preacher4truth
Active Member
What is it?
Most of us have heard others say they want "edifying" sermons, typically in response to a sermon they've heard that didn't make them feel so good, or perhaps in response to one that did.
Does edifying mean making a person feel good about themselves, or, is it something else altogether? Is that the point of edification, so we can "feel" good?
Has such thinking helped facilitate the desire for and accumulation of preachers that do these things, i.e. Osteen, Meyers, Copeland, Moore, &c?
I think an errant view of edification is that people believe it means they are to be made to feel good about themselves. I do not believe this is what is meant concerning edifying the saints. I think it means building one up with truth, equipping them with such things.
There seems to be an ever-increasing amount of preachers that focus on what man gets, and making men/women feel good, successful, empowered, that this thing is all about them and what they get out of it. That's what people seem to think edifyng means these days, and sound doctrine is waning away to this type of preference.
What type of theology has lent itself to the outgrowth of these types of ministries, where man, his faith, the power of choice, positive thinking, and freewill are a major focus in the message, and how man feels and what man gets is the objective?
- Peace
Most of us have heard others say they want "edifying" sermons, typically in response to a sermon they've heard that didn't make them feel so good, or perhaps in response to one that did.
Does edifying mean making a person feel good about themselves, or, is it something else altogether? Is that the point of edification, so we can "feel" good?
Has such thinking helped facilitate the desire for and accumulation of preachers that do these things, i.e. Osteen, Meyers, Copeland, Moore, &c?
I think an errant view of edification is that people believe it means they are to be made to feel good about themselves. I do not believe this is what is meant concerning edifying the saints. I think it means building one up with truth, equipping them with such things.
There seems to be an ever-increasing amount of preachers that focus on what man gets, and making men/women feel good, successful, empowered, that this thing is all about them and what they get out of it. That's what people seem to think edifyng means these days, and sound doctrine is waning away to this type of preference.
What type of theology has lent itself to the outgrowth of these types of ministries, where man, his faith, the power of choice, positive thinking, and freewill are a major focus in the message, and how man feels and what man gets is the objective?
- Peace