Sometimes Easy, Sometimes Not

When preaching bible sermons on some texts, it’s quite easy to come up with the desired response. An example would be Matthew 7:24-27. This is Jesus’ closing summary to His famous Sermon on the Mount. It reads: “Therefore everyone who has these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on a rock,” etc. So the desired response is that people would both hear what Jesus said and then put His teachings into practice.

Psalm One is typical of a text that is a little harder to get a handle on. Both negatives and positives are stressed in the passage. The best I have come up with is to say that the individual who is blessed by God (subject) gets his/her counsel from the right source (response). Mainly that relates to spending quality time in Scripture (verse 2). But it also includes learning to avoid questionable sources (verse 1), or at least be more discerning in evaluating them.

Usually an epistle will have a specific response the writer is asking for. In Galatians, Paul’s subject is responsible freedom. The response he is calling for is learning to be led by the Spirit (5:18). Paul writes this in different ways including living by the Spirit, keeping in step with the Spirit, sowing to the Spirit, etc.

When preaching from narrative passages, you often need to figure out the response being called for on your own. For example, the story of Samson could be the basis for sermon ideas about the danger of falling prey to the enemy by degrees. The response then being called for is to learn to deal with sin swiftly and decisively on a daily basis.

Just for practice, if your church sermon is about Esther and being caught in a difficult situation, what might be the response your message would call for?

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Is That What Jesus Did?

 I recall a pastor challenging what I was teaching regarding getting a handle on what your basic subject is early on in your church sermon preparation. His argument was that Jesus obviously didn’t do this. For example in His famous Sermon on the Mount, Jesus talked about many topics.

I was just ready to respond when another minister attending the seminar spoke up. “Oh, but Jesus did,” he exclaimed. “In the Sermon on the Mount, our Lord’s subject was the new Kingdom lifestyle. If people were going to follow Him, those many topical sermons you referred to all fit under how they should live as His followers. And our Lord’s conclusion was that if they obeyed His words they wouldn’t wash out, even in the great storms of life. But to hear His instructions and fail to obey them would be like building on sand, which as a foundation would not stand up to such storms.”

The two men continued talking back and forth for a while, after which the first pastor seemed to be satisfied, and the class continued.

I’m not altogether sure it’s necessary for me to have the backing of Jesus on this point about church sermon subjects, because nobody’s eternal destiny is at stake. But I can vouch that it helps immensely to early on in your sermon series preparation know what the subject is you plan to talk about, and the sooner you nail that down, the better off you are.

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