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  • Michael Duduit
    March 1997
    As we prepare to enter the twenty-first century, it is clear that western culture is caught in a whirlwind of conflicting values and...
  • Michael Duduit
    January 1997
    After our recent move, my family began to visit a variety of local churches in our new community and I began to rediscover that age-old...
  • Michael Duduit
    November 1996
    Attention, readers: does anybody know where my stuff is? Anybody?Anyone who has ever moved house and home (and that includes every...
  • Michael Duduit
    September 1996
    Any preacher without a sense of humor would be better off finding another place of Christian service. Truth is, it's impossible to...
  • Michael Duduit
    July 1996
    I've learned an important lesson: never, ever, ever tell your wife that you're never moving again.When we moved into our Louisville...
  • Michael Duduit
    May 1996
    I may never again be able to preach on the subject of raising children. I now have one.James Robert Duduit -- light of my life and...
  • Michael Duduit
    March 1996
    During the past several weeks I have been discovering a whole new world with its own language: bits and browsers, ftp's and domains,...
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A Preacher's Little Instruction Book
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A Preacher's Little Instruction Book
By Michael Duduit
You remember the pet rock? It was one of those products that every red-blooded American looked at in the store and said, "Why didn't I think of something so stupid that would have made me rich?"

Browsing in the bookstore recently, I came across the literary equivalent of the pet rock. Life's Little Instruction Book by H. Jackson Brown, Jr. ((c) 1991 by H. Jackson Brown, Jr.; published by Rutledge Hill Press, Nashville) is a small collection of pithy and obvious observations about "how to live a happy and rewarding life" (as if situation comedies didn't already provide enough assistance in that department).

Mr. Brown first compiled this collection for his son, who was going away to college. The book contains 511 suggestions, such as: "Watch a sunrise at least once a year" (#3); "Eat prunes" (#74); "Don't quit a job until you've lined up another" (#84); "Don't use a toothpick in public" (#283); and "Enjoy real maple syrup" (#472). And people pay for this.
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That's what got me thinking: surely young preachers need a similar compendium of suggestions, lest they be forced to use common sense or think for themselves. So I'm hard at work on A Preacher's Little Instruction Book, which I'm sure will be picked up by the first publisher that hears about it (and has far more money than good sense).

Here are some of the suggestions and observations I've identified thus far (feel free to send your own suggestions, provided you don't expect a cut of the royalties):

#1 -- Never insult the finance committee chairman.

#43 -- Never begin your sermon with the words, "Knock, knock."

#136 -- Sunday School is a little too late to start preparing your sermon.

#201 -- Never insult the finance committee chairman.

#285 -- Don't use that funny story about your wife as a sermon illustration.

#332 -- Always renew your subscription to Preaching.

#369 -- Churches don't automatically consider longer sermons better.

#424 -- Never insult the finance committee chairman.

#473 -- Seminary class notes don't preach well.

#502 -- Only use "and finally" when you really mean it.

#511 -- Never insult the finance committee chairman.

Although I've been inspired by Mr. Brown's book, I haven't found his specific suggestions to be all that helpful in writing to preachers, since he includes no references to deacons or other such obstacles to successful ministry. There is one suggestion that he makes, however, that I definitely plan to include in my book:

"Never give anyone a fruitcake" (#396)

If only I'd read his book before Christmas!
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