Chapter 99. Modulating Tension Chapter 100. The Purpose Driven Title. Chapter 101. Why Should I Listen to You? Chapter 102. Satisfying Conclusions Chapter 103. Determining Your Strengths and Weaknesses Chapter 104. Interesting Preaching Chapter 105. Crafting an Experience Chapter 106. Seven Habits of of Highly Effective Preachers Chapter 107. The Sermon's Mood Chapter 108. Teaching the Whole Bible Chapter 109. Dramatic Expository Preaching Chapter 110. Verse by Verse Sermons that Really Preach Chapter 111. What Makes Textual Preaching Unique. Chapter 112. Can Topical Preaching Also Be Expository? Chapter 113. The Biblical Topical Sermon Chapter 114. Topical Preaching on Bible Characters
In chapter 99, Craig Brian Larson titles the chapter; "Modulating Tension". He then ask how to maintain the interest throughout the sermon. Tension can be recognized with a problem and then lost with the solution. So how do we keep tention in the sermon? He states that if we describe a problem and keep adding to that problem and still add to that problem and follow the same pattern to the solution, it will maintain tension all through the sermon.
Determining Your Strengths and Weaknesses is the title to chapter 103, the writer suggest a scale to determine your abilities as to what kind of a preacher you are. On a grid numbered from 0-10 you are to rate yourself in four categories, or TEMP scale. The first category, (teaching), the second, (exhortation), third, (mercy), and the fourth, (prophecy). Determining your strengths and weaknesses will center up your preaching. AMEN
Chapter 104 is titled: "Interesting Preaching", How to avoid talking in someone else's sleep. Stuart Briscoe tells of three ways to keep preaching interesting, one way is to preach to the mind. Another way is preaching to the will, and lastly preaching to the emotions.
Crafting an Experience, that is the title to chapter 105. Rob Bell doesn't want you to sit and listen to a sermon, he wants you to live it. He speaks of engaging listeners to the sermon. He is always thinking of something to connect listner to sermon in more ways than one. Like he will give the audience a handout, or a stone or maybe a piece of clay, anything visual, or touchable that will connect the listener to the sermon. This will also connect the listner in more than one deminsion, bringing different levels of understanding. Well Amen to that.
Seven Habits of Highly Effective Preachers is the title to chapter 106, and it is subtitled, How to speak so listeners can't forget. Craig Brian Larson writes that there are seven ways to hold the listeners attention. First is the use of comparison, then there is constrast, paralleism, repetition and refrain, hyperbole and understatement, alliteration, and periphrasis. Not only does it keep their attention but they also remember what was said. AMEN!!!!
In chapter 114,"Topical Preaching on Bible Characters". Selecting a Bible character for your sermon will take some study, is your character completly relative to the story line. Does your character supply a need, a problem, or anything that would apply to the sermon an application of the main point that your sermon is preaching on. Be careful when selecting your character.
You will notice some posts below that relate to various topics of discussion by our online community of preachers.
One of the purposes of Preachers' Meeting is to provide a place for young ministers or those recently called to preach to interact around the principles in a course of study recommended by our local group of preachers in the Southern Illinois area.
We invite you to look in on our conversations. If you would like to add comments as a guest, you are welcome to do so. If this looks interesting to you, you may join us as we start a new session. You can look in the side bar (or sometimes it is moved to right below this post) to see the weekly requirements. We start new courses every 8 or 9 weeks. As already mentioned, you are welcome to comment as a guest before that time.
Below these posts, you will see the word, "comments." Just click on it, and you will see a box on the right side of the screen where you may add your comments.
Look around. Enjoy yourself, and come back often!
Weekly Requirements
Here is a review of the general requirements for each week.
You have three assignments each week
(1) Make at least two initial posts in your posting area. The first one will be the name of the course, and the names (or numbers of the DVD's) of the chapters or lectures you will be covering during the week. The second one will be a comment on one of those chapters. You will receive one point for getting the first post in on Tuesday or Wednesday. You will also get a point for getting at least one more initial post in.
(2) Go to your fellow student's posting areas, and ask them a question or make comments about their intial posts. You will recieve one point for completing this assignment before 12:00 a.m. on Friday morning (that would be before midnight on Thursday).
