This ONE Question Will Keep Your Sermon on Message
My brother is a journalist who has written longer than I have preached. He now teaches journalism at a university. When I was getting ready to teach seminary homiletics the first time I asked him a question that plagues writers of any ilk: "How do you teach writers not to wander and stay on message?"
I thought that since he's a writing professional and educator he would tell me the "secret:" the right set of questions that any author needs to prevent verbal self-meandering.
His response?
"That's what editors are for."
Thanks a lot, Big Brother!
Per last week's post, yes, that is exactly what editors are for. But without an editor what can preachers rely on instead? A very simple question with three principles.
4 Steps to Build a “Study Hall” for Efficient, Effective, & Sacred Sermon Prep
We may not be students at the moment, but we still face deadlines, major projects, and of course, preaching happens at a certain time every week
What I’ve learned since I was an undergrad is that study halls don’t have to be inside a library, and they become a lot more meaningful when we design them to be not only productive, but sacred.
The Power of Approaching the Text with a Beginner’s Mind
There is power in approaching the text as a beginner because we experience the Good News, and then we share it with others so they experience the Good News! We can help our congregations experience this power, too.
Preaching Change? Remind us who we are
Perhaps there is no greater reason we fear changing our minds than this one: it causes us to question our character, the very definition we have of our “selves.” When we suggest during a sermon that change is needed, the listener hears that that they are not as good as they see themselves. Whether we intend it or not, they hear that we as the preacher—and by extension, God—see their character as lacking. How do we preach change without suggesting a character assassination?
Disaster after Disaster: How to Preach So Listeners Don’t Tune Out
When natural disasters, political crises, and social injustices occur week after week, compassion fatigue can set in. What are we to do in the face of overwhelming need? Preachers can help their listeners avoid becoming numb, irritated or unresponsive, though. Read on to find out how.
The Key to Preaching in a "Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, Ambiguous" World
Perhaps many of us don't need Dr. Johansen to tell us a frightening and chaotic world is only going to get worse. What may be more surprising is to hear Dr. Johansen's outline for a counter-narrative: hope. He says this time of chaos is fertile ground for creativity, innovation, and a improvement.
How do preachers participate in this counter-narrative?
The Preacher’s Final Point: What Do You Hope the Listener Will Think, Feel or Do?
All parts of the sermon function like a call and response: each initial question answered, each named problem affirmed, each element finding its conclusion in the sermon’s intentionally crafted end. What are you inviting your listener to understand or believe more deeply? Why does it matter? Every word of the sermon lays the path to those answers.
When Preaching Meets Lament: A Word for a Wounded World (A GUEST POST)
“We live in a world trembling under the weight of sorrow—headlines filled with war, ecological collapse, racial violence, and mental health crises. Too often, sermons try to lift us out of suffering. We preach resurrection before we’ve sat with the tomb. But what if hope doesn’t begin with resolution? What if the call is to enter suffering? To name it. To stay with it. To tell the truth, before we promise hope?