Expository preaching took on new life in the Reformation when Ulrich
Zwingli began his continuous exposition of the Gospel of Matthew on January 1, 1519 in Zürich. Other Reformers, like Zwingli's friend
Johannes Oecolampadius, followed suit. According to
Hughes Oliphant Old, Oecolampadius' translations of the sermons of
John Chrysostom, one of many church fathers who also practiced expository preaching, inspired him to return to this classic form, and with his own exposition of 1 John in 1523, the pattern for preaching in Basel, one that would be formalized in 1529, was set. Though both Oecolampadius and Zwingli died in 1531, the expository form of preaching they (and other Swiss Reformers, like
Wolfgang Capito and
Martin Bucer) established would be the form inherited, and some would say perfected, by
John Calvin himself, who began to draft his
Institutes of the Christian Religion in Basel in 1535, where every preacher in every pulpit was now devoted to continuous reading and preaching through books of the Bible. Zwingli was succeeded in Zürich by
Heinrich Bullinger, Oecolampadius by
Oswald Myconius in Basel, while
John Knox would take the form of exposition he learned from Calvin in Geneva back to Scotland. Translations of Calvin's expository sermons would inspire generations of Reformed Christians in England and the Netherlands,
Puritans on both sides of the Atlantic, and the preachers of the
Great Awakening. Many famous
evangelical preachers in the modern era have likewise used systematic exposition.
J. Vernon McGee of the
Through the Bible radio program may be the best exemplar of the purely expository method of preaching in modern American times. He preached more than one 5-year cycle through the entire Bible.
Haddon Robinson, teacher on the long-running
Discover the Word radio program. Among the seven books he authored is
Biblical Preaching: the development and delivery of expository messages, for the study of expository preaching by seminarians. Reputed to be a great evangelical preacher of the 20th century,
Martyn Lloyd-Jones was the minister of
Westminster Chapel in
London from 1939 to 1968. His series on
Romans took years to complete as he worked through the book almost a verse at a time. Other famous expository preachers include
Charles Spurgeon,
John Stott, and
Dick Lucas from England, William Still from Scotland,
Phillip Jensen and David Cook from Australia, and
Stephen F. Olford, and
Fred Craddock from the United States.
John MacArthur was probably the best-known expository preacher in America and was a proponent of the expository method of preaching (and an outspoken opponent of the topical method as used almost exclusively by some churches). In addition, the
Calvary Chapel group of churches, headed by
Chuck Smith, include the regular use of expository preaching as one of their distinctives. Many such prominent preachers in the second half of the twentieth century have put on record that to a lesser or greater extent they were persuaded of the importance of systematic exposition as a result of reading the works of
A.W. Pink. == Relative importance of expository preaching ==