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Voicing one theme for the entire Bible and structuring all sermons around that idea may seem to be an impossible challenge. For veteran pastor and preaching professor Edmund Clowney it will not do to preach a text from either the Old or New Testaments without fully preaching its ultimate and primary focus-the person and work of Jesus Christ. He writes, "To see the text in relation to Christ is to see it in its larger context, the context of God's purpose in revelation."
Clowney's rationale for emphasizing Christ's presence in the Old Testament rests on the purpose of the Hebrew Scripture. The Old Testament follows God's one great plan for human history and redemption, and the plan is not only from him but centers on him: his presence in his incarnate Son. The witness of the Scriptures to Christ is the reason they were written, so it is appropriate to emphasize this element in the Old Testament as well as in the New Testament.
By offering numerous full-length examples of his own sermons that emphasize Christ as the principle theme of Scripture, Clowney illustrates for those who will never have the privilege of being his students how they can craft sermons which present Christ as the primary consideration of the text. He also offers specific instructions on preparing such a sermon. He discusses the personal habits of prayer and Bible study that prepare pastors to seek out Christ's presence.
Clowney emphasizes the importance of including a specific application in every sermon so that Christ is presented both in what he says and does to reveal himself in the biblical text and in what he says and does to direct Christians' lives today.
Students preparing for the pastorate, pastors desiring to increase their emphasis on Christ in their sermons, and those seeking Christ's presence in all of Scripture will find a help in Clowney's writings.
178 pages, Unknown Binding
First published June 6, 2003
Though the actual mechanics of Clowney’s writing are superb, it is what he is writing that is a breath of hermeneutical and homiletical fresh air. Too often, sermons from the Old Testament end up sounding like a baptized self-help speech. In his opening sentence in chapter one, Clowney attempts to correct this by saying, “Preaching Christ from the Old Testament means that we preach, not synagogue sermons, but sermons that take account of the full drama of redemption, and its realization in Christ” (99). Indeed, Clowney is adamant throughout the volume - both in his methodology and in his examples - that Christians are to preach Christian sermons. To teach a Christian sermon necessarily involves preaching Christ; thus, a sermon from the Old Testament must necessarily have Christ as the center and the goal. What Clowney has produced is a thoroughly Christ-centered approach to reading the Bible and crafting sermons.
There are, however, a few concerns with Clowney’s suggestions. The first is that it would be easy to over-spiritualize the text so as to miss the immediate context of the text in its relationship with the Old Testament. While Clowney provides a safe-guard for this by emphasizing that understanding the text’s Old Testament truths is a part of the interpretive journey (and noted in the previously mentioned hermeneutical diagram), the method makes this easier than other methods for this particular error (which is not to say that other methods are not in danger of other errors).
A second concern comes from reading Clowney’s sermon examples. Clowney does not provide “three points and a poem,” and while it is refreshing to see his method played out, there is a reason why three points and a poem is such a popular preaching style. The fact of the matter is that Clowney’s methodology requires imagination and story-crafting skills, two qualities that every pastor may not have. While this should not stop a pastor from at least attempting Clowney’s redemptive-historical method, a pastor should serious evaluate whether Clowney’s method works with his skill set.
Despite these mild concerns, Preaching Christ in All of Scripture is an incredibly helpful book on preaching. Every preacher should read it and be encouraged that Christ is indeed found on every page of Scripture, and that Christ should be made much of in the sermon.