Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Course 10 Week 4 Main Comments

Please place your comments for week 4 in the section below.

13 comments:

Dr. Randy Carney said...

I did it again, didn't I? Here is the place for you new comments.

I am copying the ones you have already made.

roger said...
Bro. Randy, I cannot comment on any other way to Heaven other than the way of Christ, all I know is Jesus is the way, truth and life, no one comes to the Father, but through me, those are the words of Jesus.

November 17, 2009 7:05 AM

Tyler Owens said...
The title of my book is THE ART AND CRAFT OF BIBLICAL PREACHING. The editors are Haddon Robinson and Craig Brian Larson. I will be reading twenty chapters this week.

85.Grace: A License to Wander?
86. The Rich Sound of Grace and Holiness
87.Set Free From the Cookie Cutter
88.Say and Do
89.Connecting Biblical Content with Contemporary Audiences
90.Clearly
91.Skills of Oral Clarity
92.Questions That Put Muscle on Bones
93.Better Big Ideas
94.The Power of Sequence
95.Outlines That Work for You, Not Against You
96.The Tension Between Clarity and Suspense
97.Lifeblood of Preaching
98.Alliteration Downfalls
99.Modulating Tension
100.The Purpose-Driven Title
101.Why Should I Listen to You?
102.Satisfying Conclusions
103.Determining Your Srengths and Weaknesses
104.Interesting Preaching
105.Crafting an Experience

November 17, 2009 5:54 PM

Tyler Owens said...
Chapter eighty-six is about integrating grace and truth. We have to preach both to balance the message. We cannot be lost in the idea that grace gives us the right to do whatever we want. We must preach grace and truth for three reasons. The preacher depends on it, the message depends on it, and the listener depends on it.

November 17, 2009 5:58 PM

Tyler Owens said...
Chapter ninety-one is about preaching clearly. We have to make "paragraphs" in order to tell people that we are on a new thought. It is alright to repeat yourself more than once. We can use key phrases throughout the sermon. We can also ask rhetorical questions when we are transitioning. Finally, we need to use physical movement to keep the listener's attention.

November 17, 2009 6:02 PM

roger said...

This week I am reading chapters:
8. The Gospel of Luke
9. The Gospel of John

roger said...

In the Gospel of Luke, the survey is considering the historical setting and circumstances of the listeners. Some theologians think that Luke was writing to a higher class of people.

roger said...

Hey Tyler, when your study speaks of physical movement is there a guideline to establish or do you just move as the spirit leads?

roger said...

An interesting point made in chapter 8 is the fact that Luke, author of the Gospel of Luke, was the only gospel writer to use the word "Savior".

roger said...

In Craig Blomberg's book: "Jesus and the Gospels, chapter nine is a survey of the Gospel of John. Theologians and Bible Scholars alike are struck by the fact that John's Gospel is so different than the other Gospels, such as style, the use of language, and the fact that the accounts of John's Gospel differ from that of Matthew, Mark and Luke.

Tyler Owens said...

I think that it is about movement in both ways. We need to move the way the Spirit wants us to. We also need to show some movement to help drive the point. I think the author is talking more about hand gestures than anything else.

Tyler Owens said...

I really like the Gospel of John. This is the book that I recommend to new Christians to read first. It is easier to understand and it also give the reader a strong foundation in the fact that Jesus is God.

Tyler Owens said...

The Gospel of Luke is, what I have heard preachers call, a good preaching book. It seems to be focused more on parables. Bro. Roger, is there anywhere in your book that talks about the themes of each Gospel?

Tyler Owens said...

Chapter ninety-three is called Better Big Ideas. It is about five qualities of the strongest preaching ideas. They are as follows, first it has to be narrow enough to be sharp. Secondly, it has to have an expanding force. Third, is that it has to be true. Fourth, the idea has to grow out of the realities of life. Finally, it has to be true to God's Word.

roger said...

Yes Tyler, each chapter so far has had a section discussing the themes of each Gospel. Seems the main theme in Luke is the humanity of Jesus, and quite a few others that are hard for me to see applying to the theme.

roger said...

In the theology of the book of John, it is noted that John is the only gospel writer that used the terms, Logos defined as the word, and The Lamb of God, identifying Jesus as the sacrifice.

roger said...

In the authorship of the Gospel of John, some commentators argue that a study of the text, the use of language, and the historical setting, that is possible that the writer of the book may not have been the Apostle John, but in fact could have been Lazerus, Thomas or some other follower of Jesus. Nevertheless in my opinion the writer is the Apostle John anyone else just not have known the details and inner circle conversations .