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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...
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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...
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Michael Duduit
July 1994
With this issue, Preaching begins its tenth year. Since most publications never see their fifth birthday, we're particularly proud...
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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...
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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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Michael Duduit
January 1994
We preachers live and die by words. Sometimes die is hardly an overstatement, as in the case of the pastor who announced to his congregation,...
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Michael Duduit
November 1993
While the rest of America gets into the joyous spirit of Christmas, I'm still working on that stupid list.You know the one I'm talking...
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Looking Forward, Looking Back
Looking Forward, Looking Back
By Michael Duduit
It is the beginning of a new year, with all that represents: new sermon series; starting a new calendar; remembering to write "95" instead of "94." A new year is a time to look forward, at all the potential the new year holds. That's why we make new year's resolutions -- January brings a feeling of a fresh start, and we can think in terms of getting a new beginning on all those things in which we fell short last year. This year I'm going to discipline my time better -- even better than I was going to discipline my time last year! This year I'm really going to lose those pounds I only said I was going to lose last January! The beginning of a new year is also a time to look back and reflect on the people and events which played a part in your life and ministry. Can you think of some special people who made a real contribution to your life during the past year? I am thankful for all of those who make this publication possible: the writers who share their work with fellow ministers; the folks who work in our office, making sure we keep accurate subscriber lists and files and all those countless other details that are never seen but without which we would quietly fold our tents and disappear; for our typesetter, who has typeset and pasted-up every word of this publication since day one, and whose retirement this year is going to mean a whole new ball game for us in producing Preaching. These and so many more people make this publication possible. As I look back and reflect, I am also thankful for the lives of some friends we have lost. In recent months, three brothers who contributed to this publication went to be with the Lord. D. E. King, who for many years was pastor of the great Monumental Baptist Church in Chicago, was one of our original Contributing Editors, and was also a featured speaker at our very first National Conference on Preaching back in 1989. I still remember hearing him preach while I was a seminarian; he was one of the most powerful preachers I have been blessed to encounter. This fall we lost two active contributors: John Bishop, who for more than five years has written most of our "Past Masters" columns and whose insights have been a blessing to his fellow preachers; and Harold Perdue, who has been a regular writer for our "From the Lectionary" section for several years. Both of them helped make my job easier and your reading more beneficial, and we will miss them. We all stand on the shoulders of giants, enabling us to look ahead even farther than we otherwise could. As I look ahead to a fresh year -- during which Preaching will complete ten years of publication -- I see new faces coming on the scene to "stand in the gap." As 1995 begins, I am excited about the unseen blessings yet to be received: new people who will be a part of this work, new preachers who will emerge to become models for the rest of us, new experiences that God will use in our lives to strengthen and encourage us to greater effectiveness. It's going to be a good year.
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As I was reading about the strategy of presenting an argument, these three images—sheep,...
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Once known as the White House "hatchet man" during the Nixon administration, in 1973...
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In this year’s 2008 annual survey of visual resources, we want to share with you...
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