The Neglected Bible in the Preacher’s Study
Image ID
smdas0201
Description
A weary sermon writer sits at his desk surrounded by stacked reference books, quotation manuals, humor encyclopedias, sermon aids, and scattered papers, while a robed heavenly messenger pulls back the curtain and points directly to a cobwebbed Holy Bible on the shelf. Busts of Dante and Shakespeare look down from the wall, emphasizing the temptation to draw pulpit authority from literature, wit, and borrowed learning while Scripture remains ignored.
The artwork presents a clear rebuke to ministry that substitutes cleverness for revelation. The open “Homiletic Encyclopedia,” labeled sermon helps, and neglected Bible form a visual exhortation: preaching may use learning, but it must be governed by the Word of God. Its strongest biblical theme is the sufficiency and divine inspiration of Scripture, calling pastors, teachers, and churches back to biblical proclamation rather than performance.
The artwork presents a clear rebuke to ministry that substitutes cleverness for revelation. The open “Homiletic Encyclopedia,” labeled sermon helps, and neglected Bible form a visual exhortation: preaching may use learning, but it must be governed by the Word of God. Its strongest biblical theme is the sufficiency and divine inspiration of Scripture, calling pastors, teachers, and churches back to biblical proclamation rather than performance.
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