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7 ways to not really preach a passage

Let’s resolve, prayerfully and passionately, to always seek to really preach the passage we claim to be preaching.

BIBLICAL PREACHING AUTOR 108/Peter_Mead 06 DE MAYO DE 2021 14:59 h
Photo: [link]Payton Tuttle[/link], Unsplash CC0.

Here are seven ways to not really preach the text you claim to be preaching.



You may notice that I will say nothing about heresy. I will assume that what is said in each type of sermon is biblically and theologically true. Nevertheless, in each case the preacher is not really preaching the text they claim to be preaching.



After the list, I will suggest three reasons why this is a problem.



1. Springboard preaching



This is where you read the text at the beginning and then leave it behind. You may go to some wonderful places in the thoughts that follow, but the actual text is long forgotten.



2. Trigger word preaching



This is where you allow words in your text to sequentially trigger you to preach other things. This is like a sequence of mini-springboards. Again, you may go to good places in what you say, but you aren’t saying what this passage says.



3. Cross-reference preaching



This is a variation where keywords in the preaching text trigger travel via the concordance to other, probably preferred preaching passages. I presume they are great passages, but this one is getting short shrift.



4. Preferred text preaching



This is similar to the previous one, but all the triggers take you to the same place. I once took a course in Pastoral Epistles, but the teacher seemed determined to spend as much time in Romans as possible. Wasted opportunity.



5. Meaning-lite or intention-lite preaching



This is harder to spot. It appears to be preaching in the preaching text, but the preacher has not wrestled with the text in context, or with the original intention of the author, so the text has become a superficial and context-less set of abstract thoughts for the preacher to play with.



The preacher may say good things, but is the preacher saying what the author intended to communicate?



6. Theological overlay preaching



This is a variation on number 5, but it is harder to critique. After all, the preacher might be presenting an amazing theological lecture, but the issue is that if it isn’t the intention of the passage, then it is an overlay being imposed rather than having the credibility of coming out of the text.



7. Anecdotally dominated preaching



This is where there is a tip of the hat to the text, but the real energy is invested in anecdotes and illustrations. These don’t serve the preaching of the passage, they swamp it.



Now, they might be theologically brilliant quotes, stories and examples, but what about the passage?



That is a quick menu of seven ways to not really preach the text you purport to proclaim. But if these sermons are biblically and theologically accurate, is it a problem?



Here are three reasons why it is a problem:



A. Your preaching text is good, why miss it?



The alternative may be attractive, it may be more preachable, and it may even be what they need. If it is, preach that text. But why pretend to preach this passage and then not really preach it?



In your preaching calendar it will say that you preached it, so it won’t get another opportunity for several years. Why not let them have this particular passage’s truth – it is unique, it is God-breathed, and it is profitable.



B. You are shrinking the canon, why do that?



When your preaching text does not control your content, then you will naturally move to easier texts, to pet ideas, to personal soapboxes. Even if these are all true, they are also too few.



God gave us a whole Bible of self-revelation. When we reduce that to the extent of our preferences, that will always make for a much smaller canon. What you want to say will never be as rich, diverse, interesting and helpful as what God has said and wants to say through the preaching of the Bible.



C. You are undermining God’s credibility as a communicator, why teach that?



What example are you giving your listeners, especially the more discerning ones? When they look at a text and sense that what you have said isn’t really what that text is saying . . . but you imply that it is . . . what do they learn?



The Bible is not good communication? This preacher does not believe God to be a good communicator? I should let the text trigger disconnected thoughts when I read it too?



Please add more ways this happens and more reasons it is a problem in the comments. And let’s resolve, prayerfully and passionately, to always seek to really preach the passage we claim to be preaching!



Peter Mead is mentor at Cor Deo and author of several books. This article first appeared on his blog Biblical Preaching


 

 


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