God Never Saved any Man for being a Preacher.

I mentioned a week ago that I’ve been going through Richard Baxter’s book The Reformed Pastor. I’ve so far learned much from my reading, in so much that I want to share some of them with you.

I am persuaded that Richard Baxter’s words in his book (or to me so far it seems like a rather elongated sermon) would find homage to the hearts of every Christian, as we are called to be, in a degree, Ministers to ourselves and to others around us—through the Holy Spirit.

See that the work of saving grace be thoroughly wrought in your own souls. Take heed to yourselves, lest you be void of that saving grace of God which you offer to others, and be strangers to the effectual working of that gospel which you preach; and lest, while you proclaim to the world the necessity of a Savior, your own hearts should neglect him, and you should miss of an interest in him and his saving benefits. Take heed to yourselves, lest you perish, while you call upon others to take heed of perishing; and lest you famish yourselves while you prepare food for them. Though there is a promise of shining as the stars, to those ‘who turn many to righteousness,’ that is but on supposition that they are first turned to it themselves. Their own sincerity in the faith is the condition of their glory, simply considered, though their great ministerial labors may be a condition of the promise of their greater glory. Many have warned others that they come not to that place of torment, while yet they hastened to it themselves: many a preacher is now in hell, who hath a hundred times called upon his hearers to use the utmost care and diligence to escape it. Can any reasonable man imagine that God should save men for offering salvation to others, while they refuse it themselves; and for telling others those truths which they themselves neglect and abuse?

Many a tailor goes in rags, that maketh costly clothes for others; and many a cook scarcely licks his fingers, when he hath dressed for others the most costly dishes. Believe it, brethren, God never saved any man for being a preacher, nor because he was an able preacher; but because he was a justified, sanctified man, and consequently faithful in his Master’s work. Take heed, therefore, to ourselves first, that you he that which you persuade your hearers to be, and believe that which you persuade them to believe, and heartily entertain that Savior whom you offer to them. He that bade you love your neighbors as yourselves, did imply that you should love yourselves, and not hate and destroy yourselves and them.

—Richard Baxter, The Reformed Pastor (Carlisle, PA: Banner of Truth, 1656/1974), 53-54.

Read the rest of this magnificent work, full of zeal, passion and evangelistic fervor, here. I am convinced that every Christian believer that has a desire and calling to go into the ministry should and must read this book at least once.

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