Posts Tagged ‘preaching’

What is the Ultimate Key to Effective Preaching?

Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

John MacArthur’s answer to the question, “What is the ultimate key to effective preaching?” Worthy of reflection on what priorities we have for our pastor’s work.

    Very simply, stay in your study until you know that the Lord will gladly accept what you have prepared to preach because it rightly represents His Word. Let me close with an unforgettable plan suggested by an unknown parishioner as to how to accomplish this.

    Fling him into his office. Tear the “Office” sign from the door and nail on the sign, “Study.” Take him off the mailing list. Lock him up with his books and his typewriter and his Bible. Slam him down on his knees before texts and broken hearts and the flock of lives of a superficial flock and a holy God.

    Force him to be the one man in our surfeited communities who knows about God. Throw him into the ring to box with God until he learns how short his arms are. Engage him to wrestle with God all the night through. And let him come out only when he’s bruised and beaten into being a blessing.

    Shut his mouth forever spouting remarks, and stop his tongue forever tripping lightly over every nonessential. Require him to have something to say before he dares break the silence. Bend his knees in the lonesome valley.

    Burn his eyes with weary study. Wreck his emotional poise with worry for God. And make him exchange his pious stance for a humble walk with God and man. Make him spend and be spent for the glory of God. Rip out his telephone. Burn up his ecclesiastical success sheets.
    Put water in his gas tank. Give him a Bible and tie him to the pulpit. And make him preach the Word of the living God!

    Test him. Quiz him. Examine him. Humiliate him for his ignorance of things divine. Shame him for his good comprehension of finances, batting averages, and political in-fighting. Laugh at his frustrated effort to play psychiatrist. Form a choir and raise a chant and haunt him with it night and day—“Sir, we would see Jesus.”

    When at long last he dares assay the pulpit, ask him if he has a word from God. If he does not, then dismiss him. Tell him you can read the morning paper and digest the television commentaries, and think through the day’s superficial problems, and manage the community’s weary drives, and bless the sordid baked potatoes and green beans, ad infinitum, better than he can.

    Command him not to come back until he’s read and reread, written and rewritten, until he can stand up, worn and forlorn, and say, “Thus saith the Lord.”

    Break him across the board of his ill-gotten popularity. Smack him hard with his own prestige. Corner him with questions about God. Cover him with demands for celestial wisdom. And give him no escape until he’s back against the wall of the Word.

    And sit down before him and listen to the only word he has left—God’s Word. Let him be totally ignorant of the down-street gossip, but give him a chapter and order him to walk around it, camp on it, sup with it, and come at last to speak it backward and forward, until all he says about it rings with the truth of eternity.

    And when he’s burned out by the flaming Word, when he’s consumed at last by the fiery grace blazing through him, and when he’s privileged to translate the truth of God to man, finally transferred from earth to heaven, then bear him away gently and blow a muted trumpet and lay him down softly. Place a two-edged sword in his coffin, and raise the tomb triumphant. For he was a brave soldier of the Word. And ere he died, he had become a man of God.

(Rediscovering Expository Preaching, 1992)

10 Most Common Preaching Mistakes

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

This post may not be for everyone, but if it interests you take a look. Below are the top 10 mistakes Dave Murray (a pastor who trains many up and coming preachers) see in new (and sometimes old) preachers.

    1. CRAMMING: Squeezing all you have ever studied about the Bible over the years into 30 minutes.

    2. SKIMMING: Taking too many verses and simply skimming over the surface of the text, teaching nothing that someone with average intelligence would not themselves have got from the text.

    3. FLOATING: The preacher says many things that relate to the text, floating or hovering above the text, but fails to show how they are anchored in the text.

    4. PROOF-TEXTING: Including lots and lots of texts from all over the Bible, and sometimes diverting hearers by expounding the proof texts as much as the sermon text.

    5. QUOTING: Too many quotes from commentators, theologians, and other preachers from the past and the present.

    6. LECTURING:It’s difficult to define the difference between preaching and lecturing, but you know it when you see it/hear it. It’s about passion, eye-contact, persuasion, urgency, etc.

    7. ASSUMING: Our own over-familiarity with the text results in us assuming that our hearers know the background of the text, the meaning of basic key words and concepts, etc. May also result in Mach 7 preaching speeds. And don’t assume your hearers are all converted either.

    8. CONFUSING: Hearers are left confused usually because of a lack of structure or too complicated a structure (main points, sub-points, etc.); or sometimes there is a good structure, but it’s not sufficiently highlighted and emphasized so that hearers know where they’ve been, where they are, and where they are going.

    9. SPRAYING: Lots and lots of data, but no single dominant thought; it’s the difference between a shotgun and a rifle.

    10. COMPLICATING: Instead of explaining the text, a preacher can actually make it more obscure. Usually involves words too big, sentences too long, concepts too abstract, language too philosophical/theological.

Read the whole thing here.

The Important Thing According to Paul

Monday, October 10th, 2011

Worthy of meditation:

    The important things is, that in every way…Christ is preached. And because of this, I rejoice. Philippians 1:18

8 Ways to Prepare to Listen to a Sermon

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

We prepare for class, we get ready to go out to eat, we pack and plan for travel, but have you ever prepared yourself to listen to your pastor’s sermon on Sunday? Has the thought of preparing yourself for your pastor’s sermon even crossed your mind? If not, then muse with me on this one short thought: what are good reasons to not prepare myself to received the preached Word of God? I trust you’ll find none.

As Christians we believe the preacher is a proclaimer of what God has done in Jesus Christ and a shepherd who helps to apply that truth so God’s people may “live according to sound doctrine” (Titus 2:1). In other words, you preacher on Sunday, if he is being faithful, is not speaking His thoughts or opinions, but the Living Word of God.

May the weight of that thought be contemplated.

