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Seven Deadly Sins in the Pulpit


by Steve Murrell
4 Comments

It is increasingly common today to hear parts of the gospel proclaimed. The same was happening in
the early church. In Acts 20:26,27 Paul says to the Ephesian church elders, "I declare to you today
that I am innocent of the blood of any of you. For I have not hesitated to proclaim to you the whole
will of God." (Acts 20:26, 27)
Unlike many modern preachers, Paul refused to edit out the difficult parts of the message. He
insisted on preaching the whole gospel.
In 604, Pope Gregory wrote about the "Seven Deadly Sins" which included pride, gluttony, envy,
lust, anger, greed, and laziness. In the spirit of the Pope's top seven, here's my list of "Seven
Deadly Sins of the Pulpit."

1. PREACHING CHRIST WITHOUT THE CROSS.


No cost Christianity. Paul determined to know and preach nothing except Christ and Christ crucified
(1 Corinthians 2:2). Today it seems we preach everything but Christ and the cross, causing many to
live as enemies of the cross (Philippians 3:18).

2. PREACHING SALVATION WITHOUT SANCTIFICATION.


No change Christianity. So many claim Christ today with no evidence or change in their lives, and
the pulpit is at least partially to blame.

3. PREACHING DECISIONS WITHOUT DISCIPLESHIP.


No commitment Christianity. I know we are getting crowds and decisions, but are we making
disciples?

4. PREACHING LOVE WITHOUT LORDSHIP.


No compliance Christianity. Jesus is Lord, and because He is Lord, he heals, delivers, provides, and
saves.

5. PREACHING PROSPERITY WITHOUT PURPOSE.


No cause Christianity. God blesses us so that we can be a blessing.

6. PREACHING BLESSING WITHOUT BIRTHRIGHT.


No covenant Christianity. Esau threw away his birthright and still expected a blessing. It does not
work that way. If we want the blessing, we must accept the covenantal responsibilities that go with
the birthright.

7. PREACHING REVIVAL WITHOUT REFORMATION.


No transformation Christianity. We are called to be salt and light, to impact individuals and cultures,
families and nations. The gospel is supposed to be transformational.
I have certainly been guilty of all of above at different times in my life as a preacher. As I have
matured, hopefully, I'm being more and more faithful to preaching the WHOLE WILL OF GOD. How
about you?
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Steve is an accidental missionary, reluctant leader, frequent flyer, and a watch collector.
More from Steve Murrell or visit Steve at stevemurrell.typepad.com/
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