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Preaching

Preaching
Preaching Lesson From A Politician
May 25, 2011 at 5:00 am 0

I heard portions of Benjamin Netanyahu's speech to a joint session of Congress yesterday.

I have to say, it was stunning. I pulled over in my car and began writing as much of it down as I could.

Even if you disagree with Netanyahu's politics and its implications,you have to admire to force of his argument, the simple beauty of his language, and the cadence of his delivery.

I give you below some nuggets from the text of the speech. Pay particular attention to the short sentences, the building of patterns, the rapport with the audience, and the masterful use of contrast. This is "writing to speak" (as opposed to "writing to read") at its very best:

In an unstable Middle East, Israel is the one anchor of stability. In a region of shifting alliances, Israel is America’s unwavering ally. Israel has always been pro-American. Israel will always be pro-American.

My friends, you don’t need to do nation building in Israel. We’re already built. You don’t need to export democracy to Israel. We’ve already got it. You don’t need to send American troops to defend Israel. We defend ourselves. You’ve been very generous in giving us tools to do the job of defending Israel on our own. Thank you all, and thank you President Obama, for your steadfast commitment to Israel’s security. I know economic times are tough. I deeply appreciate this.

Support for Israel’s security is a wise investment in our common future. For an epic battle is now unfolding in the Middle East, between tyranny and freedom. A great convulsion is shaking the earth from the Khyber Pass to the Straits of Gibraltar. The tremors have shattered states and toppled governments. And we can all see that the ground is still shifting. Now this historic moment holds the promise of a new dawn of freedom and opportunity. Millions of young people are determined to change their future. We all look at them. They muster courage. They risk their lives. They demand dignity. They desire liberty.

And then, my favorite paragraph of them all:

Israel has always embraced this path of freedom while others in the Middle East have long rejected it. In a region where women are stoned, gays are hanged, Christians are persecuted, Israel stands out. It is different.

It is different. Echoes of Leviticus 11:45 -- be holy for I am holy -- whether Netanyahu intended it or not.

All in all, preachers do well to study the ways in which Netanyahu's form -- a concisely written & powerfully delivered speech -- reinforces his content -- a clarion call for Israeli safety & sovereignty in the context of a peaceful Middle East.
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Preaching
How The Sausage Gets Made
May 18, 2011 at 12:20 pm 0


On two different occasions last week, I shared with people here how I prepare sermons.

I'd never done that even once before, and yet here I was giving detailed explanations two times in three days to folks in the process of growing their own preaching skills.

I talked about bible studying, wordsmithing, and, most personally, brainstorming. Where do illustrations and connections and memories come from? I have a highly detailed process, and laid it all out there for my friends and colleagues.

It was almost like having someone else read your diary.

Or giving them a behind the scenes look at how sausage gets made.

In this case, however, I hope the exercise will increase their appetite for preaching, not diminish it.
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Preaching
An Unusual Applause Line
May 2, 2011 at 5:00 am 3
Every so often, something I say in a sermon elicits spontaneous applause from the people of Good Shepherd.

I can't generally predict when this will happen . . . usually it follows a bold-ish comment about the unique-ness of the Risen Christ.

It's certainly most common with our 11:30 crowd. Seldom at 8:30, sometimes at 10, frequently at 11:30.

Whenever and wherever it happens, I'm grateful.

This Sunday had a line in the sermon -- a line not in the composed manuscript but something I only thought of this week -- that each service greeted with enthusiastic clapping.

Was it a great theological claim? No.

An urgent challenge to follow Jesus? No.

Annoucing a bold initiative for the church? No.

It was, instead, a brief line tucked in the middle of a story about Hank Aaron.




The applause line wasn't even the meat of the story I was telling.

Because what I related about Aaron involved (of course) him hitting a home run. (This one off of the Yankees and inspired by the incessant jabbing of Yogi Berra.) So I said simply, "BOOM! Over the center field wall. One of 755 STEROID FREE home runs."

8:30: applause. 10:00: applause. 11:30: applause.

The first time I was shocked; by the third hour I was prepared.

I suppose it goes to show you that in the days of athletes giving us TMI via Twitter, Facebook, or even legal testimony, people are longing for genuine heroes.
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Preaching
An Experiment Gone Wrong. And Then Right.
April 4, 2011 at 7:49 am 0
I had it all planned out.

As part of yesterday's sermon, I was going to do an "experiment" demonstrating that a) oil and water don't mix; b) there is a product made up of primarily oil & water -- mayonnaise; and c) the reason mayonnaise works is because eggs are the "emusifier" bringing together the oil and water into a cohesive product.

The larger point would be that the cross of Christ is the "emulsifier" bringing together different races, cultures, and languages into a unified people of God.

I thought "rather than just explain it, I'll DO it!" (Not produce the actual mayonnaise, mind you, just demonstrate that oil and water don't mix before introducing the mayonnaise/egg "reveal.")

So I bought a see through container, a bottle of water, some Crisco Oil, and Hellman's mayonnaise. That's heavy duty sermon prep.

At the 8:30 service, the big moment came. I poured the water into the container, followed by the Crisco.

Yet I soon discovered to my dismay that the container -- brand new! -- had two large leaks in it. I quickly put it back on my "preaching table" and watched with growing dread as the water pooled all over it and, eventually, began to drip off the backside.

I made the point and finished the sermon, but the experiment was, well, lacking.

Fortunately, several staffers came to my rescue and located a new, see through, and leak-proof container so that the science could continue unimpeded at 10 and 11:30.

So it did.

You can actually watch the sermon here.

I'm not sure I have any special preaching or ministry wisdom to draw from this event except this: if you are going to do an experiment during the sermon, practice it beforehand.
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Preaching
Files, Files, Files
March 24, 2011 at 5:00 am 1
I have an entire file drawer dedicated to sermon illustrations.

Beginning with one for "Abortion" followed by one for "Addictions" and then continuing on to places like "Grief," "Healing," "Methodism" (over which I have some grief and is in need of healing!), then into "Race Relations," "Resurrection," and winding up at "Worship."

I've been keeping such files for all 20+ years of full time ministry. Whenever I see something in the newspaper, in a magazine, or through the internet, I cut it out/print it out, slip it into the file, and VOILA! months later when I need something to bring life to a sermon subject, there it is.

Some of the files have titles from early in ministry and now I look at them and wonder, "what was I thinking?" For example: Specifically Religious (what?) and Television.

But most of them are extremely useful and help me get to that place in preparing a sermon where I have too much material rather than too little. Then I have the happy task of editing out rather than conjuring up.

Perhaps some of you can put this post in your own "Sermon" file . . .
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