Preaching Easter

Back in 2008 I blogged a series of four posts on Preaching Easter.  Let me reiterate the points here with links back to the original series:

Part 1 – Back to Basics

Our regular listeners need to hear the basic Easter story.  Jesus told his followers to share bread and wine, “in remembrance” of Him.  In a sense the Easter story never grows old for Christ’s followers – it means too much to us.  So as a preacher don’t feel pressure from somewhere to say something that is somehow clever or different.

Remember that irregular listeners need to hear the basic Easter story.  At Easter time there is a higher likelihood of visitors.  Maybe they feel they should go to church at Christmas and again at Easter.  Maybe they are visiting family who go to your church and politely join their hosts.  These people don’t need some kind of creatively opaque and nuanced message.  They need Easter, crystal clear and applied.

Part 2 – Shock and Awe

It is tempting to take the hygienic out of Easter preaching, but overly graphic detail is unhelpful to some. I’ve heard some very effective presentations of the crucifixion that went into the medical details and the sickening truth of the event. I’ve also heard some where the “shock and awe” tactic backfired significantly. We must be aware of who will be listening and what will be most effective for them. Our goal is to present the biblical truth and call for response, not to repulse people with images that obscure the message.

Let’s try to find the right balance for our listeners this Easter. We need to tell the story well, we need to help people see and feel the reality of Calvary. But we also need to be careful to allow the Holy Spirit to stir the heart, rather than merely stirring the stomach by excessive shock and awe tactics.

Check all four gospels for accuracy in your preaching. If you are preaching from, say, Luke’s account, then it is helpful to check the other three. You wouldn’t want to undermine your preaching by telling the story in such a way that you make errors because you forgot to check the other gospels.

Preach the text rather than the event. Having checked the other gospels to make sure you are not presenting an error in your sermon, be sure to actually preach Luke’s account (or whichever you have as your preaching text). Seek to preach the emphasis of the text you are in.

Part 4 – Resurrection Implications

Before preaching the resurrection this Sunday, check your text for the implications that are present. For instance, in 1st Corinthians 15 we read that His resurrection gives us hope of our own (v16-20), the fear of death is removed (v26, 54-57), there are ethical implications (v32-34), motivation for ministry (v58), and even prompting to practical help for the poor (16:1, note Galatians 2:7-10).

Let’s preach the truth of the resurrection, let’s even allow our excitement to show, but let’s also try to be specifically clear in presenting the implications. It is easy in our excitement about the event to fall short in our relevance and application. Truly, everything is changed because Jesus rose from the dead. Part of our task is to help people see how that is true.

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Easter Musings

Today I have posted some reflections from yesterday’s sermon.  Naturally with this week being Easter it is even more appropriate to focus on Christ crucified.  So today I’ll link to the Cor Deo post, then the rest of the week I am going to re-work some Easter posts from previous years.  What are your particular thoughts concerning Easter this year?

Saturday Short Thought: Profound Trust

This week I’ve been pondering the factors involved in preaching profoundly.  That is, how do we pursue the kind of substantially transformative messages that are fitting for Christian pulpit ministry.  I suspect we’ve barely scratched the surface.  I’d like to add one more thought today.

Yesterday I enjoyed lunch with a good friend and we were talking about preaching among other things.  We were thinking about how preaching can be part of how we define ourselves as a movement – for instance, in the past it might have been in reaction to Catholic theology, or more recently in reaction to Liberal theology.  Consequently our preaching can carry a subtle desire to demonstrate that we take the Bible seriously.  But then a mis-step can occur.

In our attempt to demonstrate a commitment to the Bible, we can create sermons that are actually an artificial structure placed on the passage.  That is, we seek to show our approach to the Bible and end up transmitting our own cleverness in serious sermon construction.  The Bible can almost become an exhibit for our trustworthy theology, or for our view of the Bible. There is a danger in this.

The danger is that we preach our own message from a passage, rather than preaching the message of the passage.

I am convinced that life-changingly profound preaching is not about a deep trust in a specific sermonic form, or even in conveying our system of theology, but rather in a profound trust in the Word of God.  When we do everything we can to present the text God has given us, to re-present it to our listeners so that our message not only says what the text says, but does what the text was intended to do, then I think we are getting closer to profound preaching.

Its a good question to ask ourselves before we preach tomorrow: am I trusting in my system of theology, in the sermonic form I believe reflects “true preaching,” or even in the compelling illustrative material I’ve come up with?  Or am I really trusting in the biblical passage to work deeply in our lives as we ponder the passage together?

