Tuesday, August 23, 2005

I had such great intentions. . .

I meant to write in here frequently about preaching. But I haven't.

I learn, almost every week, that the Holy Spirit is in charge of preaching. The impact of a message depends on whether the Holy Spirit is having his way in me and in the listener. And, while words matter and structure and content and clarity. Nothing compensates for the lack of the Holy Spirit.

In fact, the goal of preaching is for the Word to be a tool in the hands of the Spirit. He creates a spiritual clarity that an eloquent preacher is unable to bring. He alone can open the spiritual treasure chest. He alone can give blind people spiritual eyes and make spiritually deaf people hear.

That is the joy and the frustration of standing in front of the same people week after week. The pleading with God for the sermon is the most important part of the preparation.

Sunday, August 14, 2005

Expository Preaching and the Recovery of Christian Worship

Dr. Mohler has a series on preaching that is very encouraging.

Expository Preaching and the Recovery of Christian Worship (Part One)

Expository Preaching and the Recovery of Christian Worship (Part Two)

Expository Preaching and the Recovery of Christian Worship (Part Three)

A Preacher's Prayer -- A. W. Tozer

A Preacher's Prayer -- A. W. Tozer

The Urgency of Preaching

The Urgency of Preaching

Saturday, August 06, 2005

Economy

Preachers are famous for talking. If there is a stereotype of preachers it is that they preach too long. This isn't necessary.

Economy of words is a critical skill in the pulpit. Say more with less. Use powerful words for the greatest punch. The fewer clear, vivid, alive words, the greater the punch.

Then when you've finished -- stop.