Seeing the weight of the preached Word, what are some ways we can prepare ourselves, our friends and our families to receive the preached Word of God? Let me share five ways to prepare yourself for listening to a sermon given from a little booklet called “The Family at Church” by Joel Beeke and then I will share three thoughts from George Whitefield’s short writing on the same topic.

1) BEFORE YOU COME TO SERVICE, PRAY:

“Pray for the conversion of sinners, the edification of saints, and the glorification of God’s Triune Name. Pray for children, teenagers and the elderly. Pray for listening ears and understanding hears. Pray for yourself…Pray that you will come to God’s house as a needy sinner, purging your heart of carnal lusts and clinging to Christ for the cleansing power of HIs blood. Pray for the sanctifying presence of God in christ, for true communion with Him in mind and soul. Pray that your minister is given power by the Holy Spirit so that he will ope his mouth boldly to make known the mysteries of the Gospel (Ephesians 6:19). Pray for an outpouring of the Holy Spirit’s convicting, quickening, humbling and comforting power to work through God’s ordinances in the fulfillment of His promises (Proverbs 1:23).”

2) BE HUNGRY FOR GOD’S WORD:

Peter said, “Like newborn babies, crave pure spiritual milk, so that by it you may grow up in your salvation” (1 Peter 2:2). Stir your soul with God’s Word on Saturday, maybe by studying the passage the church will study the next day, so you may hunger for more. As you come to meet with God’s people trusting God’s gospel, to worship God with song, prayer and fellowship, be also hungry for God’s food (Matthew 4:4).

3) MEDITATE ON THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PREACHED WORD:

Thomas Boston once wrote, “The voice is on earth, (but) the speaker is in heaven” (Acts 10:33). Remember that your pastor is only a messenger who brings the Word of God. Just as people were to listen attentively to the prophets of old, we must reverently listen to our pastors proclaim the Word of God knowing that every sentence of Biblical teaching could be tagged with the line, “Thus says the Lord.” Don’t come to hear your preachers words no matter how eloquent or don’t stay home because they aren’t eloquent enough! We leave our homes and come to the corporate gathering of the church to hear no one less than God address us where we are. George Whitefield once said, “If an earthly king were to issue a royal proclamation, and the life or death of his subjects entirely depended on performing or not performing its conditions, how eager would they be to hear what those conditions were! And shall we not pay the same respect to the King of kings, and Lord of lords, and lend an attentive ear to His ministers, when they are declaring, in His name, how our pardon, peace, and happiness may be secured?” He is to have our ears. Remember who is really speaking on Sunday morning and let that truth guide your listening.

4) PREPARE FOR THE DISTRACTIONS THAT ARE BOUND TO COME:

Beeke rightly points out that “many enemies will oppose your listening.” Either it be internal distractions about work, family, job issues, lusts, a cold heart or external distractions like temperature, weather, the people around you, or noises; whatever it may be, prepare yourself to overcome. How? Pray that God may keep your heart inclined to listen to His Word over any distraction thrown your way. Remember, Satan seeks to keep God’s Word from bearing fruit in your life (Mark 4). So fight like heaven against him.

5) COME LOVING:

Remind yourself of your responsibility to the body of believers you belong to. Jesus has saved you into His family with one Father and One Brother who is over all and many other siblings. As you walk into your gathering, prepare yourself to serve with a labor of love. I can tell you now that if you come to service “putting the interest of others before your own” (Philippians 2:4) your heart will be much better prepared to hear God’s Word. Pray that you are a blessing to your church family and not a curse and you will find yourself in a position to receive much from the God who gives grace to the humble.

6) DON’T COME FOR CURIOSITY BUT FROM A DESIRE TO KNOW AND OBEY:

Come to hear them, not out of curiosity, but from a sincere desire to know and do your duty. To enter His house merely to have our ears entertained, and not our hearts reformed, must certainly be highly displeasing to the Most High God, as well as unprofitable to ourselves.

7) DON’T HOLD ANY PREJUDICE AGAINST THE PREACHER:

George Whitefield says, “That was the reason Jesus Christ Himself could not do many mighty works, nor preach to any great effect among those of His own country; for they were offended at Him. Listen and beware of entertaining any dislike against those whom the Holy Spirit has made overseers over you.

8 )REMEMBER THE PREACHERS ARE MEN LIKE YOU:

George Whitefield comments, “Even if we should hear a person teaching others to do things that he has not done himself, yet that is no reason for rejecting his doctrine. For ministers speak not in their own, but in Christ’s name. And we know who commanded the people to do whatever the scribes and Pharisees should say unto them, even though they did not do themselves what they said (see Matt. 23:1-3).”

What Are You Willing to do for Truth?

Saturday, September 3rd, 2011

Spurgeon on sacrificing for truth:

    We must show our decision for the truth by the sacrifices we are ready to make. This is, indeed, the most efficient as well as the most trying method. We must be ready to give up anything and everything for the sake of the principles we have taught, and must be ready to offend our best supporters, to alienate our warmest friends, sooner than betray our consciences. We must be ready to be beggars in purse, and offscourings in reputation, rather than act treacherously. We can die, but we cannot deny the truth. The cost is already counted, and we are determined to buy the truth at any price, and sell it at no price. To little of this spirit is abroad nowadays. Men have a saving faith, and save their own persons from trouble; they have great discernment, and know on which what side their bread is buttered; they are large hearted and are all things to all men if by any means they may save a sum. There are plenty of curs about, who would follow at the heal of any who would keep them in meat. They are among the first to bark at decisions, and call it obstinate dogmatism and ignorant bigotry. Their condemnatory verdict cause us no distree; it is what we expected.

Let us be ready to sacrifice anything for the truth. Easily said, daunting to do yet necessary if we desire to follow Christ.