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Profound Transformation

As we finish up the series of 20 nudges toward more profound preaching, let’s ponder the goal of profound preaching: profound transformation.  Surely that is our goal?  Lives changed from the core of their being, from the inside out.  That is the nature of new covenant ministry, it seeks to do what the old covenant could never achieve, hang on, I’m into the first point…

17. A transformed life comes from the inside out, not the outside in.  Conforming folks to churchy culture and respectable behaviour is not too difficult.  Having said that, for centuries people have been trying and failing with a transformation by Aristotle’s external ethics approach, because we are designed as heart-driven creatures.  Maybe it’s time we followed Luther in rejecting the Philosopher’s theology and recognized the transformative power of a biblical new covenant ministry.

18. A transformed life actually has new wants, so profound preaching must penetrate the heart of the listener.  You know the old maxim, if you aim at nothing, you’ll probably hit it every time.  So surely we must at least be aiming to preach so that God’s Word can engage and penetrate the heart – to aim for information transfer only, or pressured behaviour only, is to aim to miss.

19. A transformed life is not about memorised outlines, but about the Word impacting life in the moment of preaching, and continuing to do so subsequently.  So the main idea of the passage and its application needs to be remembered.  This takes work.  Too often we pour our energies into helping folks remember outlines, or we put no effort into helping them remember and they walk away with untargeted illustrations and anecdotes.  Main idea and application – in the moment of preaching, and in the days to follow.

20. True transformation is humanly impossible, only God can do it, so pray hard and preach by faith!

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Profound Presentation

It is obvious that profundity should be sought in preparation and matters of explanation and application.  But what about presentation and delivery?  Here are a few suggestions:

13. There is nothing profound in being dull, discouraging, distant or disconnected – cut that out.  Some may assume that profound is the opposite of entertaining and therefore seek to be deliberately dour and detached.  Apparently then the glory goes to God and not to the preacher.  Apparently this path guarantees no manipulation.  I disagree on both counts.  I don’t think God is glorified by poor incarnational presentation of His Word.  And I do think it is possible to manipulate by a detached intellectualism.  We need to see preaching as an act of communication and recognize that communication is always more than content alone.

14. Profound impact usually requires genuine connection, so know that interpersonal aspects matter.  I often mention that I wouldn’t buy a car from someone who won’t look at me, so surely that matters even more with something important like the truth of God’s Word.  Eye contact, personal warmth, open gestures, facial expression, vocal variety, etc.  These are all part of the package when a communicator connects effectively with a listener.

15. Profound impact often comes when there is an appropriate level of personal vulnerability and heartfelt conviction.  When a passage is preached at arms length, with both the text and the message being an exhibit offered to the listeners, there will be a significant reduction in impact.  When a passage has worked in and through a preacher, then the message can come through and from the preacher, and the communication can be both vulnerable and heartfelt.

16. Conviction, passion, enthusiasm, and so on, cannot be effectively faked.  A stunning message learned verbatim and copied down to the last detail of delivery will not be the same as the original.  Why?  Because the copycat communicator cannot copy genuine conviction, and they cannot offer genuine personal passion through the mask of someone else’s message.

Tomorrow I’ll finish the series with a consideration of profound transformation – the goal in all of this.  What would you add to this list?

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Profound Application

Profound preaching is not dense, complex or over peoples’ heads.  Neither is it merely historical, lacking any hint of relevance and application.  The person shaking your hand at the door may tell you “that was deep!” but really mean “that was over my head and apparently irrelevant!”  That is not our goal.  True biblical preaching should be profound in the right sense of the word – deep, weighty, serious, life-changing.  So let’s move on to matters of application:

9. Instructing conduct is probably not profound, motivating it biblically probably is.  I say probably because if your motivation method is to guilt trip listeners as you twist their arms to force them into external conformity, then that is not profound.  It is poor.  The Bible stirs life change and so should our preaching (by God’s grace, of course).  We tend to hit truth in explanation and conduct in application, but the Bible goes deeper than a behavioural model of motivating humans:

10. Application should go deeper than a to-do list, probing into thinking patterns and beliefs.  There is a place for practical to-do suggestions, but if that is the staple application of a preaching ministry, the long-term fruit will be flimsy even if numerous.  Christianity isn’t about conforming behaviour to external standards, but about response to the truth of who God is and what He has said to us.  But again, the Bible goes deeper than cognitive approaches to life change:

11. Application needs to target the affections, because the Bible does.  Discourse moves us, narratives engage us, poetry stirs us – the Bible reaches to the heart of the listener.  Sadly too many preachers assume their role is merely to pressure behavioural change, or educate for cognitive adjustment, but these approaches don’t fully present the message and method of the biblical passages.  We must wisely, honestly, carefully and prayerfully engage the hearts of our listeners with the biblical text.

12. While relevance should be a given, transformational application is rare, so pursue it.  For instance, how easy it is to preach “don’t be anxious” from the Sermon on the Mount and end up imploring people to try harder not to fret!  But the passage points listeners to how much God cares for them.  Let’s not promote a pseudo-relevance through just being strongly against something, but rather offer the text’s bigger alternative that attracts and woos.  To think of a common Old Testament example, by all means let’s smash idols, but not because we are just anti-idol, rather because God is so much better.

If explanation and application can be more profound, we are on the right track.  Tomorrow we’ll look at aspect of our presentation and delivery.

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Profound Explanation

Yesterday we pondered some aspects of profundity in preparation for preaching.  Today let’s probe a little more on the issue of profundity in explaining a biblical text.  Almost every preacher does some sort of explanation of a text, but what makes for a high enrichment without unnecessary obfuscation, uh, unnecessarily complicating it or overwhelming listeners?

5. Help listeners feel the original situation, don’t just bring imperatives over to today.  To be a bit more specific, help listeners feel the original relational situation.  If they can enter into the felt intent of the author, then the force of the text will be more effectively communicated.  The writer didn’t typically write to simply convey information – discourse intended to move, narrative intended to engage, poetry intended to stir.  As much as people claim to like straight application or direct commands, the truth is that application will always be more effective when the authority of the text is felt in its context.

6. Be theologically enriched, but don’t impose your theology.  Walter Kaiser speaks of an informing theology that is flowing into a passage – it might be the backdrop of the Fall, the plan of the promise, the history of the nation, etc.  Don’t treat a passage as if it were a standalone story in a sterile vacuum, but don’t trample all over it with your theological system either.  Be sensitive to the hints in the text, to the passage in its context, and in its place in the greater story.

7. Select the pertinent elements of explanation, don’t be exhaustive.  It is tempting to want to show all the study that has gone into the message, to cite all the commentaries, to note all the interesting anomalies in the syntax or the cross-references in your Thompson Chain Reference.  Think through how much explanation is really necessary and genuinely helpful.  Be targeted and purposeful.  Omit anything that isn’t genuinely helpful. Better to give just enough explanation and leave space for application and relevance throughout the message, rather than over-packing the explanation and making it too dense, too broad or too irrelevant.

8. Seek to plumb the text, don’t just harvest imperatives.  I see this a lot with preachers in the epistles.  Rather than offering the uniquely inspired content of a passage, they make it feel much like any other and simply present what we must do.  But that is like judging a person by their shoes and wristwatch – why not get to know them as a whole person?  Get to know the passage, its flow, its logic, its relational framing, its purpose, its mood, its tone, its strategy.  Then preach the imperatives as part of the whole.

Tomorrow we’ll move onto aspects of profound application.

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Profound Preparation

This week I’d like to ponder what it might look like to pursue a more profound preaching ministry.  While most would acknowledge that preaching should neither be dense nor inaccessible, this does not mean that shallowness and dumbing down are the order of the day.

Profound preaching must surely start with profound preparation.  Four suggestions to get a week-long list going:

1. Begin with humble recognition that you yourself need to be changed by God.  It is too easy to think of preaching preparation as being about you the preacher pursuing a message to preach to them, the needy recipients.  At this point in the process you stand very much in their shoes, needing to hear from God.  You need to encounter His heart in His Word.  You need to be marked deeply and changed by a God who communicates, who cares, who challenges and who changes.  It makes no sense to have profound faith for the sake of others, but not an openness and humility in yourself.  The preparation of a sermon will be a privilege, an opportunity for God to mark your life profoundly.

2. Study the passage to know God, not just the facts.  It is easy to treat Bible study as a pursuit of non-trivial trivia.  Don’t.  Study the passage in order to know God better.  What is His self-revelation saying of Him?  How are the characters responding to Him?  Wherever you are in the canon, the passage is theocentric, so make sure that your heart is too.

3. Don’t mix your message preparation with your Bible study.  As a preacher who cares about the congregation, or as a preacher desperate to be ready on time, it is tempting to blend passage study with message formation.  Keep the stages separate.  You have the privilege of doing some in-depth Bible study, take advantage of that!  You may not be able to help thinking of who you will be preaching to, but try to keep those thoughts until you’ve really gotten to grips with the passage (or better, until God has gotten to grips with you through the passage).

4. Saturate your preparation in prayer.  This should go without saying, but it can’t, so it won’t.  The entire preparation process should be absolutely pickled in prayer.  Prayer in passage study, prayer in personal response, prayer in “audience analysis,” prayer in message formation, prayer for delivery, prayer for life change, prayer for immediate impact, prayer for long-term fruit, etc.

Tomorrow I’ll offer a few more thoughts, this time on profound explanation in preaching.  Feel free to comment any time.

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Saturday Short Thought: Year on Year

This evening I have the privilege of speaking at the 80th Anniversary celebration of a church in Surrey.  As preachers it is tempting to think that the next message we preach is the only one that matters.  But a chance to look back with friends at God’s work over eighty years will be a great chance to celebrate the long-term impact of God’s Word.

The building work of preaching – week after week, the Word of God faithfully preached to a gathering of believers will shape them.  This could be in a good direction or not, which is why it is so vital that we watch carefully the diet that the flock are being fed.  One poor message here and there may not produce tangible trouble, but diet does matter.  I am convinced that if the churches in this country received a steady diet of just plain well-handled Bible sermons – nothing spectacular, just plain, accurate, faithful and lovingly served biblical truth, then the church would be in a very healthy place!

The shaking work of preaching – some messages, or series, will shake a church.  This is good.  Just as our personal reading should shake up our theological convictions and how we live, so the Word should shake a church.  Some preachers want to create a visible shake every week, which may not prove so sustainable or helpful in the long-haul.  But looking back over the years, I suspect healthy churches can see seasons where God’s Word brought about change (usually with discomfort and tension in the process).

The cumulative work of preaching – the steady weeks and the firework weeks, the series that seemed to hit home, and those that passed by, interspersed with the messages that brought instant fruit, and perhaps a few that brought critical feedback . . . over time the diet of God’s Word does something to people, to a church, to a community.

Your sermon this Sunday may not be the talking point of this Monday, but it is part of the history of your church being written over the decades.  Preach the Word.

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Next Week: Pursuing Profound Preaching

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Representing the Gospel

When we preach, we are representing an absolutely glorious gospel!  I was just emailing with a friend in another country who made the observation that in some cultures preachers entertain people to death, while in others they bore people to death.  So true.  So wrong.

The preacher is representing a message from a communicating and wonderfully gracious God, and it is a message of great news.  Here are some ways that we might fall into a false representation:

1. Boring news.  If we ponder it for half a minute, we should repent of ever boring people with the message of the Bible.  How can we take such a magnificent message and make it boring?  If it doesn’t even keep our preaching from being dull, it can’t be that good, can it?

2. Restricting news. If we really read the New Testament carefully, we should never come across as if the gospel is the good news of life restricted.  It sets people free from slavery to sin to know life to the full.  Certainly there are costs involved, perhaps even our lives, but if the preacher looks like all life has been strangled out of them, what does that represent?

3. Angry news. If all the preacher offers is a visual representation of the wrath of God through their demeanor and expression, might that indicate that they don’t know the God they preach about as well as they should?  Christ attracted the broken, he didn’t scare them all away.

4. Silly news. If the preacher has to act like a clown to get the attention of the listeners, I suspect there may be a problem in the content of the message.  If the preacher has to be a sophisticated entertainer, then I still suspect there may be a problem in the content of the message.

5. Illogical news.  If I can be honest, some preachers almost convince me that the atheists are right.  It sounds like everything is about a petty creator judging well-meaning people for the smallest of sins with the greatest of torture, but its okay because we just need to say a magic phrase to get a ticket to paradise.  Sometimes the gospel just seems illogical, and…

6. Flimsy news. If I can continue from the previous point, sometimes the message just seems so lightweight that it doesn’t seem to stand up to listeners questions, let alone any real scrutiny.  Is the simplistic and self-centred gospel really what so many have given their lives for?  Were they burned at the stake for something so flimsy?  Surely not.

7. Tired news. If listeners are not stirred by the gospel, it should be because they are blinded by the god of this age, not because it isn’t stirring.  Christians listening should be responsive, and if they are not showing some indication of how great the news is, perhaps that shows the preacher hasn’t really represented the gospel well.

What would you add?

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