Three ways you’re (unknowingly) sabotaging your sermon prep before you even start
Process Lisa Cressman Process Lisa Cressman

Three ways you’re (unknowingly) sabotaging your sermon prep before you even start

Many of us get stuck at certain steps along the way, and there are many steps: from praying to discerning the message to proclamation to review (yes, sermon prep continues after the sermon!).

After working with thousands of preachers, I’ve found some common reasons we get stuck. I’ve also learned from preachers how to get unstuck.

This is the first in a series of three about getting stuck during sermon prep and how to get unstuck. Today, we’re looking at three sneaky saboteurs that derail our sermon prep before we even get started.

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From Chaos to Clarity: Simplifying Sermon Note Management for Seamless Sermon Writing
Process Lisa Cressman Process Lisa Cressman

From Chaos to Clarity: Simplifying Sermon Note Management for Seamless Sermon Writing

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been through this scenario: too much time flies out the window searching and searching for a particular note or reference I know would be perfect for a sermon. I know “it” is there somewhere, but I can’t find it—or when I do mange to track it down, I don’t understand what I meant at the time I recorded it. It all adds up to a lot of frustration and wasted possibilities.

After some big changes the last couple years, however, I spend far less time and feel far less frustrated accessing my notes than I used to. I’ve spent the last few years learning how to take notes that allow me to read, mark, learn, inwardly digest—and retrieve and apply what I learn. Here are two key strategies to help you do the same.

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A Homiletician, a Theologian, and a Biblical Scholar Walk into a Bar.... (A Guest Post)
Process Leah Schade Process Leah Schade

A Homiletician, a Theologian, and a Biblical Scholar Walk into a Bar.... (A Guest Post)

From Dr. Leah Schade’s guest post: “Every preacher should have a ‘circle of trust’ that they take to their ‘sermon watering hole.’ The circle should include people you know you can rely on to help you encounter the Bible in a responsible way in order to say something meaningful about who God is and what God is doing in the world. People who spark ideas for crafting a sermon that will hook your listeners, help them follow you, and give them a reason to say “amen!” Here are three suggestions for expanding your circle of trust in sermon preparation.”

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A New Goal for Preachers: Peaceful Productivity (A Guest Post)
Process Caroline Penhale Process Caroline Penhale

A New Goal for Preachers: Peaceful Productivity (A Guest Post)

Recently, I guided participants through a process to make space for sermon prep for the multiple sermons they’d be writing for Holy Week and Easter. I encouraged three steps, and while there was some resistance to the third, once completed, I sensed a shift in energy and renewed sense of enthusiasm for the tasks ahead. Read on to energize your own sermon prep with this 3-step scheduling process.

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The Power of Questions: How to Challenge Assumptions in Preaching
Process Lisa Cressman Process Lisa Cressman

The Power of Questions: How to Challenge Assumptions in Preaching

An assumption is the lightning fast explanation we generate to connect random events or pieces of information into a believable narrative. We do this when we don’t have the time or mental bandwidth or confidence to figure out the real story. Instead, we rely on the easiest or fastest explanation to avoid the discomfort of not knowing. But when assumptions block us from the truth—from the gospel—we have a real problem.

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When the Mystery is Magnified: the Gospel and the Microscope (A Guest Post)
Process Guest Author Process Guest Author

When the Mystery is Magnified: the Gospel and the Microscope (A Guest Post)

“The main thing I remember about the microscope was the mystery of how changing the magnification could make the object I was looking at appear completely different, even though it was the same leaf or seed or bark or flower.” The same is true when we examine the biblical narratives. We can use three different lenses to understand our lives as followers of Jesus.

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