Christmas Quotes for Preaching and Reflection
You've heard the wisdom "When the student is ready, the teacher appears?" When our hearts and minds are noticing, seeking, yearning, and paying attention, the Spirit sees all that openness and provides just what we need to know, see, or understand. It's a moment that presents like serendipity, but there's too much grace behind it. The right word, insightful phrase, or vivid image leads to a face-palm moment of recognition: "There it is! That's the sermon!”
To that end, I’ve compiled for you a collection of quotes about Christmas in hopes that the teachings of others might spark an epiphany of your own. Request your free copy here.
BsP's Christmas Gift Guide for Preachers (2021 edition)
This year’s gift guide is intended to nudge the preacher’s creativity back to life—because creativity heals heart, mind, and soul.
Inspiration for Advent Preaching
As we anticipate, wait, and hope for Advent, I offer a selection of quotations for your preaching and personal reflections. You'll find wise, witty, and wonderful quotes from a variety of voices, from Dietrich Bonhoeffer to Ann Weems and Miles David to George Bernard Shaw, loosely organized into three themes:
Anticipation is the Music of Advent
Waiting is the Experience of Advent
Hope is the Fruit of Advent
I hope these bring as much joy to your spirit as they do to your preaching.
Preach about Real Saints: Human and Holy
Why do we ignore the saints’ flaws or apologize for them as something shameful, faults to be hidden and tucked away? Preaching the truth of their humanity frees us from examining the messenger to embrace their message: love God, and forgive and love self and neighbor. Saints are the embodiment of that invitation to transformation. They show us what is possible when we accept and dwell in the love of God—in the fullness of our messy humanity. I am persuaded that by allowing saints to be holy and perfectly human, we can be transformed to be more like Christ.
Getting Away from the Page: How to Preach from the Heart
For those who want to get away from the page but don’t know how to get started, and for those who fear “all the things” that can happen when not using a manuscript, Dr. Giver-Johnston’s book offers practical tools to move in that direction, step by small step.
4 Tips for Wedding Homilies
I just preached at the wedding of a dear friend’s eldest child. The preparations reminded me of a few important realities about this special event. I hope you find these tips helpful, and I would love to hear your thoughts as well.
Christianity: It’s not Personal?
Fires. Hurricanes. Famine. Flooding. There ought to be no such thing as acceptable collateral damage in the Christian’s world. Because if the Body of Christ is one thing, it’s personal. Fortunately, we preachers have a new resource to help us preach the gospel into the personal effects of climate change on those we are called to love.
Challenging the Stories We Tell About Ourselves (A Guest Post)
There is freedom to be found on the other side of our assumptions. They’re called “limiting beliefs” for a reason—they hold us back, keep us stuck, prevent us from achieving the work set before us by God. What happens when we take action in a way that challenges those assumptions? Is there a new, truer narrative to be written?
3 Strategies to Keep Sermon Prep on Track When the Rest of Life Isn't
We know stuff happens to other people all the time, which means they might call on us all the time when they need help. And yet, we’re still surprised when our carefully constructed expectation for how the day or week is going to go evaporates in an instant because of an emergency someone else is having.
Other people’s surprises can have big impacts on our sermon prep. Rather than get paralyzed (and often resentful) in the face of the unexpected, here are three strategies to stay on track.
Preaching + Advertising? (A Guest Post)
“Both preaching and advertising struggle to get a message across in a world cluttered with noise that makes it hard for anyone with ears to hear. Because of this common struggle, the two communicative disciplines share a lot of the same concerns and methods. This means that a lot of what I learned was less of a radical re-thinking of preaching and more a confirmation of some standard elements of homiletical methodology to which advertising methodology offered some new nuance.”