In his sermon titled "The Lord Calls His Preachers," Frank Tate explores the divine call to ministry as depicted in Mark 1:16-20. He outlines the notion that God individually calls His preachers, who do not choose this path for themselves but rather respond to the Lord’s summons while engaged in their daily vocations. Tate emphasizes that God's choice of disciples reflects His sovereignty, as exemplified by the calling of ordinary men like Simon, Andrew, James, and John. He stresses that true preachers are marked by their work ethic, humility, readiness to follow God's call willingly, and their role as "fishers of men," whose purpose is to bring others to Christ through the sincere proclamation of the Gospel. This understanding reinforces key Reformed doctrines such as God's sovereignty in salvation and vocation, the importance of the preacher's character, and the necessity of grace in preaching.
“God's preachers do not put themselves in the ministry...they don’t announce to everyone, you know, Lord has called me to preach and then sit around doing nothing.”
“God does not take rich men or men that have a lot of power and influence...The Lord uses common ordinary people to be leaders in His church.”
“When the Lord calls a man to preach, he's got to get out the baseball bat. No, he doesn't either. The Lord calls a man and He makes him willing to go into the ministry.”
“We draw men to Christ by telling the truth...We cast that net out of the sea, don’t we? Preaching to all men everywhere.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Frank grew up under the ministry of Henry Mahan in Ashland, Kentucky where he later served as an elder. Frank is now the pastor of Hurricane Road Grace Church in Cattletsburg / Ashland, Kentucky.
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