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Jump Start # 1574

Jump Start # 1574

2 Timothy 4:2 “Preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction.”

  We continue our series on preachers and preaching. One of the most asked questions of preachers is “Where do you get your ideas for sermons?” That is one of the challenges of preaching.

 

Here is what it looks from the preacher’s side of the pulpit. He has worked hard all week on a sermon. It takes time to get this thoughts on paper, research things, look up words, find good illustrations and chase the rabbits that come from his study. As he is writing his sermon, he realizes that some in the audience may have heard that topic preached a hundred times. He must find a way to make it challenging and interesting to them. At the same time, there may be some in the audience who have never heard this before. He must carefully explain things and not take things for granted. There is a huge balance in presenting his idea. The preacher realizes that his sermon must be more than just handing out facts. This is not a college lecture. He is moving the audience, or persuading the audience, to obedience in Christ. So in all of this, there must be applications and things easy for people to see what they are supposed to do. If he is too generic, the lesson may not do any good. If his application is too narrow, then many will not see that it fits them.

 

Our passage today says, “Preach the word.” That’s the theme of every sermon. The preacher is not promoting himself. He is not pushing his own agenda. He is not to use the pulpit to get back at people. This is not about him. It’s about the word of God. He is showing people God’s word and as Nehemiah 8 says, explaining it and making sense of it.

 

So where do the ideas come from? The good preacher is busy reading. He’s reading God’s word often. He’s reading other books. He is listening to what folks are talking about. He has a pulse on what is going on in the congregation and the neighborhood. When there has been some deaths, he may talk about death, life after death or resurrections. He will address moral topics. He will talk about things that teens need to know. He will talk about doctrinal matters. He’ll preach what was taught in the N.T. The preacher is always thinking. This is one of the down sides to preaching. He rarely turns his mind off. This is hard to explain and this is hard to cope with.

 

It’s a Sunday and the preacher has worked hard to present some lessons that he feels will help the congregation. He knows that one sermon doesn’t solve all problems. But he’s building bridges. He’s adding to faith. He’s trying to equip the brethren. And borrowing an expression from baseball, the preacher hits it out of the park. He delivers a great sermon. It helps a lot of people. It is loved. People take CD’s of that sermon to listen to it again and to pass along to others. Sunday ends and the preacher is tired. It’s been a long day. He’s taught classes, preached a couple of sermons and engaged in a lot of conversations. He is drained. He goes home and goes to bed. Monday comes and the whole process starts over. He must find a new idea and do all the things he did before.

 

Those that fill in for time to time realize how hard it is to come up with an idea. The preacher must do this every week. Not only that, most are writing bulletin articles and blogs. Then most are teaching two classes a week that demands time to study and research. Then there are the many private studies the preacher has. Some are face to face. Others take place through emails, texting and other forms. People ask him questions. He wants to answer them. Some need material and he must find it for them. For the young preacher this is hard. The demands of a young family pull him. His work isn’t something that can just be flipped on and off. If he is tired, stressed it is hard to get the mental thoughts going.

 

Even when the preacher takes a vacation, he doesn’t really get away from this. While his family sleeps in a hotel, he is up thinking and writing. When he gets home from his vacation, he must be ready to teach and preach. Often, before he leaves on a trip, he is writing bulletin articles in advance and preparing class material for those who will fill in.

 

And then there is the occasional bozo who loudly boasts, “I’d love to have your job. You only work one day a week.” The preacher smiles and musters every ounce of strength he can to keep from popping that guy in the nose. Statements like that come from those who are clueless, rude and out of touch.

 

Preaching is a different kind of work than those who work with their hands. Mentally it is exhausting. Most preachers would love to have six weeks to work on one sermon. They don’t. They must find the time to come out with two new sermons every week.  The preacher today must like to read. He must be self driven. He must balance his time between studying and visiting people. Too much of either one and his work suffers.

 

Some preachers, myself included, like to preach a series of lessons. This affords us the time to really develop ideas and it helps us by knowing what we are going to preach next. “Do you ever run out of ideas?” The honest preacher will admit, “Yes.” If the preacher isn’t in the mood or interested in preaching a topic, it will be hard to make it interesting to the audience. He must have a passion about what he wants to preach. There are times the ideas run out. Some weeks, there have been so many other things going on that the preacher hasn’t had the time to develop a sermon. Sunday comes, whether the preacher is ready or not. Wanting to present the best lesson that he can, adds to the burden the preacher goes through.

 

Why are you saying all of these things, Roger? Because, “preach the word,” seems like such a simple idea. Just open your Bible and preach. Open it where? What is most needed? Make it interesting. Make it challenging. Make it practical. Make it textual. What have they already had? What do they need? These are the thoughts that run through the preacher’s mind. They run through his mind every week.

 

Why then do you do this? Because we love the Lord. Because we feel that God has blessed us with a talent and we want to glorify Him with that. Because we love you and we want to help you get to Heaven. There are ways that preachers find mental breaks. Some go to movies. Some golf. Most have hobbies. It’s during these times that the preacher is taking a little break, but deep in the mind, thoughts, deadlines, and ideas are still spinning round and round.

