If I do not return to the pulpit this weekend, millions of people will go to hell.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
If we had more hell in the pulpit, we would have less hell in the pew.
If there is no hell, a good many preachers are obtaining money under false pretenses.
In the pulpit, we're supposed to present the teaching with all of its unvarnished clarity, but when you step out of the pulpit, you have to meet people where they are and try to walk with them.
One of my great goals in life is to live long enough to where I am in the pulpit, preaching my heart out, and I die on the spot, my chin hits the pulpit - boom! - and I'm down and out. What a way to die!
The words of the Bible, and the Bible alone, should be heard from the pulpit.
I'm going to let God be the judge of who goes to heaven and hell.
Give me one hundred preachers who fear nothing but sin and desire nothing but God, and I care not whether they be clergymen or laymen, they alone will shake the gates of Hell and set up the kingdom of Heaven upon Earth.
The hell to be endured hereafter, of which theology tells, is no worse than the hell we make for ourselves in this world by habitually fashioned our characters in the wrong way.
If I started preaching politics from the pulpit, our church would empty overnight. That's not why people come to church. They want to hear the word of God being proclaimed, not the word of Robert Jeffress.
I take it for granted that you do not wish to hear an echo from the pulpit nor from the theological class-room.