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  • The Words Get In the Way
    Wally Meyer
    May 1999
    What would you say if you saw the above drawing on your sermon notes Sunday morning? Would you try not to say anything from the pulpit,...
  • The Colors of Preaching
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    Have you ever considered how important color is to our lives? Have you wondered how color affects our lives?Color splashes your life...
  • How to Land the Sermon
    Wayne Brouwer
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    We live in a rather quiet neighborhood where nothing big ever seems to happen. At least so it seemed until several weeks ago when we...
  • Bringing the Truth to Bear on Our World
    David Henderson
    March 1999
    Every time we refer to the Bible, whether preaching before a congregation of familiar faces or citing a passage from memory in a conversation...
  • A Preaching Journey
    Ryan Ahlgrim
    March 1999
    Listening to sermons has always bored me -- during my childhood, my adolescence, and even now during my adulthood. For the first five...
  • 1999 Annual Review of Books for Preachers
    R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
    January 1999
    Though the demise of the book has been forecast by many, the printed page holds a cherished place in the ministry of the preacher....
  • The Year's Best Books in Homiletics
    Mark A. Johnson
    January 1999
    1998 marked a resurgence in books about Preaching. At Preaching, except for our annual review of books, we attempt to limit our review...
Page   <  41  42  43  44  45  >
Preaching to Power: An Interview with Lloyd John Ogilvie
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Preaching to Power: An Interview with Lloyd John Ogilvie
By Michael Duduit
Lloyd John Ogilvie has served since 1995 as Chaplain of the United States Senate, a role in which he opens each Senate session in prayer and leads an active schedule of Bible studies and counseling for Senators and their staffs. He came to Washington from Hollywood, California, where he had served as Pastor of First Presbyterian Church and hosted a national television ministry. He is author of nearly 50 books and continues to be a popular speaker and preacher. He was interviewed in his Senate office this spring by Preaching editor Michael Duduit.

Preaching: As we conduct this interview, we are sitting in the U.S. Capitol building, a place that is a symbol of political power. As you have made the transition from the pastorate of a local church to chaplain of the Senate, how has it influenced your approach to ministry?
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Ogilvie: It has had an influence. I've had to discover ways to help people who have immense secular power learn how to find the power of God for their work. The transition that must be made is to help persons realize that the river bed is the flow of God's power, not the river -- to help them be recipients of supernatural power, instead of simply the power of talents.

For instance, any Senator to be elected must have talents of articulation, clear thinking, organization, a lodestar kind of leadership that attracts others. However, once in office, a person needs the gifts of the Holy Spirit to be the kind of leader the nation needs -- gifts of wisdom, knowledge, discernment, prophetic vision, and then empowered articulation that's really the result of knowing God personally and yielding the role of leadership to him to receive the empowerment for the task.

So our work here is around the motto, "Without God, we can't; without us, He won't." And when we get that into perspective, great leaders can be born and nurtured to recognize that apart from the Lord's power we can't move at a supernatural level. God has so created the way He moves providentially in history that He works through people. Where He wants to be He invests a person; when He wants something to occur in a particular society, He puts His people to discover and do His will. And to get leaders to be open to that call is the important thing.

Preaching: You use your ministry of preaching and teaching not only to lead but to build leaders. How would you translate that into the local church setting for the pastor who is trying to build leaders among the laity?

Ogilvie: I think there has to be a fundamental reevaluation of the biblical idea of the meaning of the laity. To be in Christ is to be in the ministry, so every member of a congregation is a minister. The question is: what kind of a ministry does he or she have? So I think our task is to be a coach of the ministers, which puts preaching and teaching, counseling and administration in an entirely different focus.

I used to ask four basic questions in a church: what kind of people do we want to put into the world? What kind of church will make that quality of person possible? What kind of church officer will make that kind of church possible? And lastly, what kind of pastor will be an enabler of that quality of laity?

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