Learning Methods of Preaching

Preaching is an Art. Preaching is a Science.  Preaching requires Study.  Preaching is Speaking.  Preaching is God Directed,  Preaching is Holy Spirit directed.  Preaching is your life.  I know delivery is important, but I also believe the message is more important. 

Learning the Word of God is first.  You can’t preach the Word if you do not know the Word.  And you can not know the Word if you do not read the Bible.

And if you don’t learn the Word from those who know the Word better than you then you will only know what you know and that is not a lot.

In my circle of preachers when I first started preaching back in the 1960’s and 70’s and even in to the 80’s preachers i.e. Fundamental Baptist, they wanted you to think they did not need study, and generally you knew they didn’t really study.

And if you did study it would be for Sunday School and certainly not for preaching.  I got that a lot from preachers.  Charles you are a good teacher but a poor preacher. They meant that I had a lot of teaching in my preaching.  Think of that.

And if you used in your study anything other than the KJV, you were not on the right track.

Of course when I started I used my Dad, Charles Spurgeon, and Lee Robertson, and Wayne Martin, Gene Arnold style of preaching, and their notes.  I certainly did not know really how to really study the Bible.  Even went to Seminary, and really didn’t learn how to really study and preach the Word.  Dr. Walker Moore tried to teach us how to speak, which I was the worst in the class.  I did manage to finish second to Bob Smith in preaching in the preachers class in 1967.  But Walker Moore didn’t like the sermon.  And Bob Smith didn’t like all the time I prepared preaching when I was at FBC, he thought I should spend more time Soul Winning.

I even with to Hyles-Anderson college,  to learn the Bible, really!!!  I even tried to learn to preach like Jack Hyles.  Oh my that was a mistake.

Then going to the All Day Ministers Seminary under Bill Gothard, which I really like. He taught the Charles Stanly method of preaching, which was good, but I couldn’t do it.

Preachers just didn’t like to give the idea that they might have to study if they really preached from the Bible. They didn’t want to teach what the Bible said.  They just didn’t think they needed to preach what the Bible said in the passage of scripture they even read.

I remember preaching in the early 70’s sermons when I never read a text in the Bible.  Which is what many Baptist preachers do.

I wonder if Baptist preachers read I books on preaching!!!!

I was totally shocked when I read books on preaching: For example;

  1.  Haddon w. Robinson:  The Development and Deliver of Expository Messages; Biblical Preaching.
  2. R. Albert Mohler Jr.  He is not silent: Preaching
  3. Gordon D. Fee/Douglas Stuart book:  How to read the Bible Book by Book
  4. T. David Gordon “Why Johnny Can’t Preach.”
  5. Mark Dever’s book:  Preach: Theology Meets Practice.
  6. Walter C Kaiser % Moses Silva book:  An Introduction to Biblical Hermeneutics”
  7. Walter Kaiser Jr. book :  Toward An Exegetical Theology
  8. Kevin. J. Vanhooser’s  “Is There A Meaning in This Text?:
  9. Abraham Kuruvilla books  “Privilege the Text?”
  10. Jay Adams books on Preaching
  11. Steven Lawson’s lectures on Preaching.
  12. John MacArthur’s lectures, books, have been #1 resources since 1983. 
  13. Martyn Lloyd-Jones outstanding book on preaching
  14. Steven Lawson’s lectures at the Master’s Seminary
  15. AND TO COUNT ALL THE PAPERS I HAVE READ.

 I still do not know really how to start from the original language.  I have learned that the resources are available to make it possible to learn.  I have learned that there are plenty of helps that can help you learn what the text is saying.   

