What Does Preaching Accomplish?
by Bob Waldron
The Old Testament prophet was the preacher of his day. He was inspired, but other than that, he served in the same role as preachers must serve today. There were all kinds: blunt Amos, noble Isaiah, austere Elijah. The various prophets also served different purposes. Some of them made virtually no converts (Jeremiah). Some were very successful, even when they did not want to be (Jonah).
The prophets have messages that refresh us and encourage us. Sometimes, they give us sober warning. Consider one of the lessons. Isaiah prophesied from 740-700 B.C. He preached in Jerusalem, but he saw the downfall of Israel to the north. He saw the terrible signs of decay in his own Judah. Although he had the sympathy and support of Hezekiah, the people of Judah gave little heed to his preaching. Also, sometimes, he dealt with a king such as Ahaz, who had no sympathy for Isaiah’s cause whatsoever. This situation makes us wonder, “If people will not listen, why preach? What good does it do?”
In Isaiah’s commission (Isaiah 6), the Lord says, “I need someone to do a job.” Isaiah volunteered. The job was: “Make the heart of this people fat, and make their ears heavy, and shut their eyes” (Isaiah 6:10). How was Isaiah to do this? By telling them what God said. Isaiah wanted to know how long he should do this. God answered, “Until cities be waste without inhabitant, and houses without man, and the land become utterly waste” (Isaiah 6:11).
God knew the heart of His people. He knew they would reject His word, and He wanted Isaiah to understand that He knew they would respond this way. Yet He told Isaiah to preach to them anyway. Why? Isaiah was to preach with all his heart to convert his people. If he could not accomplish this, he would leave them no defense when judgment came—let them drive the nails in their own coffin, as it were.
Today's preacher is to preach with all his heart to win sinners from the clutches of this sinful generation. Preach with love and concern. But even when the effort seems to be a failure, realize that this is not the case. We get preoccupied with numbers sometimes and forget that our objective is to do the bidding of God and leave the results in His almighty hand. God wants all men to be saved (I Timothy 2:4). If a generation turns away from God, then God wants them to have a witness against them that they were taught. He wants them taught repeatedly, so their rejection of His will is complete. Whether they obey or whether they are lost, “yet they shall know that there hath been a prophet among them” (Ezekiel 2:5).
This lesson is not to say that we should deaden our hearts to the fate of doomed men and women but to help us realize that when we have done our best to preach the word, and the world will not respond, we have not failed if we have faithfully taught the word.