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Seven benefits of a slow-burn project

A lot of ministry happens on fairly short notice. The weekly rhythm keeps ticking like a metronome, and it tends to get interrupted by emergencies.

BIBLICAL PREACHING AUTOR 108/Peter_Mead 23 DE SEPTIEMBRE DE 2021 09:47 h
Photo: [link]Aaron Owens[/link], Unsplash CC0.

A lot of ministry happens on fairly short notice. The weekly rhythm keeps ticking like a metronome, and it tends to get interrupted by emergencies.



Church emergencies, outside ministry requests, family issues, as well as things going wrong in the house, etc., there is always something pressing.



That is why sermon preparation tends to fit into the few days before Sunday. And sometimes it is like a game of Tetris making it fit!



If you don’t already have one, consider adding one more thing to your load. A slow-burn, no-pressure, long-term project. Something that motivates you biblically and theologically.



Here are seven benefits of this kind of approach:



1. Redeem the time without stress



When people talk about redeeming the time, it sometimes becomes a frantic multi-tasking that ends up costing us sanity and productivity. Having a slow-burn project allows you to use ten minutes here and there in a way that feels enriching rather than annoying.



 



2. Read different materials



I don’t tend to have the time to read journal articles when I am preparing a sermon. But with a slow-burn project I can accumulate and gradually engage with different types of materials.



 



3. Get assistance in your research



It is rarely helpful to ask around for a resource when sermon prep is pressing (other than going to that friend who has a good commentary to borrow, of course).



But with this kind of project I find that I ask more random people if anything comes to mind and sometimes get some very helpful things in return.



 



4. Dig deeper into the text



When Sunday is coming, the sermon has to come sooner. But with a long-term project there is room to analyse the biblical text more thoroughly. If you have enough Greek or Hebrew you can really dig in and dwell in the text.



You can become really familiar with a passage, its parsing, its logic, its nuances, its uniqueness. No pressure. No rush. (And if you are probing something theological or historical, you can probe so much deeper there too.)



 



5. Find schedule-shifting motivation



When there isn’t a deadline pressing you on a project, there will be times when that project lies almost dormant. And other times when you feel that spark that motivates you to move other things out of the way in order to make progress on the project.



That is always the best kind of pressure, the kind that builds up inside your soul to give attention to something that is motivating you.



 



6. There may be a surprising ministry outcome



Don’t rush this part, but a slow project can yield surprising fruit. Obviously there may be a sermon or a series to be had, but don’t rush into that. Could there be a seminar or workshop that would help others?



It could also be a magazine, or journal, article. Maybe it will move you into an academic season and become a thesis or dissertation. Perhaps a book.



 



7. There will be a welcome personal outcome



Whether or not your slow-burn project yields an outcome in terms of specific ministry, it will yield all the great fruits of long-term pondering on and dwelling in God’s Word.



It may be that it sparks an interest in another aspect of Scripture, or a writer from church history, or an aspect of theology, that becomes heart food for a future season of life and ministry.



The slow-burn project may yield an outcome of real value for others, but it will almost certainly do something even deeper in you.



What slow-burn long-term project have you found has had a big impact in your life and ministry?



 



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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