So in this brief post, just a small view of my experience in preaching.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ten Principles For a Good Eternity

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Here are 10 principles that for wise spiritual investing in light of eternity…

1. Invest in the lives of those who minister the word. (Gal 6:6, 7)

2. Minister to those in need. (Lk 10:42)

3. Sacrifice to follow Christ. (Lk 19:27, 28, 29)

4. Give without fanfare. (Mt 6:1, 3, 4)

5. Be willing to suffer for the sake of Christ. (Mt 5:11, 12)

6. Pray in Secret (Mt 6:5, 6)

7. Engage in spiritual activity without fanfare. (Mt 6:16, 17, 18)

8. Love your enemies by being willing to help them. (Lk 6:35)

9. Give beam service to the Lord and not just to please men. (Col 3:23, 24)

10. Entertain those who cannot repay you. (Lk 14:12, 13, 14)

 

Growing In Spirtual Graces

The Process of Growth in Grace in the Believers Life: Five Mistakes and Three Signs of Growth in Grace

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Holiness is an ongoing process of growth in grace that constitutes a condition of personal spiritual health.

 Some common mistakes about spiritual growth.

 1A  Growth in Grace is Visible:  The first mistake is to think that growth in grace is always clear to see.

 Rather growth in grace is a process wrought by the Holy Spirit that centers on the human heart.  The quality of a person’s responses to a crisis, a shock, or the demands of any new situation, may tell us all sorts of things about them that we did not know before, and one of those things may well be their spiritual stature.

 2A  Growth in Grace is Uniform:  A second mistake is to think that growth in grace always is uniform process, either in itself throughout the stages of a believer’s life, or in comparison with what God is doing in the lives of others.  Sanctifying grace works differently in all people  Its always conditioned by their natural make-up.

 God’s heath-giving, growth-producing, work of sanctification is differently shaped in detail, and appears to proceed at different speeds, in different lives.
But all Christians can testify that knowing God through Jesus Christ enables them now to live and act in ways that were simply beyond them before; and a professed Christian with no such testimony can hardly be genuine, and is certainty not growing in grace.

 3A  Growth in Grace is Automatic: A third mistake is to think that growth in grace automatic if you are a religious professional, be a minister or missionary, full time worker,. 

 All Christians need God’s help to know who they are, and to live with Him, and with their own human intimates in honest, integrity, and vulnerability. 

 4A  Growth in Grace is Protection:  A fourth mistake: to think that growth in grace shields one from strains, pains, and pressures in one’s Christian life.  Christians have no exemptions from these then did Jesus or Paul. As a matter of fact, compassion generates more distress for growing Christians than other human beings ever know.

 5A  Growth in Grace is a Retreat: A fifth mistake is to think that growth in grace may be furthered by retreating from life’s hard places, heavy burdens, and hurtful relationships. Of course it might be a good idea for some good reason why some Christians should choose to live relatively withdrawn lives, but the belief that only so can they grow in grace.

 Christians grow as they accept their destiny of self-denial and cross-bearing. Luke 9:23.

 So when spiritual growth does take place and graces of Christian character, and in intimacy with God is taking place, one may at least expect to see a few signs of it:

 1A  Sign one is growth delight in praising God, with an increasing distaste for being praised oneself. Psalms 115:11

 2A  Sign two is a growing instinct for caring and giving, with a more pronounced dislike of the self-absorption that constantly takes without either caring or giving.  Luke 23:24, 44

 3A  Sign three is a growing passion for personal righteousness, with more acute distress at the godlessness and immorality of the world around, and a keener discernment of Satan’s strategy of opposition, distraction land deception from ensuring that people neither believe nor live right.  2 Corinthians 2:11

 4A  Sign four is a growing zeal for God’s cause, with more willingness to take unpopular action to further it.  Psalms 144:1

 5A  Sign five is a great patience and willingness to wait for God and bow to His will, with a deeper diastase of what masquerades as the bold faith, rather then trying to force God’s hand. Matthew 26;39

 

10 Reminders for Preachers

Here are ten reminders for those who preach and teach the Word of God, as articulated by some of history’s greatest preachers.

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1. Effective ministry consists not of fads or gimicks, but of faithfully preaching the truth.

