The primary theological focus of Albert N. Martin's sermon, "Effective Popular Preaching #4," centers on the necessity of application in preaching. Martin argues that the effective proclamation of Scripture should not only involve explanation but must also engage the hearts and consciences of the hearers. He emphasizes the importance of making Scripture relevant to the listeners' lives, using the axiom that preaching must address their thinking, behavior patterns, affections, and wills. Key Scriptural references include 2 Timothy 3:16-4:2, which outlines the responsibilities of a preacher in teaching, reproving, rebuking, and exhorting, supported further by examples from the preaching of prophets and apostles. The practical significance lies in the assertion that preaching without application falls short of its biblical mandate, prompting the preacher to personally engage with their congregation's specific spiritual needs to facilitate actual change in their lives.
“Application in preaching is the highway from the head to the heart in our preaching of the Word of God.”
“We are not to speak before people, but to them, and must earnestly strive to make them take to themselves what we say.”
“If truth is the nail and exposition is the tap which sets the nail in the minds of men, then application is the blow of the hammer which drives it through the mind and into the heart.”
“The preacher must make the application himself. The goads and nails must not be laid by as if the post would knock them in of their own.”
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