With insight and wisdom, Derek Tidball reviews a selection of idols to which preachers are particularly vulnerable, under four headings: the self, the age, the task and the ministry.
'Preachers' and 'idolatry'. Surely these two words don't belong together? Or do they?
The apostle John ends his first letter with the plea, 'Dear children, keep yourselves from idols' (1 John 5:21) - an exhortation to believers to keep alert to insidious temptations of all kinds.
What is true of Christian life and ministry in general is true of preaching in particular, and John's warning may be taken as a specific warning to preachers who can easily fall prey to various forms of idolatry associated with their calling.
With insight and wisdom, Derek Tidball reviews a selection of idols to which preachers are particularly vulnerable, under four headings: the self, the age, the task and the ministry. His aim is not to condemn - for the task is perilous enough - but to alert, and thereby help us to avoid those factors which, although good in themselves, become idolatrous, deposing God from the throne which is rightly and exclusively his. Our preaching should be offered up as a worthy sacrifice to the one, true, living God.
Contents
Abbreviations
Preface
Introduction: The nature of idolatry
The idols of the self
The idol of the pulpit
The idol of authority
The idol of popularity
The idols of the age
The idol of success
The idol of entertainment
The idol of novelty
The idol of secularization
The idols of the task
The idol of oratory
The idol of immediacy
The idols of the ministry
The idol of professionalism
The idol of busyness
The idol of familiarity
Epilogue
Contributors | Derek Tidball |
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ISBN | 9781844747962 |
Format | eBook |
Language | English |
Publisher | IVP |