Charles Spurgeon: Ah, my dear friends, we want nothing in these times for revival in the world but the simple preaching of the gospel. This is the great battering ram that shall dash down the bulwarks of iniquity. This is the great light that shall scatter the darkness. We need not that men should be adopting new schemes and new plans. We are glad of the agencies and assistances which are continually arising; but after all, the true Jerusalem blade, the sword that can cut to the piercing asunder of the joints and marrow, is preaching the Word of God. We must never neglect it, never despise it. The age in which the pulpit it despised, will be an age in which gospel truth will cease to be honored. . . . God forbid that we should begin to depreciate preaching. Let us still honor it; let us look to it as God’s ordained instrumentality, and we shall yet see in the world a repetition of great wonders wrought by the preaching in the name of Jesus Christ.

Source: Charles Spurgeon, “Preaching! Man’s Privilege and God’s Power,” Sermon (Nov. 25, 1860).

2. Preaching is a far more serious task than most preachers realize.

Richard Baxter: And for myself, as I am ashamed of my dull and careless heart, and of my slow and unprofitable course of life, so, the Lord knows, I am ashamed of every sermon I preach; when I think what I have been speaking of, and who sent me, and that men’s salvation or damnation is so much concerned in it, I am ready to tremble lest God should judge me as a slighter of His truths and the souls of men, and lest in the best sermon I should be guilty of their blood. Me thinks we should not speak a word to men in matters of such consequence without tears, or the greatest earnestness that possibly we can; were not we too much guilty of the sin which we reprove, it would be so.

Source: Richard Baxter, “The Need for Personal Revival.” Cited from Historical Collections Relating to Remarkable Periods of the Success of the Gospel, ed. John Gillies (Kelso: John Rutherfurd, 1845), 147.

3. Faithfulness in the pulpit begins with the pursuit of personal holiness.

Robert Murray M’Cheyne: Take heed to thyself. Your own soul is your first and greatest care. You know a sound body alone can work with power; much more a healthy soul. Keep a clear conscience through the blood of the Lamb. Keep up close communion with God. Study likeness to Him in all things. Read the Bible for your own growth first, then for your people. Expound much; it is through the truth that souls are to be sanctified, not through essays upon the truth.

Source: Robert Murray M’Cheyne, letter dated March 22, 1839, to Rev W.C. Burns, who had been named to take M’Cheyne’s pulpit during the latter’s trip to Palestine. Andrew Bonar, ed, Memoir and Remains of Robert Murray M’Cheyne (Banner of Truth, 1966), 273-74.

4. Powerful preaching flows from powerful prayer.

E.M. Bounds: The real sermon is made in the closet. The man – God’s man – is made in the closet. His life and his profoundest convictions were born in his secret communion with God. The burdened and tearful agony of his spirit, his weightiest and sweetest messages were got when alone with God. Prayer makes the man; prayer makes the preacher; prayer makes the pastor. . . . Every preacher who does not make prayer a mighty factor in his own life and ministry is weak as a factor in God’s work and is powerless to project God’s cause in this world.

Source: E.M. Bounds, Power Through Prayer. From chapter 1, “Men of Prayer Needed.”

5. Passionate preaching starts with one’s passion for Christ

Phillip Brooks: Nothing but fire kindles fire. To know in one’s whole nature what it is to live by Christ; to be His, not our own; to be so occupied with gratitude for what He did for us and for what He continually is to us that His will and His glory shall be the sole desires of our life . . . that is the first necessity of the preacher.

Source: Phillips Brooks, Lectures on Preaching, originally published in 1877. Republished in 1989 by Kregel under the title The Joy of Preaching. As cited in “The Priority of Prayer in Preaching” by James Rosscup, The Masters Seminary Journal, Spring 1991.

