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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Racism and Segregated Sundays: What We Need to Talk About (A Guest Post)
Spirituality Shaundra Taylor Spirituality Shaundra Taylor

Racism and Segregated Sundays: What We Need to Talk About (A Guest Post)

"The most segregated hour of Christian America is 11 o’clock on Sunday morning.” Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. offered this tragic insight decades ago.

Not much has changed since.

How did we get here? Why do we stay here?

Flat-out racism is a cause, to be sure.

But racism is not the only cause.

This guest post by Backstory Preaching mentor, the Rev. Dr. Melinda Quivik, raises questions helpful to the conversation about how we address our segregated Sundays.

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The nuts and bolts of holy creativity: Two sources inspiring my creative life right now (a guest post)
Craft Shaundra Taylor Craft Shaundra Taylor

The nuts and bolts of holy creativity: Two sources inspiring my creative life right now (a guest post)

“I love reading to and listening to other creatives talk about their craft and process. Their perspectives not only provide practical tools and advice for my own work, they help me feel less alone in this strange space of creation. They help me believe the invisible work I do matters. These two gems offer insight on revision, inspiration, and getting to a finished sermon/story/script/etc. that is greater than the sum of its original concepts and drafts.”

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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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Acts 2 Versus The Tower of Babel: The Key to Crafting a Sermon Your Listeners Understand
Craft Lisa Cressman Craft Lisa Cressman

Acts 2 Versus The Tower of Babel: The Key to Crafting a Sermon Your Listeners Understand

Just as the backstory of preachers’ lives profoundly influences the way we interpret Scripture, discern a message, and deliver our sermons, the backstories of each listener and the congregation as a whole are influential in what they hear. One skill can help us connect our sermon message to our listeners’ context and existing knowledge so they can receive the sermon the Spirit intends for them.

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