'd be hard-pressed, friends, to graduate seminary today and emerge as a minister of the gospel who knows how to preach the gospel in its full colors of ruin, redemption, repentance, and regeneration.
I doubt very seriously you will learn in seminary how to thunder the law of God about the ears of your hearers to awaken them to the terrors of their lost condition by preaching up the utter strictness and severity of the law of God, that God requires perfection to get into his heaven, and that all men, when they are held up against the strictness and severity of the law of God, will be found to be guilty lawbreakers and sinners who deserve punishment for sin, for the sentencing of the law must be carried out by a just judge who must punish sin, that man is born with a depraved and ruined nature, with a bent toward sin, and that salvation rests solely in the hands of God and not man, that unless you repent you will surely go to hell, and only those individuals who have experienced a supernatural act of regeneration upon the heart, which is a new birth, will make it into heaven, that Jesus Christ suffered and died as a substitute for sin, and he rose again, and now sits at the right hand of the Father, and he earned that right by way of a bloody cross, that to be a Christian means that one must throw down their shotgun of rebellion at the feet of a sovereign, and submit to the rule and reign of the Lordship of Jesus Christ, and that a crucified Christ must have crucified followers who take up their cross daily in a life of self-denial and discipleship, that to be a Christian means you have been washed in the blood and born from above, and now you can put that in your pipe and smoke it, friends, because until we get back to that kind of preaching and call sin black and hell hot, and that a sinner must exercise repentance toward God and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, we will merely continue to make false converts who are baptized and join the church believe in church membership is salvation. In Jeremiah 6.16 we read, Thus saith the Lord, Stand ye in the ways and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls. But they said, We will not walk therein.
Let us pray.
Sermon Outline
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I
- The dilution of the gospel in modern pulpits
- Contrast with revival-era preaching
- The necessity of preaching the full counsel of God
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II
- The four great doctrines: ruin, redemption, repentance, regeneration
- The law’s strictness and the sinner’s need for a remedy
- The role of God’s justice and punishment of sin
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III
- The person and work of Jesus Christ as the remedy for sin
- The call to repentance and faith in Christ
- The necessity of a crucified life and true discipleship
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IV
- False converts vs. true salvation
- The importance of returning to the old paths
- The consequences of rejecting God’s call
Key Quotes
“The message of the only believed gospel has been a damning message to millions for the last 70 years.” — E.A. Johnston
“Until we get back to that kind of preaching and call sin black and hell hot, and that a sinner must exercise repentance toward God and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, we will merely continue to make false converts.” — E.A. Johnston
“A crucified Christ must have crucified followers who take up their cross daily in a life of self-denial and discipleship.” — E.A. Johnston
Application Points
- Examine your own understanding of the gospel to ensure it includes repentance and regeneration.
- Commit to preaching or sharing the gospel in its full biblical purity without compromise.
- Live a daily life of self-denial and discipleship, taking up your cross as a follower of Christ.