(3) Answer the questions asked.
(4) On Fridays, I will also give directions for making remaining posts during the week. Be sure and read those, and take them into account when making at least one of your remaining posts.
In all, we want to make at least nine posts during the week. You will receive points for that as follows:
9 or more posts - 12 points
6-8 posts - 10 points
3-5 posts - 6 points
1-2 posts - 3 points
You will have the extra points you had accumulated by getting things in on time. Those are bonus points that will be used only to move your grade closer to 100 if you need them. They will be awarded each week if needed to move your grade up to 12 for the week. If you do not need them for that week, they will be carried over to the next week(s). Remember the posts that count for points will be at least three sentences long.
Thoughts on Application
Roger gave some good thoughts on application:
"Chapter 75, titled: 'Apply Within' is a lesson in application. The writer explains why it is sometimes difficult applying a sermon to real life situations. I will list some of the reasons application is not applied to our lives.
"First it is "hard work", it is hard to find application to every situation in the congregation,
"second, is wrong assumptions, assuming the audience is able to apply any and all biblical truths is totally a wrong assumption,
"third, is fear, fear of being to deep or to simplistic in the text and failing at application, and then there is training or lack thereof,
"many preachers know the text, and the history and the order of things but are totally untrained in application. One gentleman said it this way," how can you be a good football player when you can pass the ball, or when you can kick the ball, or when you can run with the ball but you don't know the rules of the game."
If you live in the souther Illinois area, we would like to invite you to a Couples' Marriage Enrichment Seminar on Saturday, February 27. It starts at 6:00 p.m and will run to 9:00 p.m.
After the welcome, there will be a dinner. Then there will be an opening session, followed by two breakout sessions, then a short closing.
The Keynote Speaker is Dr. Randy Carney (That's me :)!) and Roger and Janet Dutton will be speaking during the breakout sessions (That's Roger, who is commenting on this blog during this term!). Randy and Rhonda (my wife!) Carney will also have a breakout session discussing "Keys to Marital Bliss."
The Keynote Address will be on the topic of "The Way to a Successful Marriage: The Shocking and Surprising Truth."
Roger and Janet will be talking about "Hope for Restoring your marriage."
The cost is $15.00 per couple and that includes a dinner and all seminar materials. A nursery and childcare will be available. (Please indicate that you need these services when you register.) A book table with resources from Handfuls on Purpose Christian Bookstore will be available.
The seminar is for couples of all ages, ranging from newlyweds to marriage veterans!
To register, call 618-627-2228 to let the church know how may will be attending. Payment can be made at the event. (Make checks to TFBC.) For more information, call the church at 618-627-2228.
The Greatest Love
Since Valentine's Day falls on Sunday this year, I imagine there will be a ton of sermons going out on the topic of love.
Paul talked about love and respect in marriage (Ephesians 5), but he was really saying that that was an illustration of the relationship between Christ and the church.
Christ
Left Heaven to come to this earth.
He
Overcame adversity while here. He even conquered death!
He
Valued mankind so much that He gave Himself on the cross.
He desires fellowship with us. He reconciled the world to Himself, so that people could have an
Intimate realtionship with Him.
He meets all of our
Needs.
He is the supreme example of
Giving.
Do you see the word, LOVING, there? That is what He is--our LOVING Savior! Because of that, we should love one another.
Course 11 Week 4
Scroll down to the week 4 area to begin commenting.
Dealing with the Closed American Mind
One of the chapters Roger is reading is entitled, (something like) "Dealing with the Closed American Mind." I don't know if it is mentioned in the chapter, but I suspect that if you tak about something where a person has a felt need, you can gain their hearing somewhat.
What are your thoughts?
You may scroll down and comment in the week 3 comments area. Visitors are welcome to comment also.
Connecting with Postmoderns
This is something most preachers do every Sunday. If you have young unchurched visitors in your church, you will be trying to reach postmoderns. Even some of your church youth are more influenced by postmodernism than by their previous Sunday school teaching.
