By Peter Mead
Preaching is not just about communicating the message of the Bible; it
is about communicating that message to people. Specifically, certain
people. Today I’d like to share some thoughts on preaching to those who
are present, then we can move on to those who aren’t!
1. Know your listeners as much as possible. Seems
almost too obvious to state, but it is important. We have to know who
is listening when we preach. If we are a visiting speaker, we need to
go into overdrive before the meeting to find out what we can. If it is
our home church, we should be engaged in the lives of those who are
listening. It will influence how we pitch the message, the vocabulary
used, the applications chosen, the background information given, etc.
Not to mention the difference it will make if you love the people to
whom you preach!
2. Be as relevant as possible. This is true on so
many levels. We need to be relevant in our vocabulary, in our
illustrative material, in our applications of biblical truth, etc.
Relevance is the natural next step on from knowing the listeners. Our
task is not to make the Bible relevant, but to show how relevant it is
to these specific people.
3. But beware of unhelpful target practice. There is a
danger that the first two points can lead to an unhealthy third
one—target practice. That is, you know your listeners, including the
issues, including the tensions, including the squabbles and the politics
and so on. And then you want to be relevant. And without thinking you
can find yourself preaching a sermon to a congregation that is pointed
right at one person, or one situation, or one clique, or one faction, or
whatever. It is so easy to either bare someone’s dirty laundry or to
take political potshots. You can do it in your vocabulary, in your
illustrations, in your applications, etc. This is both an abuse of the
preaching privilege and a flawed approach to addressing issues. Whether
it is a situation you are seeking to help or a skirmish you’ve been
dragged into, the pulpit is not the place to address it directly.
Certainly the Word will speak to life’s real issues, but don’t be the
filter through which the Bible gets redirected.
Tomorrow we’ll ponder the audience issue some more, specifically in reference to people who are not present.
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