Using Money for Good: Preaching Tips & Tools to Grow Conscious, Ethical Consumers (A Guest Post)
It’s rather surprising we don’t find ourselves preaching a lot about money since fully 1/3 of the parables are about money and one in ten verses in the Gospels are connected to money. Getting money situated in its right relationship with our lives, and the world around us, is an important spiritual topic. And we need to tackle it.
"Preaching God's Economy": A Panel Discussion Hosted by Faith+Finance
To help the people in our pews deal with the very real challenges, impacts, and opportunities of their money, we have to find a way to have difficult conversations about finance. Preaching about money is a good start. Listen in on this panel discussion to discover how you might approach these conversations in your own church.
Preaching & Comedy? "Thou Shalt Achieve World Peace Through Humor" (A Guest Post)
“Comedians have long known a secret that world and religious leaders struggle to understand to this day: humor is the key to world peace.”
Preaching on money and finances: the Church's role in shaping our economy (A Guest Post)
Money shapes all of life. We—and our congregants—need to think about how we spend our money, how we invest our money, and how we relate to our money. As uncomfortable as these topics are for preachers, I believe we need to be willing to put our personal anxieties aside and walk into the deep waters where our parishioners live to launch some hard conversations. Our people desperately need that from us, and the Church must become a place where these necessary conversations can find a home.
Preaching God's Economy When People are Afraid
People are being laid off and are un- or under-employed. Government assistance is capricious. Food insecurity, especially with the need to feed school-aged children who won’t receive school meals, is getting desperate. And for preachers, stewardship season is around the corner. How do we dare talk about money and finances this fall?
"Resilience": A Panel Discussion for Preachers
I spoke with three preachers about how they’re maintaining hope on this roller coaster of personal and collective tragedy and joy we’re on. As preachers, how do we handle our own feelings so we can call our congregations to hope in their moments of despair?
A Free, At-Home Retreat for Preachers: "Resilience"
Due to our strange circumstances, many of us will not get away on a spiritual retreat for silence and contemplation this year. But we can still find spiritual renewal with this flexible retreat designed for ninety-minutes, three-hours, or six. I pray we emerge from this retreat at home filled with the Spirit’s gift of “holy resilience” to continue to minister well in Christ’s name.
How to Write a Good Sermon: Your Guide to Transformative Preaching
Filled with practical advice you can apply right away, this guide will help you craft more compelling sermons that keep your listeners thinking and talking long after the benediction.
Preaching to Remove White-Colored Glasses
There are distinct stages of transformation, and our listeners are going to be somewhere on this spectrum, just as we are. Call them into work beyond their current stage, and they may resist change even more. Instead, we need to shift our preaching to meet folks at the stage they’re at in order to move them to the next.
How to Preach into the Crisis of George Floyd’s Death
Many preachers find themselves preaching into mostly white contexts. This leaves those churches without the witness, lived experience, wisdom, and leadership of people of color as they navigate tragedies like the murder of George Floyd and the national crisis at hand. My hope is to share some thoughts and perspectives for those preaching in primarily white contexts, graciously informed by my conversation with Rev. Rogers, so white churches can step into this moment with humility and courage and repentance.