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  • Gregory Hollifield
    February 2006
    Preparing a sermon is hard work. Ironically, the more one reads about how to prepare a sermon often complicates the work, making...
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  • Michael Duduit
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    What happens if preachers go out on strike? That's a question some churches in Canada may have to answer if a group of pastors is successful...
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Three Questions To Simplify Sermon Preparation
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Three Questions To Simplify Sermon Preparation
By Gregory Hollifield
Preparing a sermon is hard work. Ironically, the more one reads about how to prepare a sermon often complicates the work, making a tough job even tougher. Before putting pen to paper (or fingers to the keyboard), the well-read preacher with a biblical text in front of him must first decide how to view his task. Will he picture himself as H. Grady Davis’ arborist nurturing the growth of the sermon as a tree? As John Stott’s bridge-builder? As David Buttrick’s “mover” and shaker? As Eugene Lowry’s playwright about to construct a homiletical plot? Or as Michael Quicke’s swimmer wading into the stream of divine revelation?

Having settled that matter, he must then decide how to tackle his task. Will he exercise Wayne McDill’s “12 Essential Skills for Great Preaching?” Work through Haddon Robinson’s “10 Stages of Development for an Expository Message?” Follow Rick Warren’s advice on how to “C.R.A.F.T.” a purpose-driven sermon? Or consult one of the contributors to Michael Duduit’s Handbook of Contemporary Preaching? While he’s trying to make-up his mind, his eye catches a glimpse of the newest title on his homiletics’ shelf, Peter Grainger’s Firm Foundations: 150 Examples of How to Structure a Sermon! What’s a preacher to do?

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Faced with this plethora of choices myself, I have often recalled a scene from one of the Bad News Bears movies. Coach Buttermaker has just learned that his star pitcher who is supposed to be practicing on the sidelines isn’t. When he asks why, a kid tells him it’s because the hurler cannot decide which major leaguer he wants to pitch like. The youngster was suffering from “paralysis by analysis.”

Too often I find myself seated at my desk thinking more about how to prepare a sermon than the sermon I am preparing. Much is going on between my ears, but little of it will actually come out of my mouth the next Sunday. To refocus my thoughts and get the wheels of progress turning again, I have found three simple questions most helpful: What do I want to say? What do I hope to accomplish? How can I make it happen?

What do I want to say?

To answer this question I take my cues from the biblical text. Tipping my hat to Robinson, I ask, “What is the subject of this text? What is the complement?” I want to make sure of the “big idea” first; then I can decide whether to preach that entire idea in my sermon, a part of the idea (in context of course), or an application of the idea.

While searching for the big idea, in the back of my mind I am paying homage to Bryan Chapell’s Christ-Centered Preaching by staying sensitive to what the text says about God and man. If I overlook God, I miss the point. If I overlook man, I miss the point of connection.

What do I hope to accomplish?

To speak to the whole person, I must ask account for the hearer’s intellect, emotions, and will. I want to do more than inform the intellect. I want to touch emotion and challenge the will. What do I want my audience to think? What do I want them to feel? What do I want them to do?

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