Pastors

Tim Keller: Leading People to the Prodigal God, Part 3

Leadership Journal August 6, 2009

Tim Keller concludes his message with 5 things church leaders can do to help lead their people to the prodigal God:

Spiritual renewal has to happen in the heart by the Holy Spirit; it has to be happening now as we think of Jesus’ love. That destroys the spiritual deadness of our elder-brotherism. We have to drill this gospel down into our hearts. Otherwise, people think that asking Jesus into their hearts means “Now we should try hard to live for Jesus.”

1. As leaders we have to receive this gospel into our hearts. I was reading Romans 1:16, “He who through faith is righteous shall live,” and the Holy Spirit whispered to me, “and he who through preaching is righteous dies a thousand deaths every Saturday night.” The reason we take criticism so hard, the reason we care so much about attendance, the reason we work so hard, is that our salvation is still our performance; we’re not living by the gospel.

A 200-year-old text says, “Don’t go into the ministry to save your own soul.” At first, I thought, “We don’t do that; we go into ministry because we’ve already been saved.” But then I realized what the writer meant: Are we trying so hard to help people for our own sake, or for Jesus’ sake?

2. If you’re a teacher or preacher, carefully distinguish the gospel from moralism and religion. In Corinthians, when Paul appeals for generosity, he does it because “Christ, for our sakes, became poor.” To the degree we see we have true spiritual riches in Christ, money will not be our security and righteousness, and we’ll be free to give our money away because it’s only money. The reason we’re being stingy is because deep down we don’t believe.

If preaching, say, Psalm 23, we can’t just preach, “Now go and trust him.” Instead, we show how because Jesus came and had to thirst, our cup can be filled; because he was hungry, we can feast; and because he was forsaken, grace and mercy will follow us all the days of our lives. That’s why we can trust, because of Jesus.

We can’t just pound on the will.

3. Share this with your leaders. Get a group of leaders in your church to work through this, perhaps using The Prodigal God DVD and study guide.

4. Get the congregation to work through it.

5. Pray.

How do you know the renewal is coming? When you have gracious disagreements. In churches where people don’t grasp the gospel, there aren’t conflicts, because people just leave. Or they fight without graciousness. But when there are gracious disagreements, God is at work.

When you see in people a catholicity of spirit, a sense of appreciation for the many ways of Christian expression, yet still an enjoyment of your own tradition.

When people who thought they were Christians now see that they aren’t.

As John Newton wrote in the hymn,

Thou art coming to a king

Large petitions with you bring

For his grace and power are such

Thou can never ask too much.

Our Latest

Make Faith Plausible Again

Bryce Hales

A peculiar hospitality can awaken faith in our secular contexts.

Public Theology Project

Russell Moore’s Favorite Books of 2025

CT’s editor at-large recommends a handful of biographies—from Augustine to Robert Frost—along with sci-fi, Stephen King, social media, and more.

The Priest and Social Worker Deradicalizing Jihadists in Prison

One Catholic and one Muslim, they disagree on the role of religion in their work in Lebanon, but are united in their aim.

News

Hong Kong Church Rallies After 60 Congregants Lose Homes in Deadly Fire

Joyce Wu

The territory’s worst fire in decades claimed more than 150 lives.

The Russell Moore Show

 Listener Question: N.T. Wright on the Parable of the Talents

N.T. Wright takes a listener’s question about the parable of the talents told in Luke 19, and why it’s not all that it seems.

Celebrating Christmas with Hot Chai and Crispy Murukku

Amid rising persecution, Indian Christians share Jesus’ love with friends and neighbors through delectable dishes.

My Top 5 Books on Christianity in Southeast Asia

Compiled by Manik Corea

Explore how the faith has flourished in Singapore, the Philippines, Indonesia, and other countries in this religiously diverse region.

Review

Today’s Christians Can Learn from Yesterday’s Pagans

Grace Hamman

Classicist Nadya Williams argues for believers reading the Greco-Roman classics.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube