WHAT IS REFORMED EXPERIMENTAL
PREACHING? By Joel R. Beeke
"And Shaphan the scribe shewed the
king, saying, Hilkiah the priest hath delivered me a book. And Shaphan read it
before the king. And it came to pass, when the king had heard the words of the
book of the law, that he rent his clothes." 2 Kings 22:10-11
"So they
read in the book in the law of God distinctly, and gave the sense, and caused
them to understand the reading." Nehemiah 8:8
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You probably know that, historically,
Reformed and Puritan preaching was 'experimental' preaching. But do you
understand what is meant by the term experimental or experiential? The term
comes from the Latin word 'experimentum', derived from a verb which means to
'try, test, prove, or put to the test'. The same verb can also mean 'to find or
know by experience', and so gives rise to the word 'experientia', meaning
'trial, experiment' and 'the knowledge gained by experiment'.
Christian Experience. Calvin used experiential (experientia) and
experimental (experimentum) interchangeably, since, from the perspective of
biblical preaching, both words indicate the need for examining or testing
experienced knowledge by the touchstone of Scripture (Isaiah 8:20). Experimental
preaching stresses the need to know by experience the truths of the Word of God.
It seeks to explain in terms of biblical truth, how matters ought to go, and how
they do go, in the Christian life. It aims to apply divine truth to the whole
range of the believer's experience: in his walk with God as well as his
relationship with family, the church, and the world around him. We can learn
much from the Puritans about this type of preaching. As Paul Helm writes: 'The
situation calls for preaching that will cover the full range of Christian
experience, and a developed experimental theology. The preaching must give
guidance and instruction to Christians in terms of their actual experience. It
must not deal in unrealities or treat congregations as if they lived in a
different century or in wholly different circumstances. This involves taking the
full measure of our modern situation and entering with full sympathy into the
actual experiences, the hopes and fears, of Christian people'.
Preaching Christ. The experimental preaching of the Reformers and
Puritans focused on preaching Christ. As Scripture clearly shows, evangelism
must bear witness to the record God has given of his only begotten Son (Acts
2:3; 5:42; 8:35; Romans 16:25; 1 Corinthians 2:2; Galatians 3:1). The Puritans
thus taught that any preaching in which Christ does not have the pre-eminence is
not valid experiential preaching. William Perkins said that the heart of all
preaching was to 'preach [only] one Christ by Christ to the praise of Christ'.
According to Thomas Adams, 'Christ is the sum of the whole Bible, prophesied,
typified, prefigured, exhibited, demonstrated, to be found in every leaf, almost
in every line, the Scriptures being but as it were the swaddling bands of the
child Jesus'. 'Think of Christ as the very substance, marrow, soul, and scope of
the whole Scriptures', advised Isaac Ambrose. In this Christ-centred context,
Reformed and Puritan evangelism was marked by a discriminating application of
truth to experience.
Marks of Grace. Discriminatory preaching
defines the difference between the non-Christian and the Christian.
Discriminatory preaching pronounces the wrath of God and eternal condemnation
upon the unbelieving and impenitent. But it offers the forgiveness of sins and
eternal life to all who, by true faith, embrace Jesus Christ as Saviour and
Lord. Such preaching teaches that if our religion is not experiential, we will
perish not because experience itself saves, but because Christ who saves sinners
must be experienced personally as the rock on whom our eternal hope is built
(Matthew 7:22-27; 1 Corinthians 1:30; 2:2). The Reformers and Puritans were very
aware of the deceitfulness of the human heart. Puritan evangelists in particular
took great pains to identify the marks of grace that distinguish the church from
the world, true believers from merely professing believers, and saving faith
from temporary faith. Thomas Shepard in The Ten Virgins, Matthew Mead in The
Almost Christian Discovered, Jonathan Edwards in Religious Affections, and other
Puritans wrote dozens of works to differentiate imposters from true believers.
That kind of discriminatory preaching is scarce today. Even in conservative
Evangelical churches, head knowledge of scriptural truth is often a substitute
for heart experience, or (what is equally unscriptural) heart experience is
substituted for head knowledge. Experimental preaching calls for both head
knowledge and heart experience; its goal, according to John Murray, is
'intelligent piety'.
Brought Home. Experimental preaching is
'Christianity brought home to men's business and bosoms', said Robert Burns.
'The principle on which experimental religion rests is simply this, that
Christianity should not only be known, and understood, and believed, but also
felt, and enjoyed, and practically applied'. How different this is from most
contemporary preaching! The Word of God is often preached today in a way that
wiII never transform anyone because it never discriminates and never applies.
Preaching is reduced to a lecture, a catering to the wishes and needs of people,
or a form of experientialism removed from the foundation of Scripture. Such
preaching fails to expound from Scripture what the Puritans called 'vital
religion': how a sinner is stripped of all his own righteousness; driven to
Christ alone for salvation; finds joy in obedience and reliance upon Christ;
encounters the plague of indwelling sin; battles against backsliding; and gains
the victory through Christ.
Our Great Need. When God's Word is
preached experimentally, the Holy Spirit uses it to transform men, women, and
nations. Such preaching transforms because it corresponds to the vital
experience of the children of God (Romans 5: 1-11); clearly explains the marks
of saving grace in the believer (Matthew 5:3-12; Galatians 5:22-23); proclaims
the high calling of believers as the servants of God in the world (Matthew
5:13-16); and shows the eternal destination of believers and unbelievers
(Revelation 21:1-9), We desperately need a return to faithful, Reformed
experimental preaching today.
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