Author: | Michael Whitworth, Jay Lockhart, Jeff A. Jenkins, Jacob Hawk | ISBN: | 9780988512139 |
Publisher: | Start2Finish Books | Publication: | January 14, 2014 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Michael Whitworth, Jay Lockhart, Jeff A. Jenkins, Jacob Hawk |
ISBN: | 9780988512139 |
Publisher: | Start2Finish Books |
Publication: | January 14, 2014 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
The man behind the pulpit is the communicator of the Word of God, the dispenser of heavenly wisdom that restores the fainting, encourages the weary, and motivates the determined. The preacher is a minister—a servant to God and to his fellow man.
But who ministers to the minister?
In Fit for the Pulpit a host of preachers dispense comfort and counsel to their brethren in the trenches, men who often work in ministerial isolation as they seek to build up the body of Christ. Chris McCurley, the editor of this volume, has assembled ten different writers to cover a wide swath of material. In eleven chapters McCurley and his colleagues manage to cover many of the areas wherein preachers need continual encouragement: time, relationships, discouragement, stress, criticism, family, finances, sin, attitude, and laziness.
The authors of Fit for the Pulpit manage to minister grace to the minister by using candid and captivating language. The variety of the text and the timelessness of the themes make Fit for the Pulpit both readable and relatable. McCurley’s work makes a valuable contribution to the catalog of homiletical literature—a contribution that accomplishes much, helping to make men fit for the pulpit.
The man behind the pulpit is the communicator of the Word of God, the dispenser of heavenly wisdom that restores the fainting, encourages the weary, and motivates the determined. The preacher is a minister—a servant to God and to his fellow man.
But who ministers to the minister?
In Fit for the Pulpit a host of preachers dispense comfort and counsel to their brethren in the trenches, men who often work in ministerial isolation as they seek to build up the body of Christ. Chris McCurley, the editor of this volume, has assembled ten different writers to cover a wide swath of material. In eleven chapters McCurley and his colleagues manage to cover many of the areas wherein preachers need continual encouragement: time, relationships, discouragement, stress, criticism, family, finances, sin, attitude, and laziness.
The authors of Fit for the Pulpit manage to minister grace to the minister by using candid and captivating language. The variety of the text and the timelessness of the themes make Fit for the Pulpit both readable and relatable. McCurley’s work makes a valuable contribution to the catalog of homiletical literature—a contribution that accomplishes much, helping to make men fit for the pulpit.