trusted online casino malaysia
Realizing the presence, promise, and power of the Kingdom of God.
Crosfigell

Living and Powerful

We need a revival of the Word, beloved.

For the Word of God is living and powerful, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.

  - Hebrews 4.12

And these clerks began their preaching, and they had fair Latin books with them, and they recited their reading clearly, and praised the Creator fervently. And it was recreation of mind and heart to the hosts to listen to them. And those who had never thought of God before, turned their thoughts to Him now.

  - Life of Colman Ela, Irish, 17th century from an earlier ms.[1]

Our anonymous hagiographer is reporting on the work of itinerate preachers within the ministry of Colman Ela. We refer to such people as peregrini, wandering missionary/monks who brought the Gospel to pagan peoples in Ireland, Scotland, and elsewhere.

In this account, the object of their preaching is some local king and his tribe. We can make a couple of observations here about the preaching of these 6th-century Celtic missionaries. 

First, it was clear and fervent. This is evident both in the description of their delivery and the response of those who heard them. They made their points clearly, bringing the Word to their hearers in a manner that could penetrate and open their minds. And they did so with passion, in order to pierce the hearts of those who heard them.

Second, their preaching was based on the Latin text of the Bible – probably their own hand-made copies, transcribed for use in ministry. We can be sure that they had spent much time in the Word and were well prepared for this labor. Each monastery had a Scriptorium where the work of Scripture study and copying was part of every monk’s assigned duties. Celtic peregrini were solid students of the Word.

Third, preaching consisted of a combination of impassioned reading, praise to God, and instruction to the hearts and minds of the hearers. All these were blended seamlessly, it seems, into the proclamation of the Good News. We can imagine how this must have helped hearers have a weightier sense of the presence of God.

This is the kind of preaching that looses the living and active Word to impact lives. No jokes, stories, or skits. No gimmicks. No impressive, detailed explanations of subtle word usages or nuances of grammar. Reading, praising, explaining with clarity and fervor.

No wonder those Irish pagans who heard this preaching turned their thoughts to God.

We need a revival of preaching in the Church today, preaching that floods the mind with clear expositions of Biblical texts and teaching, and that stabs at the heart to lay it bear before the searching Spirit of God.

This kind of preaching requires diligent preparation and study. It also requires unblinking courage, for it will not be popular with the masses, who prefer entertainment to transformation.

But it will be blessed of God if it is grounded in prayer and proclaimed with love. 

Only the Word of God can bring life to lost sinners. Only the living and active Word of God can awaken slumbering saints, bring them to true repentance, and equip them for every good work. Only the Word of God can bring us into the presence of our Lord and His glory where the Spirit can transform us into the image of Jesus Christ.

Let us pray that God will move in the hearts of preachers all over this land to recover the ministry of proclaiming God’s Word with clarity and fervor, urgency, praise, and sound teaching.

Then we will see what God can do.

Psalm 25.4-7 (Festal Song: “Rise Up, O Men of God”)
Make me to know Your ways, teach me Your paths, O Lord!
My Savior, all day long I wait and seek You in Your Word.

Remember mercy, Lord, and steadfast love to me!
And all my sins before You let them not remembered be!

Lord, raise up faithful ministers of the Word, preachers who, like Patrick will proclaim the Gospel, investing the Word in the people they serve, and demanding obedience as the proper return to the Lord. Adapted from Audite Omnes Amantes

Have you checked out
ViewPoint?
In case you have not yet subscribed to our daily ViewPoint column and podcast, let meencourage you to do so. Every week we tackle a new subject in the Christian worldview, unpack it in seven daily lessons, then bundle the week together as a free study in PDF. ViewPoint currently resides in the ReVision column at the website, and you can sign up to receive it daily on your desktop, tablet, or smart phone, simply by registering at the home page.

If you click here, you can download the most recent ViewPoint series, free of charge. The theme is Why We Need the Church, which is probably a good question for us to be considering these days.

Thanks for your faithful prayers in support of our ministry. How about forwarding today’s Crosfigell to a dozen of your closest friends, encouraging them to sign up for themselves? Oh, and don’t forget to check out the new video we’ve placed on the website, which gives an overview of the website and our ministry. Just click here to view it.

T. M. Moore, Principal
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Psalms to Pray for Today and Thursday
Today
Morning: Psalm 119.153-160; Psalm 94
Evening: Psalm 20

Thursday
Morning: Psalm 119.161-168; Psalm 95
Evening: Psalm 21

T. M. Moore, Principal
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

All Psalms for singing from The Ailbe Psalter. Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.



[1]Plummer, p. 163.

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
Books by T. M. Moore

Subscribe to Ailbe Newsletters

Sign up to receive our email newsletters and read columns about revival, renewal, and awakening built upon prayer, sharing, and mutual edification.