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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

Yet the vast majority of congregations in the U.S. still have less than 300 people in attendance each Sunday, and the methodologies so well suited to the suburban megachurch are often a poor fit for such congregations. The tragedy is that too many pastors and lay leaders look longingly at the megachurches and identify that as the definition of “success,” no matter how unrealistic it may be for their rural and urban churches.

At the same time, there are some things every preacher can learn from gifted pastors like Rick Warren, Andy Stanley, Ed Young (Jr. or Sr.) and many others. Just as Victorian pastors would have done well to study a model like Charles Spurgeon, so today’s pastors can gain great insights from studying the ministries and preaching of today’s most effective communicators. Please note I said study, not mimic.

• The marketplace for pastoral resources is getting more and more crowded. For example, when we started the National Conference on Preaching in 1989, there were few significant training events for preachers. Today, pastors are inundated with invitations to conferences, seminars, and meetings. We still think NCP is one of the two or three most effective conferences for preachers held each year, but it can be a challenge for pastors to cut through the onslaught of promotional materials and find the events that will truly make an impact on their ministries.

And the congestion isn’t limited to conferences. Although a couple of the major preaching publications (Proclaim, Pulpit Digest) have ceased publication in recent years, that doesn’t mean there is less competition for a pastor’s time and attention. New periodicals have emerged, and the big action is on the Internet. It’s hard to even count the number of web-based “sermon services” that have hit the web, all offering to make your job easier by providing pre-digested sermons for every Sunday. (As if God intended preaching to be anything less than an investment of blood, sweat and tears on the part of God’s messengers.) At Preaching, we want to give you helpful, quality tools with which to carry out your divinely-appointed task. But if we ever suggest that we are going to make your job easier by providing your sermons for you, you have my permission to slap me up side of the head.

• On a related front, plagiarism seems to be a more significant issue than it was twenty years ago. There has always been plagiarism; the temptation to “borrow” from a book of published sermons has always been a reality of Saturday-night specials. But the advent of the Internet (and all those thousands of sermons in digital form) has made plagiarism an increasing temptation and problem. Every year, we read new reports of pastors who are fired by church leaders when it’s discovered they have been preaching the sermons of others without attribution. They expect you to be good; they also expect you to be you.

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