I believe that one of our
biggest problems as Christians is that we do not do enough preaching. Now, I
don’t mean behind a pulpit every Sunday or even on the street corner throughout
the week. And I’m not thinking here about preaching to your unsaved loved one
or neighbor, though certainly you should be sharing the gospel with them
whenever you are provided the opportunity. I am talking about personally
preaching to ourselves every single day. Specifically preaching the gospel
message to ourselves. D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones was right, “most of your
unhappiness in life is due to the fact that you are listening to yourself
instead of talking to yourself” (Spiritual
Depression: Its Causes and Its Cure. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans
Publishing Company, 1986; 20). Let me explain what I mean by this.
Every morning we wake up
with thoughts going through our head. Perhaps they remind us of sins we
committed yesterday; an ugly thought that we had, that unkind and hurtful word
which we said to our spouse, the wrong way we responded to our children, or the
jealousy we had for what someone else had been given instead of us. These
thoughts condemn us wearing us down. We can either listen to these thoughts and
allow them to defeat us or we can battle them by preaching to ourselves the
truth of the gospel message. Telling ourselves that Jesus Christ died for all
of those sins 2,000 years ago experiencing the punishment for them that we
deserve and if we are united to Him through faith, God no longer sees those
sins when He looks at us. We have been forgiven of all of them through the shed
blood of our Savior. Nothing that we do can separate us from the love that He
has for us in Christ (Romans 8:35-39). When our thoughts point out that we
can’t do enough or will fall short of the next task, we need to preach to
ourselves that Jesus did all that was necessary for us to be in a right
standing before God and our acceptance before Him is not based on our imperfect
deeds but Christ’s perfect righteousness. Also, we remind ourselves that we
have His Holy Spirit dwelling inside us whom we can rely on to give us the
ability to do whatever it is that He has called. Or the thoughts tell us some
negative things about ourselves after looking in the mirror or being given the
pink slip at our job. Preaching the gospel to ourselves is saying to ourselves that
in light of that, our real identity is still found in being a chosen, loved,
predestined, adopted, redeemed, forgiven child of God in Christ (Ephesians 1). When
we look at our circumstances and our thoughts conclude that God has abandoned
us, preaching the gospel to ourselves is telling ourselves that God uses such
times to strengthen our faith and to increase our trust in Him as we are made
more aware of how good He is to us (Job 42:5-6; 2 Corinthians 1:8-10; James
1:2-4). That He is forever for us and working all things for the good of our
ultimate redemption (Romans 8:28-32). Preaching the gospel to ourselves is
basically taking the truths of Scripture and telling them to ourselves to
combat these thoughts in our minds.
This practice is exactly
what the author of Psalm 42 does in battling his depression. As he goes through
and recounts his longing to be back in God’s presence at the temple and the
tears that he has been shedding day and night as well as the taunts of his
enemies as to where his God is, he stops and begins to talk to himself. “Why
are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you in turmoil within me? Hope in
God; for I shall again praise Him, my salvation and my God” (v. 5). He
encourages himself in the midst of the pain and woe that he needs to find his
hope in God, not in anyone or anything else. That in God is found his salvation
from whatever it is he may be experiencing. That God is still his God regardless
of it all. We see that he ends the Psalm on the exact same note (v. 11). That
is the method which he employed to pull himself out of the pit of despair and
depression; preaching the gospel to himself. We would do well to follow his
lead.
It appears that Jeremiah
also, in a sense, preached the gospel to himself in the midst of his lamenting
over how bad things had gotten with the Babylonians ransacking of Jerusalem.
Roughly halfway through the book of Lamentations, he states, “But this I call
to mind, and therefore I have hope: The steadfast love of the LORD never
ceases; His mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is
Your faithfulness. ‘The LORD is my portion’ says my soul, ‘therefore I will
hope in Him.’ ” (3:21-24). He preaches to himself the character of God to bring
him back to the hope that he has only in Him. A hope that he obviously was
losing sight of in the thick of the circumstances he found himself in.
So the next time those
thoughts come into your head, don’t listen to them. Preach the truth of the
gospel to yourself instead. And keep preaching until you stop giving heed to
such thoughts but embrace the truth. When the thought returns, then begin preaching
again. Continue to preach the gospel to yourself everyday.
Love
in Christ,
Pastor
Lee
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