The Real Teacher: When the Holy Spirit Takes the Pulpit.
James 3:1
"Not many of you should become teachers, my brothers, for you know that we who teach will be judged with greater strictness."
Why do some people (I'm looking at myself) feel compelled to teach, preach, and reach (out) with the gospel?
For me, there is a deep, almost irresistible pull to teach from the scriptures.
But why?
It seems to me the answer to these questions had better be a good one if you don't want the caution in James to become a reality for you.
My belief is that a teacher of "The Word" needs to have a rock-solid, biblical foundation. I'm not saying they need academic validation, some sort of educational pedigree. But they ought to have lived with The Word in the context of growth through study, but through a life marked by diligent, an ongoing immersion in Scripture, personal growth, obedience, and transformation by it. This produces the kind of rock-solid foundation that honors the warning in James 3:1 while enabling faithful teaching.
So okay, that's all well and good, but even more important is having a heart for preserving the spirit of The Word, the intent and purpose of it.
As far as I see it, this is a key biblical principle:
2 Corinthians 3:6
"He has made us sufficient to be ministers of a new covenant, not of the letter but of the Spirit. For the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life."
Biblical teaching isn't just about providing information and understanding, it's about preserving life.
Imagine that. Teaching about Spirit and Life. Not doctrinal precision, but preserving and imparting life through the Spirit who inspired the Word. This is a contrast between lifeless, mechanical handling (the "letter" that condemns without grace) with Spirit-empowered ministry that brings resurrection power, transformation, and eternal life.
The letter that kills is when teaching becomes dry intellectualism, legalism, debate-club arguments, or self-righteous correction without love. It exposes sin but offers no hope, leaving people condemned rather than redeemed.
The Spirit that gives life is when we see Christ as the living center of every text. When we teach the Word in ways that convict, heal, restore, and empower obedience from the heart. When our primary teaching is about what God did right in Christ Jesus, not focused on what we did wrong, except to say what we did we did without Him.
Teaching that preserves the spirit, intent, and purpose of the Word asks:
Does this point people to Jesus as Savior and Lord?
Does it breathe life into weary souls, or does it burden them further?
Does it rescue those who have been enslaved by religion?
Does it renew the mind?
Is it planting seeds of regeneration?
Does it offer streams of living water that satisfy the thirsty?
Is the goal edification, maturity, and glory to God, or something lesser (pride, control, division)?
And finally, is the real teacher teaching through the teachings, The Holy Spirit?
When the answer to that last question is "yes," then the rest follows. The Spirit doesn’t need our cleverness or our polish; He needs yielded hearts that say:
1 Samuel 3:10
"Speak, Lord, for Your servant hears"
He takes the Word we’ve studied diligently and breathes resurrection power into it, making dead letters dance with divine life. Teaching in this vein isn’t about being the smartest person in the room, the most articulate, the most interesting; it’s about being the most surrendered, so the Spirit can be the most prominent.
Our Lord Jesus said this:
John 6:63
"The Spirit gives life; the flesh is no help at all. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life."
What has spirit and life?
Jesus says this in the midst of the so called "Bread of Life discourse" (John 6:22–71).
Let me say this:
Jesus is what God believes and says about you. And it's a CORE TEACHING, it’s declaring that God’s opinion of you...His verdict, His declaration, His belief...isn’t based on your performance, your failures, your background, or even your best efforts. It's a radical mind shift. You can't do anything without Him, His mercy is the basis of your existence. It’s embodied in Jesus Christ. What God thinks and says about you is summed up in who Jesus is and what He accomplished for you. God doesn’t look at you through the lens of your sin or shortcomings alone, He looks at you through Jesus.
God’s declaration over you is...
"accepted in the Beloved"
He doesn’t say, "You’re acceptable if you clean up your act."
HE NEVER SAYS THAT!
It's not in there.
In Christ, God sees you as chosen, adopted, redeemed, forgiven, sealed with the Spirit (Ephesians 1:3–14). These aren’t future hopes, they’re present realities because Jesus is the fulfillment of them. What God believes about you is wrapped up in believing in Him.
God isn’t waiting for you to prove yourself worthy; Jesus is the proof that you already are (to Him, through grace).
Did you hear that?
Read it again. And take it to heart.
It’s not about what we say about ourselves or what others say; it’s about what God says, and He says it definitively in His Son Jesus. When God calls you redeemed, He's saying it because He's talking about His Son.
This is the pure, unadulterated gospel beating out from the heart of the new covenant:
God’s opinion of you is Jesus Christ Himself. Not a tentative "maybe", not a conditional "if you measure up", but a resounding, eternal yes declared in the person and work of His Son, and already sealed (where?) in the Word of God.
Ephesians 1:13–14
"In him you also, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and believed in him, were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of his glory."
Sealed...this isn’t something you earn or maintain, it’s done to you the moment you believe the gospel.
And why is this relevant to today's devotion commentary?
Because that seal is tied directly to hearing and believing the gospel of your salvation.
You heard the word of truth.
You believed when you heard and believed the gospel.
You were guaranteed. God has staked His own Spirit on your future redemption.
If your teacher isn't teaching this, be careful, be discerning, and be ready to search for the answers from the scriptures. Because the seal of the Holy Spirit isn’t a peripheral doctrine or optional assurance; it’s the immediate, divine consequence of simply hearing the word of truth and believing the gospel of your salvation. This isn't just conversational theory, James 3:1 isn't just something biblical people say to convict someone. The seal of the Holy Spirit is not some optional footnote in the gospel; it’s the immediate, divine signature God places on every person who hears the word of truth and believes the gospel of their salvation.
Teachers aren’t judged more strictly because God is harsh; they’re judged more strictly because words shape souls, influence faith, and can either build up in grace or burden, confuse, or even mislead. When teaching carries the gospel, the stakes are eternal. If a bible teacher consistently downplays, undermines, or omits the reality of being sealed with the Holy Spirit as the immediate fruit of believing the gospel...they risk turning assurance into anxiety, rest into striving, and the new covenant into a repackaged old-covenant performance system.
If the message leaves hearers wondering whether God’s favor is secure, it subtly replaces Spirit and life with the letter that kills.
Friends,
Don’t swallow everything uncritically, search the Scriptures daily, like the Bereans (Acts 17:11).
Frankly, if you're not studying the Bible?
What the hell are you doing?
You have children?
Are you studying the word along with them?
Why the hell not.
I'm sorry for being blunt, but the stakes are eternal. The Word isn’t optional background music, it’s God-breathed. Bible study should be your daily rhythm. Part of the ordinary moments of life. Parents are commanded to be the primary disciplers; teaching God’s Word isn’t outsourced to Sunday school or youth group alone. It’s YOUR responsibility, flowing from a heart saturated in it first.
If you’re not opening the Bible with your kids...reading, discussing, praying through it...then you’re leaving them spiritually malnourished in a world that’s force-feeding them every lie imaginable.
You did that.
The world didn't fail them.
You did.
You failed to pass on the one thing that can make them wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. This isn’t guilt-tripping; it’s gospel urgency. The same grace that seals us with the Holy Spirit is the grace that calls us to feast on the Word daily, and to feed our households from the same table.
Friends, the Word is alive and active (Hebrews 4:12). Don’t let another day go by without opening it; for yourself, and especially for the little ones God entrusted to you.
Why the hell not?
Grace and truth to you all today. Keep pressing in, dig in. Teach them. Watch the Spirit give life in Christ.
Amen.