The Power of Scripture for Change
Blackwood remembers his experience at Grace as being incredibly peaceful, surrounded by good people and professors who invested personally in the lives of the students. “I’d been to other schools, but never one that was as personable as Grace,” Blackwood said. He also remembers the indelible lesson he received in his studies about the power of expositional preaching. “The confidence I got from Grace is that Scripture is accurate, inerrant and powerful,” he said. It positioned him well when he arrived in Miami, where he saw, right from the beginning, that he was in for a battle.
“I found Miami to be a city like few others — spectacularly beautiful but pervasively lost,” Blackwood remembered. “I knew the city was extremely lost at that time — about 90 percent unchurched. After about two months, this pastor came up to me and said, ‘You need to get the hell out of here. This place is awful. It will kill you. It will kill your kids.’”
Blackwood found out later that church leaders were fleeing the city in droves. In fact, he was told that the Baptist Convention had given up on the city altogether. “It scared me. I started thinking ‘God, where have I come? What does all this mean?’ I remember God saying to me, in my heart, ‘Rick, I need you to stay. I need somebody to start a movement in this city, and you’re the one to do it.’”
“I wasn’t even sure what ‘a movement’ meant. So I decided to just pick a book [of the Bible] and go.”
Blackwood launched into a series of sermons on 1 Peter, building his messages around application of Scripture to their life as a church. “A lot of times, expository preaching is just information dumping, without pushing people to do something about it. So as I preached expositionally, I pushed people to be more than mere hearers of the Word; I pushed them to be doers of the Word. There were a lot of changes that had to be made in terms of the governance and traditions of the church. It was very stuck in the past; it was not poised to grow. I would say things like, ‘Our constitution and bylaws say we can’t do this. So what’s the authority — the bylaws or the Bible?’ I remember people shouting, ‘The Bible!’ So we’d change it.”
The shakeup didn’t sit well with the group of leaders who felt they ran the church. As Blackwood remembers it, “150 of them wanted to kill me.” He laughed. “Or at least fire me.” But he believed in the power of preaching the Bible to win the battle, and it’s what he committed to, in order to lead the church to make necessary changes. “When the church interviewed me, they asked what I thought I could bring to the church that would help. I remember saying, ‘Not much. But I do have the Bible, and I believe it’s sufficient.’ And that was drilled in me at Grace.”
The Bible proved to be absolutely sufficient. Today, under Blackwood’s leadership, Christ Fellowship is known as one of the fastest growing and largest churches in America, with a membership of nearly 10,000 people and campuses in Cuba, Colombia, El Salvador and Jamaica. To an outside observer, it would seem that Blackwood’s greatest battle was behind him. But the future held another, far more personal battle for which he’d once again need the assurance of Scripture.