By Brady Boyd
Brady is the lead pastor of New Life Church in Colorado Springs, CO. He
is married to his college sweetheart Pam and is the dad to two great
kids, Abram and Callie. He has just written a book called Fear No Evil and he's really serious about caring for the people of Colorado Springs by opening numerous Dream Centers.
Pastors tend to spend a lot of time obsessing about preaching and
teaching, while the rest of society thinks about it, like never. But
it’s Monday, and I spoke at New Life yesterday and still wonder if I’m
any good (this is the part that is supposed to motivate you to give me a
lot of compliments), but Pam and the kids thought it was great and
that’s most important.
Anyway, about a year ago, I underwent a philosophical shift in the way I
preach each week. For years, I was a part of a world that primarily
taught sermon series on various topics for four to six weeks, each
series complete with a cool logo, title and sermon bumper (that is the
trendy video that plays right before the pastor magically appears on
stage).
Strengths of the sermon series approach to preaching:
1. You can tackle topics that are important to the
congregation in a timely way. For example, if marriages seem to be
struggling, you can talk about marriage, etc.
2. You can go deeper on topics that need extra time to
teach, like eschatology (that’s a fancy preacher word that means the
end times).
Weaknesses:
1. You can skip over the hard topics and just talk
about the happy ones. In other words, we can talk about the blessings
without talking about suffering or sacrifice.
2. You can drain the life out of your creative team
trying to be better or more clever than the last series. Cool one-word
titles can slide down the cheese hill very quickly. Our title for the
teachings from Luke is … Luke.
My approach for the past year has been to walk through books of the
Bible story by story, capturing all the big ideas of the book. I have
preached through Ephesians, 1 Peter, and for the past 30 weeks, through
Luke. I plan to tackle Acts for the first part of 2012.
Strengths of the book approach:
1. You cannot skip over the hard topics. The past two
weeks I have taught out of Luke 16, which focuses on two difficult
topics for most pastors—hell and money.
2. Hermeneutics (another fancy word for studying the
Bible) is embraced more completely. Who wrote the passage? To whom was
he talking? Why did he use specific language? What was going on in the
culture at the time?
3. You have to teach on all of the topics and ideas
that Jesus and the apostle’s taught their churches and followers. It
builds a more complete disciple in the long run (just my opinion, but it
is my blog).
Weaknesses:
1. Missed opportunities to preach about topics that
are trending socially. For example, on the 10-year anniversary of 9/11,
we were in Luke 14, which did not contain a ready-made memorial message.
2. Missed opportunities to camp out for several weeks on topics that need deeper explanation.
For the record, I think both approaches have merit for the local
church, and it’s the job of the pastor to listen to what God is saying
and to obey. Don’t get stuck in a sermon rut. It is possible, and even
probable, that some fresh new ideas may be exactly what all of us need.
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