Friday, July 16, 2010

Course 12 Week 3 Main Comments Area

You can use the comments area below to finish up week 3. I did not think anyone was posting. Roger, sorry I did not see all of your posts until this morning.

7 comments:

roger said...

In the book :"The Art and Craft of Biblical Preaching" written by Haddon Robinson and Craig Brian Larson, I will be reading chapters 135-144 this week, and they are titled:
Chapter 135. Suspense
Chapter 136. How to Preach Like John Grisham Writes.
Chapter 137. Good Tension
Chapter 138. Illustrating From Pop Culture
Chapter 139. Adapting Illustrations So They Fit You
Chapter 140. Overexposure
Chapter 141. Illustrating with Integrity and Sensitivity
Chapter 142. Footnotes in the Pulpit
Chapter 143. Avoiding Self-centered Sermons
Chapter 144.Illustrating wiyh Slices of Life.

roger said...

In chapter 135, Suspense, it is written by Dave McClellan, talks about building suspense in your sermon. One of the best ways to build that suspense is to create mystery, that is done by withholding details until a specific time in the sermon. Don't say too much too soon! Jesus was very effective in doing this: John 16:16 " yet a little while you see me no more and in a little while you will see me", and the disciples questioned "what does he mean a little while". Suspense it is a great tool!

roger said...

Chapter 137 Titled: Good Tension is written by John Ortberg, and he teaches that tension in a sermon is another excellent tool. Tension is not to be confused with suspense because tension builds energy into your sermon.Speak tension building statements and you can hold your audiences attention to the end.

roger said...

Richard Exley writes in chapter 140 titled:" Overexposure", about the transperency of preaching and the risks you take by doing it. Personal experiences are a great way to connect with your audience, but be careful and make sure you only share what has been dealt with and that you have repented for. Display your experience in such a way that your audience's attention is not on your experience alone, but that they see and understand that the only way that you can share it and learn from it is the grace you have recieved through it. That grace comes from Jesus and him alone. Relate your struggles in such a way that they become your audiences struggles, real transperency!

roger said...

Chapter 143, "Avoiding Self-Centered Sermons". Craig Brian Larson writes that illustrating your life experiences in your sermons can become lame and boring. You should limit your experiences and when using them make sure that they fit in your sermon to make the point. Too much you equals not enough God. AMEN!!!!

roger said...

Chapter 144, "Illustrating with the Slices of Life" by John Ortberg. This writer wants his audience to know that he lives in the same world that they do, therefore he looks for illustrations that connect him to them. Bro. Ortberg studies his congregation, reads the same newspapers they do, carefully using the sphere of government and business to capture sermon illustrations. Connecting with his audience with the everyday life is what makes his sermons powerful. great

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