MAKE YOUR PREACHING INTERESTING Too many sanctuaries during the sermon resemble the Old Testament land of Nod. Uninteresting sermons turn our hearers into Cains, banishing them to the land of wandering. How may we secure and hold the congregation's attention? How may we put a blindfold over the eyes of dull preaching, hold up the rifle, and execute it? How may we make our preaching interesting? 1. Preach the Bible. It is the most interesting book on the face of the earth. The Word draws men's attention the way a picnic draws ants. Have confidence that the Bible will secure the interest and attention of God's people. 2. See that you apply to yourself what you preach. Don't imitate a waiter, serving to others piping hot dishes he himself does not eat. Instead, imitate a mother who, after frying the chicken and mashing the potatoes, sits at the table and eats with the family. This will not only promote your own sanctification, but it will also cause people to listen to you. Someone once said there is no eloquence like the eloquence of conviction. Let the living bread have your own teeth marks on it when you serve the people, and I assure you they will come and listen. 3. Make the Word relevant to the people to whom you speak. Don't send your sermonic mail to "OCCUPANT" or "CURRENT RESIDENT." Make your sermons personal. As you prepare, allow your mind to roam over the pews. There you see the eighteen-year-old high school quarterback who longs to be faithful to Jesus Christ, yet struggles with all the peer pressures a teenager faces. How does this truth speak to him? How does it speak to that fifty-four- year-old man who has just lost his job, a job he thought was going to take him all the way to retirement? When you speak to people where they are, they will gladly listen. 4. Be a pastor. It was said of our Lord that He knew what was in man. That ought to be said of every preacher. One way to get to know men is by spending time with them. Visit your people. And when you are with them, listen. Instead of dominating the conversation, allow your parishioner to talk about his hopes, dreams, and fears. With the knowledge you gain, you'll be better able to preach the Word of God to their needs. 5. Communicate to the congregation a high view of preaching. Teach them the high esteem in which God holds preaching. Constantly reinforce the fact that when your people gather on Sunday, it is not a futile exercise, but an act of strategic importance to their lives. 6. Work to make your sermons understandable. Don't use William F. Buckley words -- words most hearers cannot understand. Be very careful to explain what you mean by terms, ideas, and concepts. 7. Liberally sprinkle your sermon with illustrations. An Arabian proverb says, "He is the best speaker who can turn the ear into an eye." The Lord Jesus constantly performed that sermonic miracle. Give truth in pictures. Instead of simply saying Jesus was sinless, say, "You could put on a clean white glove, rub it over even the back shelf of Christ's life, and it would still be spotless." 8. Speak concretely. If you are talking about how hesitant we are to obey God, say we are as hesitant as a 17-year-old who is about to ask a Christie Brinkley look-alike for a date. Make people feel, smell, and touch and you will help them understand. 9. Retire old homiletical soldiers, those cliches that march through our sermons like World War I doughboys. Refuse to use hackneyed phrases like "It was such a blessing." Force yourself to think freshly and creatively. 10.Preach without notes. Why? Because eye contact is so important in establishing rapport with the congregation. All too often we are tied to notes because we are too concerned about ourselves. Let go! Your congregation is not going to remember everything you say; you want them to remember at least one thing you say. Saturate your soul with your sermon and then see to it you don't bury it under points. 11.Preach with brevity. Coughing and squirming in a sermon indicate the pressure in the cabin is being lowered because the exit door has opened. Your hearers are strapping on their parachutes, ready to bail out. The sermonic journey has been a bit too long. Make it shorter and they will stay the whole flight. 12.Use humor. Why can't we laugh in the house of God? Why can't we be happy about our relationship with Jesus Christ? But if you are not naturally humorous, don't force it. There are enough bad comics on the face of this earth. If, however, God has given you that gift, use it cautiously and wisely, but don't hesitate to use it. 13.Preach Jesus Christ. As you preach Christ, emphasize His cross more than anything else. You will preach to people who have been dealing with certain sins in their lives for years. Preach the mercy of Christ, then the forgiveness of Christ, and finally the love of Christ. Nothing makes a man so eager to live for Jesus as does the knowledge that Jesus loves him. 14.Saturate your sermon with prayer. The old authors talked about "unction" -- the Spirit of God giving your message energy, power, and might. How do you get unction? You get it through prayer; you don't get it any other way. You need to spend as much time on your knees as you do in sermon preparation. Your sermon may be wearing an exegetical tuxedo, but all your preparation means nothing if the Spirit of God has not come down upon you. |