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  • Michael Duduit
    July 2007
    There’s a new television program designed to make you feel dumber than you already felt. And as if that wasn’t bad...
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    May 2007
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    March 2007
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  • Michael Duduit
    January 2007
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    November 2006
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    September 2006
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  • Michael Duduit
    July 2006
    Now that American Idol has picked its silver-haired hero and started a national tour, the Fox network has to fill those lonely broadcast...
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Oops. Let Us Rephrase That . . .
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Oops. Let Us Rephrase That . . .
By Michael Duduit
Who knew that reading a magazine could be so dangerous?

I recently read about a dust-up among our British cousins involving advice given in a magazine. It seems that the February edition of Trail — the top-selling hiking magazine in the UK — had an article about how to descend safely if caught in bad weather on Ben Nevis in Scotland, Britain’s tallest mountain.

A worthy topic, to be sure. Except that the advice given in the article, if followed, would result in a lengthy fall. It seems that the directions offered in Trail would lead the hiker straight off a cliff on the north face of the 4,406-foot mountain.

Oops.

The editor was very apologetic, explaining that the publication had inadvertently omitted a couple of crucial steps in getting off the peak. Which would result in one really long step for the hiker who followed their advice.

And apparently it’s not the first little boo-boo for Trail. Last year, the magazine was criticized by mountain rescue teams for claiming that three popular hiking routes were snow-free during the winter.

All of which got me to thinking about possible Preaching articles that might be dangerous for our readers. Such as:

Putting Them in Their Place:
10 Sermons That Show Your Deacons Why They Are Demon-Possessed

Living on the Edge:
Why Not Start Your Sermon Preparation over Breakfast next Sunday?

Keeping Their Priorities Straight:
Begin Your Next Revival on Super Bowl Sunday Night

Crafting the 18-Point Sermon

The Purposeless-Driven Sermon:
Who Said it Had to Go Anywhere?

10 Snappy Comebacks When Your Organist Gets Grumpy

More of a Good Thing:
Why Your Church Will Enjoy a 90-Minute Sermon Now and Then

More Time for Golf!
Why Spend Hours in the Study When You Can Preach Those Ogilvie, Swindoll and Lucado Sermons That Are Already on Your Shelf?

The Weakest Link:
Sermon Application Gets Specific When You Name Names

At any rate, we promise not to give you any of that bad advice in our preaching articles. However, in our new cooking section . . .

___________________________

Michael Duduit is the Editor of Preaching magazine.
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