The Four Marks of Reformed Preaching

An open Bible resting on a wooden pulpit in a historic church, illuminated by a beam of light, with the words ‘Let God Speak – Four Marks of Reformed Preaching’ overlayed above.

⏱️ Estimated Reading Time: 2 min read

The Four Marks of Reformed Preaching

Always Reforming: Fidelity to God’s Word in Every Generation

The Reformation was fueled by preaching—men opening God’s Word and declaring, “Thus says the Lord.” Reformed preaching today continues that vision. It takes the whole counsel of God seriously and presses it upon the whole person.

Letting God Speak

Reformed preaching is thoroughly biblical. It’s not what man says that counts; it’s what God says that counts (2 Timothy 3:16–17). The preacher’s task is to repeat and expound what God has spoken in Scripture.

It is also doctrinal. Faithful preaching teaches “sound doctrine” and instructs the mind in truth (Titus 2:1).

Getting Practical

Good reformed preaching is experiential. God’s truth is pressed upon the heart by the Spirit so that hearers taste and see its reality (Psalm 119:32).

And it is practical. We are called to be “doers of the word, and not hearers only” (James 1:22). A faithful sermon helps you walk away saying, This is what I must do; this is how my life must change by God’s grace.

In short: Reformed preaching ministers to the whole person—comprehensive, biblical, doctrinal, experiential, and practical—because God’s living Word speaks to every generation.

Source concept from Joel R. Beeke, “4 Essential Ingredients of Reformed Preaching.” Adapted for this series posted with permission. 

Always Reforming Series: Explore how God’s unchanging Word reforms life and ministry in every age.
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