My friend’s story last Monday could be told by every preacher in the land.
“When I stepped off the platform Sunday morning, I knew I had laid an egg. The sermon seemed to have been still-born. It just didn’t work. I felt awful.”
“But the most amazing thing. People were down at the altar praying, and ever since a number of people have come up to me saying how it ministered to them.”
Just goes to show, I said.
Goes to show what?
I raised that question on Facebook this week. I asked pastors who have felt that they bombed and then heard from church members that the sermon had special meaning to them, what they learned from the experience. The answers were all of one theme: “That God can use anything.” “God can speak through a donkey.” “How unimportant the messenger is.” “Christ is everything.”
Recently a friend and I visited another church. She was visiting in our home and there is a pastor she loves to hear, so I drove her there. That day, the sermon was not up to his usual standards, I felt. He is normally one of the finest expositors anywhere.
In the car, on the way to lunch, my friend said, “That was a wonderful sermon. Just what I needed to hear today.”
Goes to show.