6. The preacher is a herald, not an innovator.

R.L. Dabney: The preacher is a herald; his work is heralding the King’s message. . . . Now the herald does not invent his message; he merely transmits and explains it. It is not his to criticize its wisdom or fitness; this belongs to his sovereign alone. On the one hand, . . . he is an intelligent medium of communication with the king’s enemies; he has brains as well as a tongue; and he is expected so to deliver and explain his master’s mind, that the other party shall receive not only the mechanical sounds, but the true meaning of the message. On the other hand, it wholly transcends his office to presume to correct the tenor of the propositions he conveys, by either additions or change. . . . The preacher’s business is to take what is given him in the Scriptures, as it is given to him, and to endeavor to imprint it on the souls of men. All else is God’s work.

Source: R.L. Dabney, Evangelical Eloquence: A Course of Lectures on Preaching (Banner of Truth, 1999; originally published as Sacred Rhetoric, 1870), 36-37.

7. The faithful preacher stays focused on what matters.

G. Campbell Morgan: Nothing is more needed among preachers today than that we should have the courage to shake ourselves free from the thousand and one trivialities in which we are asked to waste our time and strength, and resolutely return to the apostolic ideal which made necessary the office of the diaconate. [We must resolve that] “we will continue steadfastly in prayer, and in the ministry of the Word.”

Source: G. Campbell Morgan, This Was His Faith: The Expository Letters of G. Campbell Morgan, edited by Jill Morgan (Fleming Revell, Westwood, NJ), 1952.

8. The preacher’s task is to make the text come alive for his hearers.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones: As preachers we must not forget this. We are not merely imparters of information. We should tell our people to read certain books themselves and get the information there. The business of preaching is to make such knowledge live. The same applies to lecturers in Colleges. The tragedy is that many lecturers simply dictate notes and the wretched students take them down. That is not the business of a lecturer or a professor. The students can read the books for themselves; the business of the professor is to put that on fire, to enthuse, to stimulate, to enliven. And that is the primary business of preaching. Let us take this to heart. … What we need above everything else today is moving, passionate, powerful preaching. It must be ‘warm’ and it must be ‘earnest’.

Source: D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, “Jonathan Edwards and the Crucial Importance of Revival.” Lecture delivered at the Puritan and Westminster Conference (1976).

9. The preacher is to be Christ-exalting, not self-promoting.

R.B. Kuiper: The minister must always remember that the dignity of his office adheres not in his person but in his office itself. He is not at all important, but his office is extremely important. Therefore he should take his work most seriously without taking himself seriously. He should preach the Word in season and out of season in forgetfulness of self. He should ever have an eye single to the glory of Christ, whom he preaches, and count himself out. It should be his constant aim that Christ, whom he represents, may increase while he himself decreases. Remembering that minister means nothing but servant, he should humbly, yet passionately, serve the Lord Christ and His church.

Source: R.B. Kuiper, The Glorious Body of Christ (Banner of Truth, 1966), 140-42.

10. Faithful preaching requires great personal discipline and sacrifice.

Arthur W. Pink: The great work of the pulpit is to press the authoritative claims of the Creator and Judge of all the earth—to show how short we have come of meeting God’s just requirements, to announce His imperative demand of repentance. . . . It requires a “workman” and not a lazy man—a student and not a slothful one—who studies to “show himself approved unto God” (2 Tim. 9:15) and not one who seeks the applause and the shekels of men.

Source: A. W. Pink, “Preaching False and True,” Online Source.

The Preaching/Teaching of the Scriptures

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Irrespective of how incompetent some may think preaching is in our technological, mass media society, regardless of how much more exciting or entertaining or even successful other methods may appear, the most powerful, competent, impelling, impressive and effective way of communicating the gospel of Jesus Christ is still through the method and means God was pleased to choose—preaching

The purpose of the church? To preach/teach the Word of God which transforms lives. “Preach the Word” Paul tells Timothy. And the best way is to teach the Word is to read the Word, explain the Word, apply the Word, this is the responsibility of the preacher/teacher.

