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  • Michael Duduit
    March 1995
    We all understand the hectic nature of contemporary life, but some folks seem determined to carry it to extremes.A recent article in...
  • Michael Duduit
    January 1995
    It is the beginning of a new year, with all that represents: new sermon series; starting a new calendar; remembering to write "95"...
  • Michael Duduit
    November 1994
    When it comes to the Bible, people can be awfully funny.I heard recently about an American church group that was interested in funding...
  • Michael Duduit
    September 1994
    "Today we will see how God was able to work in Abraham's life," said Pastor Bob. The words had barely departed his lips when he heard...
  • Michael Duduit
    July 1994
    With this issue, Preaching begins its tenth year. Since most publications never see their fifth birthday, we're particularly proud...
  • Michael Duduit
    May 1994
    As preachers, we tend to live and die by our words. But after learning how much some other speakers are making these days, I've decided...
  • Michael Duduit
    March 1994
    As I sit at the computer on a winter day -- the snow piling higher by the moment -- and dream of spring, several things come to mind:-...
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Hey Buddy, Can You Spare a Moving Van?
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Hey Buddy, Can You Spare a Moving Van?
By Michael Duduit
Preaching is about to get what many of its readers probably thought it's always had: a full-time editor.

It seems like only yesterday that I sat in a barbecue restaurant with Steve and dreamed aloud of creating a professional journal for preachers. (I've tried to convince my wife I do my best thinking over barbecue, but she's not yet completely convinced.) Less than a year after that first idea, Preaching was born and mailed to 2,300 brave charter subscribers who had invested $15 each in a publication nobody had ever seen before.

It's hard to believe what's happened in the years since that first issue of July-August 1985. Today more than 10,000 ministers across the United States and Canada -- as well as readers in England, Ireland, Australia, and on various mission fields around the globe -- are a part of a growing family committed to preaching excellence.
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Over the years as Preaching has grown -- and spun off other ministry resources, like the National Conference on Preaching and the American Academy of Ministry -- it has been a labor of love for me. (That means it didn't pay anything!) By day I labored on my full-time ministry work, first as Director of Communications at Southern Baptist Seminary in Louisville, and since January 1987 as Director of Development and Church Relations at Samford University. Evenings and weekends were devoted to corresponding with contributors, reading and evaluating article and sermon manuscripts, editing copy, designing pages and all of the other editorial tasks involved in producing Preaching. (Frankly, I'm getting tired just thinking about it.)

That worked while I was young and Preaching was in its infancy, but the publication is approaching adolescence and I'm not quite as young as before. Over recent months, it has become more and more clear that this is the ministry to which God has called me to devote the majority of my efforts. So as of July 9, I become a full-time employee of Preaching and the American Academy of Ministry.

We will be closing our Jacksonville business office (and our Birmingham editorial office, which consists of a room in my house stacked to the ceiling with papers) and moving everything to Louisville, where I will also be teaching a class each semester as Visiting Professor of Preaching at Southern Seminary. (After holding down three or four jobs at a time, I can't imagine not having at least something to do!) After some transition time this summer, I'm looking forward to devoting the kind of time and energy that Preaching and its readers have always deserved. (I may even catch up on my correspondence.)

There's just one down side to all of this (besides giving up my steady paycheck): all those books have to be moved back to Louisville! Does anybody have about a zillion boxes they'd like to devote to a good cause?
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