Here is my reply to one of Roger's posts:
"Roger, what tips stand out to you for commecting with postmoderns? I think the term modern referred to an age in history that related to new thoughts in science, etc. (If I am off base, refresh my memory.) Post modern refers to the time following that era. Connecting with postmoderns is something you have to do, whether you realize it or not, almost every time you preach."
I will post some of his answers here if he sees the question in time.
Preaching--Proclamation of God's Word
Preaching, by one definition, is the proclamation of God's Word. As such, a person, can take the Scriptural passage and find some of its main points and emphasize those points.
While I believe we should learn all we can about the grammatical construction of the words of Scripture, and that we should learn all we can about the historical setting for when those words were originally spoken; the nice thing about proclaiming the Word is that you can just take what the text says and emphasize it. Then the Word will not return void.
People with all different types of backgrounds have been called to preach throughout the centuries. Some very "unlearned" (as the world would put it) men have had great results by simply taking the main ideas of Scripture and simply emphasizing them. As long as we do not twist the meaning, this simply shows the amazing power of the Word of God.
New Format
I am going to try putting my comments for each day in this left sidebar. The comments areas for the remaining weeks are displayed to the right. That is where you will place your comments for each week.
8 comments:
This week I'll be reading chapters 99-114, in the book "The art and Craft of Biblical Preaching" by Haddon Robinson and Craig Brian Larson.
Chapter 99. Modulating Tension
Chapter 100. The Purpose Driven Title.
Chapter 101. Why Should I Listen to You?
Chapter 102. Satisfying Conclusions
Chapter 103. Determining Your Strengths and Weaknesses
Chapter 104. Interesting Preaching
Chapter 105. Crafting an Experience
Chapter 106. Seven Habits of of Highly Effective Preachers
Chapter 107. The Sermon's Mood
Chapter 108. Teaching the Whole Bible
Chapter 109. Dramatic Expository Preaching
Chapter 110. Verse by Verse Sermons that Really Preach
Chapter 111. What Makes Textual Preaching Unique.
Chapter 112. Can Topical Preaching Also Be Expository?
Chapter 113. The Biblical Topical Sermon
Chapter 114. Topical Preaching on Bible Characters
In chapter 99, Craig Brian Larson titles the chapter; "Modulating Tension". He then ask how to maintain the interest throughout the sermon. Tension can be recognized with a problem and then lost with the solution. So how do we keep tention in the sermon? He states that if we describe a problem and keep adding to that problem and still add to that problem and follow the same pattern to the solution, it will maintain tension all through the sermon.
Determining Your Strengths and Weaknesses is the title to chapter 103, the writer suggest a scale to determine your abilities as to what kind of a preacher you are. On a grid numbered from 0-10 you are to rate yourself in four categories, or TEMP scale. The first category, (teaching), the second, (exhortation), third, (mercy), and the fourth, (prophecy). Determining your strengths and weaknesses will center up your preaching. AMEN
Chapter 104 is titled: "Interesting Preaching", How to avoid talking in someone else's sleep. Stuart Briscoe tells of three ways to keep preaching interesting, one way is to preach to the mind. Another way is preaching to the will, and lastly preaching to the emotions.
Crafting an Experience, that is the title to chapter 105. Rob Bell doesn't want you to sit and listen to a sermon, he wants you to live it. He speaks of engaging listeners to the sermon. He is always thinking of something to connect listner to sermon in more ways than one. Like he will give the audience a handout, or a stone or maybe a piece of clay, anything visual, or touchable that will connect the listener to the sermon. This will also connect the listner in more than one deminsion, bringing different levels of understanding. Well Amen to that.
Seven Habits of Highly Effective Preachers is the title to chapter 106, and it is subtitled, How to speak so listeners can't forget. Craig Brian Larson writes that there are seven ways to hold the listeners attention. First is the use of comparison, then there is constrast, paralleism, repetition and refrain, hyperbole and understatement, alliteration, and periphrasis. Not only does it keep their attention but they also remember what was said. AMEN!!!!
In chapter 114,"Topical Preaching on Bible Characters". Selecting a Bible character for your sermon will take some study, is your character completly relative to the story line. Does your character supply a need, a problem, or anything that would apply to the sermon an application of the main point that your sermon is preaching on. Be careful when selecting your character.
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