 

In His classic work Preaching and Preachers, Martyn Lloyd-Jones wrote,  (kindle fire)

“The most urgent need in the Christian Church today is true preaching; and as it is the greatest and most urgent need in the Church, it is obviously the greatest need in the world also.”Assuredly, Lloyd-Jones did not have drama, entertainment, or pulpit chats in mind when he pressed the need for “true preaching.” In his mind, true preaching was nothing less than the exposition of God’s Word in the power of the Holy Spirit. “What is preaching?” Lloyd-Jones queried:

Logic on fire! Eloquent reason! Are these contradictions? Of course not. Reason concerning this Truth ought to be mightily eloquent, as you see in the case of the Apostle Paul and others. It is theology on fire. And a theology which does not take fire, I maintain, is a defective theology; or at least the man’s understanding of it is defective. Preaching is theology coming through a man who is on fire

Sermon Preparation

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Preaching is an important part of pastoral ministry, but preparation can be stewarded better with the right kind of help. |

What we say in the pulpit has the ability to transform people’s lives, and lead them to be like Jesus.

In 2010 LifeWay Research found that Protestant pastors devote more time to sermon preparation than anything else they do—and that’s good news.

Only 7% dedicate less than 5 hours a week, which is a smaller number than the 9% who dedicate more than 25 hours per week to sermon preparation.
The preaching of God’s Word matters greatly.
That’s a lot of time out of a pastor’s work-week. With 65% of pastors working at least 50 hours a week, that indicates to us that the average pastor is dedicating a significant amount of time in sermon preparation.

You don’t have to wait until the week before to start listening to the Holy Spirit!

God is just as present in your planning and preparation months in advance as He is “in the moment,” and by getting ahead you give Him time to reveal even more inspiration to you as each Sunday’s topic approaches. Plus, you’ll be able to engage more of your creative staff and volunteers to make each Sunday the best it can be, for God’s glory!

 

God has spoken in Scripture. It is the business of all Christians to seek to understand God’s Word and put it into practice. If this is the case for every believer, then it is certainly true for pastors. Their key task is to teach and apply the message of the Bible for the salvation of the lost and the building up of the people of God. Acts 20:17-41.

Preparation for a Sermon and Notes

Charles 12 21 2014 teaching

Preparation for a Sermon: Romans

The responsibility of the pastor/teacher is this:


To bring the truth to the people of God reveled in the Scripture by explaining it meaning. The meaning of the scripture is the revelation from God. I have no other responsibility in my duty to represent the Lord then to explain to you the meaning of His revelation. God has reveled Himself in one book. We are ministers of this one book. In a sense we are brokers of this one book.  We are to simulated these truths to His people. Both to people who do not know the Lord and those who do know the Lord.

 

I always start out trying to understand the passage that I am in.  Of course I started in Romans 1 and continue chapter by chapter and verse by verses.  And the idea is to explain the text as it is in the text

Well, my favorite word, well.  Since I have preached, taught romans since 2009,  we certainly lose a lot of memory.  And we certainly lose memory of chapter 12 as well. In this paper I thought I would review Romans 12:1-8. Then a more detail study of Romans 12:9-21. Romans 12:9 to 21  Has been on the Christian Behavior. My process of this preparation of this study has been to do a lot of research. What I have done  either by the websites, or books, or papers that I have on Romans and have copied and reworked the material.  When I deliver the lesson, I see the notes and material but most of the time I find myself talking and saying what is not necessary on the paper. This paper has taken a lot of time.  As you see I like to do a lot of different things, like outlines, photos, arrangement of words.  Bold letters, and different fonts are used. 

WHERE DOES PRAYER COME IN IN PREPARATION

So how do I pray in preparation for a sermon? Dwight Haynes Its generally asking the Lord to direct my mind to the right material and resources in preparation for the sermon. Since I know where I am going in my preaching. Romans, Luke and First Peter, I have no problem where to start. Since I know the material that I have been studying, I have no problem there either. I think I pray more for strength, stability, steadfastness, Spirit intervention, soul searching, sanctified mind set going into the study. Seeking to understand the scriptures.

Resources from moving from Exegesis to Exposition

1. Homiletic.

2. Exposition.

3. What the text means.

4. Art.

From

1. Personal preparation.

2. Analyze the Text’s Content.

3. Expose the Text’s Structure.

4. Apprehend the Text’s Intent.

5. Identify the Timeless Truth.

Then a few resources in preparation

  1. Bible Versions
  2. Interlinear Bible
  3. Parallel Bible
  4. Commentaries
  5. Concordances
  6. Dictionaries
  7. Encyclopedias
  8. Lexicons History
  9. Sermon Illustrations
  10. Sermon Helps

 

  • Charles library technical at home I used to have over 3000 books while I was in Altoona, Kansas.  When I went to the Shepherd Conference in 1982, 1990 and 1993 I learned that I need to have expositional books.  So I left most of my books in Altoona, at First Baptist Church, and started to get books that I need for study. 

Since the beginning of teaching book by book, I began to buy books that would help me in the process of teaching.  Of course 1982 to 1996 I didn’t have a internet so I was never on the computer.  In those early days, I used tapes that I bought from John MacArthur. and books.

Charles library technical at home

I have sets of books that I have used over the years. I  have not bought any sets since I was at FBC in Altoona KS. 

I started getting the John MacArthur’s commentaries.

Then in 2013-2014 bought one book at a time of D.M. Lloyd-Jones books on Romans

Then when I got my Kindle Fire I started getting books from Amazon.  That has been good to do too. 

Charles library of Lloyd Jones

Charles library study notes 12 13 14

Just How Well Do We Know How To Prepare a Sermon

THE PRACTICE OF HOMILETICS.

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  1. Homiletics (Gr. homiletikos, from homilos, to assemble together), in theology, is the application of the general principles of rhetoric to the specific department of public preaching. The one who practices or studies homiletics is called a homilist.
  2. homiletics comprises the study of the composition and delivery of a sermon or other religious discourse. It includes all forms of preaching, viz., the sermon,
  3. It may be further defined as the study of the analysis, classification, preparation, composition and delivery of sermons.

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Preaching requires an understanding of oratory: Augustine explains his homiletics in Book IV of DDC. He describes it practically in relation to the classical theory of oratory, which has five parts:

  1. The choice of the subject and decisions of the order (inventio)
  2. The structure of the oration: (dispositio)
  3. The arrangement of words and figure of speech elocutio)
  4. Learning by heart (memoria)
  5. The delivery (pronuntiatio)

He constructed this theory in four parts:

  1. the basic principles of rhetoric
  2. a study on the rhetoric of Scriptural texts
  3. n analysis of styles and
  4. some peculiar rules of rhetoric for sermons ).

Three styles of sermons

  1. (genera tenue / docere [to teach];
  2. genera medium / delectare [to amuse];
  3. genera grande / flectere [to ersuade]),

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homiletics

Augustine stresses the importance of principle and discipline at the same time.

  1. Preachers need to practice again and again so that they can use these styles in any situation of preaching .
  2. But they should pay attention to the priority of order.
  3. Continuous and diligent study of the Bible is more important than mere memorization, that is to say, they should pursue wisdom more than knowledge
  4. The best is the combination of wisdom and eloquence as seen in the Pauline letters and prophetic writings
  5. Yet, he does not praise eloquence itself; rather he prefers a concrete proclamation than a showing off of rhetorical technique

 

  1. It is truth, not rhetoric, that preachers try to deliver

What is Rhetoric

  1. A body of rules which serve in order to produce texts ‘according to the rules of art’ (either written or spoken)

Purpose of Rhetoric
The purpose of rhetoric is to

  1. persuade:
  2. intellectually (docere) and
  3. emotionally (delectare, movere).

