{"id":2206,"date":"2014-07-20T14:19:52","date_gmt":"2014-07-20T22:19:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/oxgoad.ca\/?p=2206"},"modified":"2014-07-20T14:19:52","modified_gmt":"2014-07-20T22:19:52","slug":"more-on-invitations","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/oxgoad.ca\/2014\/07\/20\/more-on-invitations\/","title":{"rendered":"more on invitations"},"content":{"rendered":"

As a follow-up to my earlier post, I\u2019d like to comment on what I think are appropriate uses of the invitation.<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

First, I believe that every sermon should have some kind of appeal. There should be some kind of response required. That is what makes a sermon a sermon and not a lecture. Certainly one of our purposes in preaching is to inform, but our purpose always should be to persuade our hearers to make a spiritual decision of some kind. In a sense, the invitation should be a built-in component of our sermon. Lack of attention to this function of preaching may lend to the artificial character of many an invitation \u201ctacked on\u201d to the end of a service.<\/p>\n

Second, I believe that not every sermon will require the same kind of response, nor will it require a response of every hearer. A sermon with an evangelistic impulse will not have a direct appeal to a converted hearer. Though an invitation may be implied or explicitly expressed in such a message, it obviously only applies to those who are not born again. A sermon with a call to some other response, that is, directed at Christians, calling them to modify some aspect of their Christian life, will only apply to those for whom real change is required \u2013 some hearers will already practice what the sermon calls for.<\/p>\n

Nevertheless, in keeping with point one, every sermon should call for some response implicitly. I believe that most sermons should also call for some response explicitly, but that explicit call need not always<\/em> or only<\/em> be the \u201ccome forward\u201d invitation. In some of the discussion following my original article, several suggestions were mentioned, many of which I have employed.<\/p>\n