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  • Michael Duduit
    June 2008
    This is the summer of the book boxes at the Duduit household.As I shared with you in a previous issue, this summer our family is...
  • Michael Duduit
    May 2008
    These days, American businesses seem to be outsourcing more and more products and services. Call a firm for information about Aunt...
  • 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...
  • Michael Duduit
    May 2006
    Many of my friends from college and seminary days now have children in college and beyond. Since my two boys are only 10 and 6, I...
  • Michael Duduit
    March 2006
    As best I can determine, I was the last American to enter a Starbucks. For years I watched them appear on every corner of every block...
  • Michael Duduit
    January 2006
    I've written about this topic before, but the examples that inspire just keep on coming. The topic, of course, is the well-placed...
  • Michael Duduit
    July 2005
    The process of assembling this 20th anniversary issue of Preaching has been an enjoyable yet challenging process. It’s been fun to...
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Things I’ve learned In The Past Twenty Years
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Things I’ve learned In The Past Twenty Years
By Michael Duduit
The process of assembling this 20th anniversary issue of Preaching has been an enjoyable yet challenging process. It’s been fun to dig back through many of the 120 past issues we’ve produced since 1985 — to read the old interviews, sermons, and articles. I’ve even read through some of my old Back Page Pulpit columns, which is an experience just as humbling as going back and reading some of your earliest sermons. (I’ve burned my beginning sermons, just to be sure there’s no danger of them doing any further damage.)

Putting this issue together has been a bit like stumbling across an old scrapbook. As you flip through the pages, lots of memories tumble out that spark laughs, tears, and maybe a cringe or two. It’s also got me thinking about the past two decades of editing Preaching, and all the things I’ve learned. (The list of things I haven’t learned is too big for one column; that one would fill a collection of hefty volumes.) So please allow me the liberty of sharing some observations about things that 20 years in this editor’s chair have taught me:

• The great preachers — past and present — didn’t get that way through a driving desire to be known as “great.” That adjective is attached to preachers with a compulsion to communicate God’s Word effectively. They have invested the time and energy to develop their craft. They have spent time in reading and study. (For example, I’ve yet to come across a great preacher who isn’t also a voracious reader; strong preachers just have a curiosity that makes them want to read and learn more.) Great preachers have never been obsessed with adhering to some artificial homiletical model created by others; their commitment to effective communication has led them to find the style that best suits the gifts God has given them.

The great preachers aren’t those who seek greatness. For a great preacher, the goal is not the accolades of the crowds; it is the applause of nail-scarred hands. There are some who draw crowds today but whose names will be lost a generation from now. There are others who may be overlooked today, but whose work will continue to produce fruit many years after they are gone. God knows, and that’s enough.

• Preaching is being affected by the reality that more and more people are attending a growing number of megachurches scattered across the suburbs of America. As a result, the 800-or-so senior pastors of those congregations are increasingly identified as the pastoral models of our era. In fact, a handful of those pastors and churches have become “virtual denominations” through their offerings of curriculum and conferences, worship resources, congregational tools and more. Ask a random group of pastors who today’s “top preachers” are, and at least eight of the first ten names listed are likely drawn from this group.

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