 

  1. DOCERE: using LOGOS (appeal to reason)
  2. DELECTARE: using ETHOS (appeal to character)
  3. MOVERE: using PATHOS (appeal to emotion)

Structure
A speech, according to the classical pattern, has four parts:

1.EXORDIUM (prooimion, introduction, Einleitung)
2.NARRATIO (diegesis , narration, Erzählung)
3.ARGUMENTATIO (pistis, argument, Beweis)
4.PERORATIO (epilogos, conclusion, Schluß)

 

 

Luke 5:17-26 Noted

Studied Luke 5:17-26 yield some good thoughts. The Pharisee had some good theology about God and forgiveness and the need to be forgiven by God. They just didn’t believe Jesus was God. I learned from this sermon that

(1) Forgiveness is necessary

(2) Only God has the authority to forgive, not man, priest, pope or preacher

(3) All people are sinners, and all are under the wrath of God

(4) God forbids anybody to declare a sinful person righteous

(5) The message of Christianity is this: God forgives sinners

(6) Learned at 75% of evangelicals believe that man is generally good and they convince them they are.

(7) Jesus had the power to bring a soul out of darkness and bring that soul into the Kingdom of God

(8) Jesus knowledge of the human hearts was amazing

(9) Perception word study

(10) Jesus was about forgiven sin, rather than healing the man

(11) Faith that brings about forgiveness

(12) Jesus read the heart of the man who knew he was a sinner

(13) People in the Old Testament was saved knowing they needed to be forgiven

(14) What is necessary for a man to believe about Jesus to believe.

(15) Word study of a lot of words in the periscope.

In the study for this message I discovered so much more than I could ever thought I could.

While I have many of the technical books necessary to gleam from, what is so great is that these same books that I spend $100’s to buy are now on websites for free.

For example books that I have  in my library that are on websites

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Well these are three ring binders that have so much research material that I have done over the years since 2003.

Charles book at home 2014

My technical bible books

  1.   Vine’s  Expository Dictionary of N.T. Words
  2.    Strong’s Greek Dictionary
  3. The Pulpit Commentary set (24 columns)
  4. Commentaries by Pink, MacArthur, Spurgeon, Gill, Barnes, Ironside, Lloyd-Jones  etc
  5. Zondervan Pictorial
  6. The Treasury of Scriptural Knowledge
  7. I have a number of books on  Christian Theology, Systemic Theology, Doctrinal Theology, Christian Theology, Dictionary of Evangelical Theology
  8. Concordances
  9. Greek Lexicons
  10. Greek Bible

Just to name a few:  But there are so many good sites that one can go and get a good resources about preaching and teaching and knowing the Bible.

 

 

 

Preaching and the Congregration Hearing #700 Post

image.pngI am afraid that people in our pews do not quite understand that they are in the service to hear the word of God preached or taught by the preacher who has been given the word of God to preach.

Martin Luther put it this way:

“Thus when you hear a sermon by St. Paul or by me, you hear God the Father Himself. And yet you do not become my pupil but the Father’s, for it is not I who is speaking; it is the Father. Nor am I your schoolmaster; but we both, you and I, have one Schoolmaster and Teacher, the Father, who instructs us. We both, pastor and listener, are only pupils; there is only this difference, that God is speaking to you through me. That is the glorious power of the divine Word, through which God Himself deals with us and speaks to us, and in which we hear God Himself.” [1]

In this light, perhaps the most clarifying way to understand the preacher’s task is to consider its most quintessential act — the opening of the mouth.

Look with me to the Book of Acts, 10:30-43:  Really take time to look at this verse

Notice carefully that Peter is told that Cornelius was directed by an angel to hear what Peter has to say. When Peter arrives, Cornelius declares to his entire household: “Now therefore we are all here in the presence of God to hear all that you have been commanded by the Lord” [Acts 10:33].

This is one of the most powerful teachings in Scripture about the proper disposition of a congregation. This congregation may have been relatively small, but it was ready to hear a word from the Lord, delivered through God’s preacher.

Just imagine if every congregation awaited every sermon with such an announcement: “Now therefore we are all here in the presence of God to hear all that you have been commanded by the Lord.”

Imagine the expectation that statement reflects; the faithful eagerness that statement projects. They were gathered to hear and to receive and to believe all that God would command his preacher to say.