 

Where do you get ideas? Everywhere. I’ve been told that some have even used our Jump Starts for ideas for sermons. That puts a smile on my face. I’m glad to help out. I hope you can see from your side of the pulpit what takes place on the other side of the pulpit. The finished product, much like a cake, the restoration of an old car, the remolding of a house, involved a lot of effort. The finished product is amazing. It doesn’t just happen.

 

If you haven’t thanked your preacher in a while, do so. He puts hours and hours into trying to present something that will help you. And once he is done, it starts all over again, the next day. God bless the good men who are preaching their hearts out. They often go home Sunday evening tired, empty, drained and even sad because they tried their best to get someone to come to Christ. They tried their best to get you to be more like Jesus. And some days, many days, it seems like nothing changed. It seems like their words fell flat. And that eats them up on the inside. Back to the drawing board. Another idea. Another attempt. Another sermon. They are trying to shape us to be like Jesus. Bless each of their hearts.

 

Roger

 

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Jump Start # 336

Jump Start # 336

2 Tim 4:2 “Preach the word; be ready in season and out of season, reprove, rebuke, exhort, with great patience and instruction.”

  Today we look at Paul’s words to the young preacher Timothy. The books of 1 & 2 Timothy are instructions written concerning preachers. Now, since most of our readers are not preachers, it might be easy to dismiss these thoughts as something that most of us will never need. But don’t do that. There are wonderful lessons in all of God’s word. Sometimes it takes a little digging and a bit of work, but usually there is something there for everyone. That’s just the way the Bible is. I suppose that’s why it’s living and active as the book of Hebrews tells us.

  Preachers are to preach the word. The expression, “The word” implies and means the word of God—not the word of the preacher. To preach it, a person has to know it. This tells us much about the business of preaching. First, a person has to like to read. The preacher has to spend time with his nose in the book—and not just any book, but THE BOOK. It  shows when he has done this, and it shows when he hasn’t. You can tell.

  Preaching is just an interesting thing. I’ve been doing it for most of my adult life and I’ve come to learn a few things about this thing called preaching. Preaching is communicating. It’s taking the story of Jesus and making it real. I don’t have much tolerance for many preachers today, because they’ve become showmen and not preachers. Their sermons are an event and not a discourse in the word of God. Good preaching doesn’t have to be long, dry and painful. Not at all. Preaching ought to grab our attention. Most folks only see the finished product on Sunday morning—the sermon. I can tell you, it’s not as easy as it looks. What happens on Sunday morning is the easiest part of preaching. What happens before that determines what kind of sermon it’s going to be. The idea…the research…the thought process…the right words…the right illustrations…the organization…knowing how to say something in kindness and love. Preaching is more than giving a speech, it’s persuading people, as Paul told the Corinthians. It’s connecting with hearts and getting those hearts connected to God. Preaching is showing the goodness of God and convincing folks that they need to journey with God. Preaching is hard work, but I’m convinced more than that, there is a talent that is a gift from God.

  Our verse tells us that the preacher is to be ready in season and out of season. We know that expression. There are certain foods that are in season, that is, they can be found in gardens and local produce stands. Then there are the out of season stuff. Here in the north, most produce stands are boarded up in January. Nothing is in season. Paul is telling Timothy to preach the word—when folks want to hear it and when folks don’t want to hear it. What Paul did was bring the audience into the realm of preaching. There are times, there are lessons, that some folks are just not eager to hear. Often it is a lesson that will “step on toes.” The out of season sermons make us squirm in the pew. It causes guilt and often anger. Instead of being mad at ourselves, we get mad at the preacher for preaching those kind of sermons. Out of season does not mean rude, offensive or crude. It is not the place to be unkind, off color, or mean. The reason the sermons are out of season is not because of the way they were delivered, but because of the heart of the audience. They simply did not want to hear that.

  In season sermons are the easiest to preach. Folks love them. But it’s the out of season lessons that often do the most good. Those are hard to preach. Sometimes we blister the preacher when all he has done was do what God wanted him to.

  I’ve also found through the years that preaching a sermon is a whole lot easier than living a sermon. But that is what the preacher is expecting and wanting the audience to do, so he ought to lead the way himself and be practicing what he is preaching.

  It is the preached word that will save our souls. It’s the preached word that encourages us, especially when we are down. It’s the preached word that drives fear away and builds faith. Getting people to the word is the job of the preacher.

  Much of what is going on these days is anything but preaching the word. Too many are trying to build a church, run an organization, keep the people happy and entertained, rather than spending time in the word. It would do well if every preacher just remembered what he was supposed to do, what God wants him to do. The more of us that got back to the word of God and started doing things the way He wants, the fewer the problems we’d have.

  Thanks for letting this preacher share some words with you about preaching. I am amazed that God would take the perfect message about His perfect Son and allow imperfect people like me to preach it. I’m not sure why He does that, but I’m glad He does.

  Preach the word—that’s what preachers need to hear!

Roger