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Sometimes My Preaching Stinks
November 5, 2007
By Travis K Miller
Am I the only one who thinks this way from time to time? Am I the
only one who leaves a Sunday service feeling like I have just dropped the ball
in extravagant fashion? Are there others who have finished a service and
wondered how such a good thought could wind up coming out so pitifully? Somehow,
I don’t think that feelings like these are unique to my experience.
Same Effort, Different Results
In the course of ministry, there are a variety of outcomes to our
efforts. Whether preaching, teaching, singing, or simply testifying, sometimes
we see wonderful results, and other times it seems as if our efforts were
worthless. Over time, this variety of outcomes can be confusing.
Why does this happen? What is going on? Why is it that I can
preach in one service and the “house comes down,” and then preach the same thing
another time, in a different setting, and the people fall asleep?
I clearly recall such a situation. One Friday evening I was to
preach a statewide youth rally. I followed my usual routine of prayer and
preparation for the service. Then I conscientiously delivered what I felt to be
God’s Word for that service. In the end, the youth in attendance responded
genuinely and wonderfully to the Word and Spirit of the Lord. We had great
church.
Exactly one week later, I was to preach the exact same kind of
meeting in a different state. In prayer and preparation, I felt to preach the
exact same message as the week prior. In the same kind of meeting, to the same
kind of audience, I delivered the same Bible-based message that had brought such
genuine response the previous week. Yet this time around, the audience just
stared at me when I made the altar appeal. As I struggled to get the youth to
respond to the Lord and His Word, they were reluctant. In the end, they did
pray, but it was not a genuine, heartfelt response. They seemed to pray out of
habit and respect for tradition.
Immediately, the questions began in my mind—What happened? Is
there something wrong with me? Is there something wrong with the people? Was
there something about the situation that I did not learn in prayer? Is there
something else that I should have done?
As a public speaker, I recognize two particular facets of
preparation and presentation that are of interest. The first deals with whether
or not I feel like I have “heard from God” for the service. Preachers and
teachers realize that we can share anything from the Bible and it is the Word of
God, but I am speaking about the speaker’s desire to share from the specific
portion of Scripture that is the will of God for that specific service. The
second aspect is in regard to the presentation. It has to do with whether or not
the congregation responds as if the message is indeed a word from God. Do they
willingly and desirously react to the call to action or do they blankly stare as
if unaware of the point?
The combinations of these two aspects create four possible
outcomes:
1. I don’t feel like I have heard from God and the congregation
responds like they agree with my feelings.
2. I don’t feel like I have heard from God, but the church
responds wholeheartedly anyway.
3. I feel like I have heard from God, but the audience doesn’t
respond in kind.
4. I feel like I have heard from God, and the congregation
responds in agreement with my feelings.
Though there are other dimensions of message preparation and
presentation, I sense that these four scenarios entail the largest percentage of
the ministry experience. As such, it would be good to explore each of them and
discover the pitfalls and practical responses.
Next Week: Detailing the “I Don’t Feel Like I Heard From
God” Issues
ninetyandnine.com
© 2007, Travis K. Miller
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Travis K. Miller has been a husband for 21 years, a father
for 19 years, and a cyclist for 7 years. On occasion, he speaks to audiences
here and there.
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