Profound preparation
The preparation of a sermon will be a privilege, an opportunity for God to mark your life profoundly.
22 FEBRUARY 2024 · 11:50 CET
While most would acknowledge that preaching should neither be dense nor inaccessible, this does not mean that shallowness and dumbing down are the order of the day.
Profound preaching must surely start with profound preparation. Four suggestions to get a week-long list going:
1. Begin with humble recognition that you yourself need to be changed by God
It is too easy to think of preaching preparation as being about you the preacher pursuing a message to preach to them, the needy recipients. At this point in the process you stand very much in their shoes, needing to hear from God.
You need to encounter His heart in His Word. You need to be marked deeply and changed by a God who communicates, who cares, who challenges and who changes.
It makes no sense to have profound faith for the sake of others, but not an openness and humility in yourself. The preparation of a sermon will be a privilege, an opportunity for God to mark your life profoundly.
2. Study the passage to know God, not just the facts
It is easy to treat Bible study as a pursuit of non-trivial trivia. Don’t. Study the passage in order to know God better.
What is His self-revelation saying of Him? How are the characters responding to Him? Wherever you are in the canon, the passage is theocentric, so make sure that your heart is too.
3. Don’t mix your message preparation with your Bible study
As a preacher who cares about the congregation, or as a preacher desperate to be ready on time, it is tempting to blend passage study with message formation. Keep the stages separate.
You have the privilege of doing some in-depth Bible study, take advantage of that!
You may not be able to help thinking of who you will be preaching to, but try to keep those thoughts until you’ve really gotten to grips with the passage (or better, until God has gotten to grips with you through the passage).
4. Saturate your preparation in prayer
This should go without saying, but it can’t, so it won’t. The entire preparation process should be absolutely pickled in prayer.
Prayer in passage study, prayer in personal response, prayer in “audience analysis,” prayer in message formation, prayer for delivery, prayer for life change, prayer for immediate impact, prayer for long-term fruit, etc.
Peter Mead is mentor at Cor Deo and author of several books. He blogs at Biblical Preaching
Published in: Evangelical Focus - Biblical Preaching - Profound preparation