Quantcast
You Are Here
  HOME  RESOURCES  FEATURES
FEATURES SEARCH
X
 FEATURES ARCHIVE
Page   <  6  7  8  9  10  >
  • Dulling Down Pentecost
    William Willimon
    May 2007
    I don’t recall that Jesus ever made dullness a sin, but maybe—what with the things He said and the things He did—He didn’t have to....
  • What Women Wish Their Preacher Knew
    Denise Geroge
    May 2007
    Many Christian women today view the sermon—the proclamation of the gospel—as the centerpiece of the worship experience. They yearn...
  • Study the Passage: The vital step in preparing powerful sermons
    Donald R. Sunukjian
    May 2007
    The first step in preparing a biblical message is to study the passage...
  • What to Say...When You've Said It All
    Stephen D. Patton
    March 2007
    How does one approach the final sermons in a church before resignation? After having to deal with this challenge a few times, let me...
  • Using Humor in the Pulpit
    V. Neil Wyrick
    March 2007
    It is not necessary, on a Sunday morning, to become a comedian for Christ. Yet neither is there a scriptural reference that claims...
  • Preaching on Sensitive Subjects
    Joe McKeever
    March 2007
    I thought I was the first to discover this technique of dealing with controversial issues from the pulpit. But it turns out this little...
  • Finding the Timeless Truth
    Phil Wood
    March 2007
    Somewhere in the process of sermonizing the preacher must turn up the heat on the passage and himself and discover the timeless, universal...
Page   <  6  7  8  9  10  >
Expository Preaching in a Narrative World: An Interview...
RATE THIS ARTICLE
Expository Preaching in a Narrative World: An Interview with Haddon Robinson
By Michael Duduit
I think that it can be a great satisfaction in having a curiosity met. I think that there are people who enjoy Bible study the same way that other people enjoy filling out crossword puzzles. Get all the parts and get the thing completed -- they find satisfaction. I think there are people that study the Bible that way. They can see how it relates to its context and how its details work to get across the concept. But if it never gets into your life, if it never really touches your experience, I doubt seriously that you can call it a study of biblical truth, because I think God's truth is always designed to challenge us and change us.

Preaching: One of the critical areas that is so important to preaching -- and that so many pastors struggle with -- is the whole area of applying biblical truth. Making that transition from the context of the biblical world into "What does this mean for me on Tuesday morning?"
Advertisement

Robinson: It's a perceptive question. In fact if I have a serious book left in me, it would be on application. I think in many of our circles, more evangelical circles perhaps, but liberal as well, the great heresies are not primarily in the doctrine -- though they can be there -- but in the application. By that I mean, I can study a text and I can understand what the text means, as a preacher. Thus if I really understand what this text means, I can preach that idea, that abstraction from the text, with the authority that says "Thus saith the Lord." But the big question is, when I apply it in a specific way, can I have the authority of the Scriptures behind the application?

If it's a necessary implication: that is, if as Paul would say in 1 Corinthians 9, "There is one God," it's a necessary implication. There can't be five Gods. So if A is true, B must be true. But there aren't that many necessary implications. The next level would be a probable implication -- it's important, but it doesn't quite have the "Thus saith the Lord." Others are a possible implication, I guess improbable and, finally, an impossible implication. But how you take a truth from the ancient world in a different context from ours and bring it over with the authority of scripture, I think is the thing we battle with. But on the other hand, you have to apply the text, and you have to do it, I think, in specific ways, for people to get it and to put it into their lives.

There's a danger of legalism here. You can have an abstract concept, a concept that says "You shall honor your father and mother"-- it's clear that's what you're supposed to do. Then I apply it: it has to do with my aging parents. And I can tell you a story out of my own life, when my father came to live with us the last years of his life in Dallas. He lost touch with reality, and we had to put him in the nursing home. It cost me half of my salary, and I went to visit him every day. I hated to put him in there because he didn't like to be there. When my wife's mother came to the end of her life, we kept her in our home, and my wife took care of her. In both cases I was trying to honor my parents. Different situation -- the kids were gone when Bonnie's mother was ill. But it is very easy to come to the conclusion that if you are going to honor your parents then you must keep them in your home when they get old. Then what happens is that that application has all the force of the principle. But you can honor your parents in a number of different ways because of different situations. So I see legalism as the application of a principle, and the application has all the force of the principle and it does not deserve it. So there is a theological danger in the way that we apply.

Page   1  2  3  4  5  >
COMMENTS
  • Be the first to comment!
  • Preaching.com (Salem All-Pass) registration.
    Salem Forums Users: You do not need to register for a new account; your forums account is part of the "Salem All-Pass."
    Registration is Easy and it's FREE!
    Required fields marked with *
    *Username:
    *Password:
    *Confirm Password:
    *E-mail Address:
    FREE NEWSLETTERS

    Terms of Use / Privacy Policy
NEWSLETTERSmore...
  •  PreachingNOW
     Culture Connection
IN THIS ISSUE
BIBLE STUDY TOOLS - SEARCH
Salem Publishing
Preaching.com is a proud member of the Salem Publishing family of sites providing content and resources such as: