Preaching

Why I Don’t Go to the Bible to Find Sermon Material

I never go to the Bible to find a passage to preach on for Sunday’s sermon.

Yes, I preach from the Bible. It is always the starting point for every sermon.

But when I open God’s Word, I don’t ask what it’s saying to someone else, I ask what it’s saying to my heart and life first.

The Bible is not a sermon-assist tool. It’s an essential element in my ongoing relationship with Jesus.

Why I Don’t Go to the Bible to Find Sermon Material Read More »

This Easter, Let’s Tell a Better Story

As Easter approaches, many pastors will be tempted to tell a feel-good story of spiritual renewal, personal growth and universal hope to our larger-than-usual congregations.

That’s a good story.

But I want to encourage you to tell a better story.

Tell the story of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus.

Not as a metaphor for change and hope. As a real-life narrative.

This Easter, Let’s Tell a Better Story Read More »

Why You Need to Change How You Preach (And 5 Changes I’ve Made)

People don’t communicate today like they did just a few years ago. I speak differently now because people listen differently now.

And with the advent of computers, smart phones, tablets, Netflix and the like, the pace of change is getting even faster.

The message of the gospel matters so much that we need to communicate it in the best possible way for those listening.

Why You Need to Change How You Preach (And 5 Changes I’ve Made) Read More »

Let Them Lean In: The Power a Subtle Gospel

What if the church, instead of yelling louder, gave a noise-soaked world something they had to lean in to? Instead trying to catch the attention of an overwhelmed culture with even more sound and fury, what if we undermined the dominant communications paradigm by doing something truly counter-cultural – a subtle gospel?

Maybe whispering the gospel is better than yelling it. At least in some situations.

Let Them Lean In: The Power a Subtle Gospel Read More »

5 Reasons to Stop Making Your Sermon Notes Rhyme

Recently, I was doing a session with pastors on how to preach better sermons for today’s congregations. When I advised them to stop making their sermon notes rhyme, something in the room shifted.

The older pastors recoiled in horror at the idea. But the younger pastors became like bobble-heads nodding up and down. So I paused to point out the difference.

“Am I right on this one?” I asked the young leaders. Their nodding increased. So I went on, supported by my bobble-head choir of young leaders, to explain why I no longer make my sermon notes rhyme or alliterate.

5 Reasons to Stop Making Your Sermon Notes Rhyme Read More »

Tired of Being Trite: One Pastor’s War On Ministry Clichés

TRITE /trīt/ (Adjective) Overused and consequently of little import, lacking originality or freshness.

It’s easy to become trite when you’re a pastor.

After all, we’re in constant output mode. Whether we’re preaching, teaching, comforting or just hanging out (you may know it as fellowship), we talk a lot.

It’s not always easy to know the right thing to say, so most of us give in to the temptation to find a handful of clichés and repeat them at regular intervals – even if we don’t realize we’re doing it.

Not everything we say can be original, of course. As Solomon reminded us, there’s nothing new under the sun.

But that’s never an excuse to be trite.

Yet we do it all the time.

Pastoral triteness often involves the use of “Christianese” – insider lingo that means nothing to others and stops meaning much to us after constant, thoughtless repetition.

In response to that, we’re often told we need to flip the script. Stop using old, worn-out phrases. I agree with that. I’ve fought a war on “Christianese” (ironically a very Christianese word) for decades.

But when we try to be new and cool, sometimes we’re just trading the triteness of one generation for the triteness of the next. Or the triteness of the christian culture for the triteness of the non-christian culture.

My War On Triteness

I started this post with the definition of “trite”, because we seldom use the word any more. But we practice it way more often than we should.

As ministers of the Gospel, it’s time to declare war on our own triteness. Let’s stop dumbing down the Gospel. In the way we speak and act.

Tired of Being Trite: One Pastor’s War On Ministry Clichés Read More »

Movies In Church: Use Pop Culture, But Don’t Let It Use You

“With great power comes great responsibility.”

When I wrote my last post, Uh, Pastor… Being Right Is Not an Excuse to Be Mean, I ended it with those words from the Spider-Man comics.

It is perhaps the most famous quote from superhero comics and movies (thanks to Stan Lee and Peter Parker’s uncle Ben).

Because I used that quote, I was tempted to make it the title of my post and use a photo of Spider-Man to accompany it.

Here’s why I didn’t.

The Sign On the Front Door Matters

There’s an old, true saying in leadership circles:

What you win them with is what you win them to.

I didn’t choose to attract readers to my last post with a Spider-Man quote and photo because I wasn’t interested in attracting them to Spider-Man or superheroes.

When people were done reading that post, I wanted my readers to be thinking about how pastors need to be careful with our words, so that’s what I put in the title and accompanying photo.

In today’s post, I want you to walk away thinking about how we need to be careful about how we use words and images from popular culture, so I put that in the title. And I used a photo of a little dog in an ill-fitting Spider-Man suit because I think it illustrates the point of this post well – there are some ideas that might seem cute at the time, but they don’t fit like they should.

Provide an Alternative, Not More of the Same

I have no problem using references from pop culture to illustrate truth – I used a Spider-Man quote in my last post, after all. And I’ve made multiple references to pop culture in previous posts (including quoting Keith Richards, Reality TV shows and The Big Bang Theory sitcom, among others). But I’m beginning to tire of the tendency among pastors and Christian bloggers to link so much of our speaking and writing directly from the popular culture.

Movies In Church: Use Pop Culture, But Don’t Let It Use You Read More »

10 Reasons I Don’t Use Negative 10-Point Lists In Preaching or Blogging

A lot of bloggers and ministers like using negative 10-point lists as the basis for blog posts and sermons.

Some that I’ve run across include:

10 Reasons Your Church Isn’t Growing
10 Practices Healthy Pastors Need to Avoid
10 Habits of Highly Ineffective People
10 Attitudes that Will Ruin Your Marriage
10 Ways to Raise a Boy You Wouldn’t Want Your Daughter to Date
There’s nothing inherently wrong with writing or speaking that way, but I’ve never been a fan of it.

Here are my 10 reasons why.

10 Reasons I Don’t Use Negative 10-Point Lists In Preaching or Blogging Read More »

Preaching Better – Let Process Flow From Content

Most preachers are process junkies.

We obsess over sermon length and structure, whether-or-not to use PowerPoint, if we should preach in a series, etc.

Most of the discussions I have with other preachers about preaching concern these issues. And that’s fine. These are the tools of of the trade, after all, and we want to use them well.

I’ve participated in these discussions. I’ve written about how to preach better and I’m currently working on a blog post on the process I use to prepare sermon series’.

But I’ve discovered that there’s a set of principles underneath all the talk of process that we often forget.

Process should follow content, not the other way around.

I think there are two defining rules every communicator needs to follow:

1. Decide what you need to say

2. Say it in the best way possible

That’s it.

Everything else should follow after that. From sermon length, to series length, to use of illustrations, video clips, Q & A, etc.

Use the process that best communicates what needs to be said and let everything else go.

Preaching Better – Let Process Flow From Content Read More »