• Mashup Religion
  • Jonymac Studio
  • The West End Rhythm Kings

Otherwise Thinking

~ a blog by John McClure

Otherwise Thinking

Tag Archives: Sermon Introduction

Please Tear Your Sermon in Half!

04 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by John McClure in Views from the Street

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Beginning the sermon, Bible and Preaching, boring preaching, boring sermon, homiletical method, self-disclosure, sermon illustration, Sermon Introduction, sermon preparation, sermon set-up, text-to-sermon

Ok. Maybe not exactly in half. But I’ve listened to lots of sermons over the years, and I’m worried about the way we begin sermons. I have to say that about three fourths of these sermons would be dramatically improved if the preacher started about two pages (or about 3-5 minutes) into the sermon. I don’t know what it is, but most of us love the “wind-up” not realizing that we are not baseball pitchers; sermon wind-ups are usually sermon “wind-downs.” Here are the most common “wind-up/wind-downs.”

  1. Re-hashing the biblical text. The preacher in this mode drags the listener through a long, expanded, or “imaginative” re-hashing of the text. No. This is not an exposition or interpretation. I’m speaking about a non-interpretive re-hashing of the bits and pieces of the text. Sometimes this never ends and lasts the entire sermon. The preacher forgets to have anything to say to us – or what is commonly called a “message,” and seems to assume that we’ll “get it” if we hear the old, old story re-iterated.
  2. The sermon “set-up.” In this mode, the preacher spends a few minutes exegetically framing the biblical text – providing what the preacher considers useful background information – some interesting tid-bits, mostly exegetical by-products.
  3. Touring the cutting room floor – In this approach, the preacher tells us how he or she arrived at this message – strolling us around the room and pointing out all of the fascinating options left behind on the cutting room floor.
  4. Climbing to higher ground. In this mode, the preacher tells the listener all of the ways she or he has heard this text preached in the past – leading us to the superior ground of their own interpretation.
  5. The rapport story. In this mode, the preacher decides to tell a personal story. This is not a story told about someone or something else, narrated through the lens of the preacher’s experience, but a story about the preacher’s experience (of self, other, family, sports, memory, life, etc.). This story might contain a catchy thematic hook designed to capture our interest. Often, the story goes on interminably. No matter what they are supposed to be illustrating, these wind-up stories seem to be saying something else, namely: “Welcome to my world – please like me and be my friend while I preach this sermon.” When this occurs over and over, genuine sermon content is sacrificed to a rather contrived rapport-building exercise. 
  6. The message grope – In my experience this is the most common “wind-up/wind-down.” When beginning to write the sermon the preacher didn’t really have a clue what to say. The preacher just started writing or speaking, hoping a message would pop out. By the time a message finally arrived, several minutes had been wasted groping one’s way toward it, and most of the energy of the sermon had evaporated. For whatever reason, rather than removing this material, it is kept.

Anton Chekov’s famous advice to writers comes immediately to mind: “Tear out the first half of your story; you’ll only have to change a few things in the beginning of the second half and the story will be perfectly clear.” This is serious and solid advice for many preachers. Once we’ve written the sermon, or organized it and preached it through a few times extemporaneously, it is a good idea to ask ourselves whether, in fact, the sermon would be better if we started it further in – on page two or three. If we did this on a regular basis, I believe we’d avoid many of the “wind-up/wind-downs” that currently sap the energy at the beginnings of our sermons.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 191 other subscribers

John McClure

Recent Posts

  • My Sermon Organization Method: Sermon Sequencing and the “Multi-Track Sermon”
  • Transcript: Jeremiah Wright’s 9/11 Sermon
  • Getting Sermon Feedback
  • Sermon Logic in a Hyperlink Generation
  • Multimedia Preaching
  • Humor and Preaching
  • Extemporaneous Preaching and the Art of Improvisation
  • Long-Range Preaching
  • The Frustrated Preacher
  • This Sabbatical: Trying On A Few (Old) Shoes

Categories

  • Connecting the Dots
  • improvisation
  • Musings
  • Views from the Street
  • Who is this?

Archives

  • July 2020
  • September 2016
  • July 2014
  • December 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011

Buy Speaking Together and With God

Speaking Together and With God: Liturgy and Communicative Ethics

Buy Under the Oak Tree

Under the Oak Tree

Buy Mashup Religion

Buy Otherwise Preaching

Buy Preaching Words

Buy Claiming Theology in the Pulpit

Buy The Four Codes of Preaching

Buy The Roundtable Pulpit

Buy Listening to Listeners: Homiletical Case Studies

Download Telling the Truth: Preaching about Sexual and Domestic Violence (free)

Buy Best Advice for Preaching

Buy New Proclamation: Year C; Advent Through Holy Week

Blogroll

  • I P Prospective
  • Leslie Rodríguez Photography Blog
  • Los Rodriguez Life
  • Mashup Religion
  • Ministry Matters
  • Peer Pressure is Forever
  • Rock and Theology

Websites

  • Academy of Homiletics
  • Captured by Leslie: Leslie Rodriguez Photography
  • Homiletic: A Journal of Religious Speech Communication
  • Otherwise Thinking facebook page

RSS Mashup Religion

  • Sherry Cothran’s “Strange Woman”: Popular Music as Parahomiletic
  • New Blog about Artists in my Recording Studio
  • Para-homiletics and video games
  • From "Air Guitar" to "Air Preaching"
  • Wound 3: The Wounding of “Spatial” Desire
  • II. The Second of Five Wounded Desires: The Wounding of Ethical Desire
  • I. The First of Five Wounds/Five Desires: the Wounding of Our Desire for God
  • Caveats
  • Join me in a theological mashup
  • Musicians Might Learn a Thing or Two from Theologians

Otherwise Thinking

  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • Otherwise Thinking
    • Join 191 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Otherwise Thinking
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar