Romans 11:33-36

Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways! “For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who has been his counselor? Or who has given a gift to him that he might be repaid?” For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be glory forever. Amen.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Thrown Up Preaching


Ed Stetzer has been posting a series of snippets from his interview with Andy Stanley, pastor of the 22,000 member North Point Community Church on three Atlanta area campuses. Stetzer included a quote from Preaching Magazine about the process Stanley uses in planning his messages:


All of our series planning begins with a team of people and me just throwing things up on the board and at every level of preparation bringing people into the process and saying, "What do you think about this? Does this make sense?" The average person gives me all the credit for that wonderfully delivered message, but it had a lot of hands in it...I think the whole team approach to series planning is helpful. My best visual aids weren't my ideas but when you get a group of people thinking, they all have a gift. So I wish I'd done that earlier. It takes the creative pressure off sometimes. I'll have other people out there thinking about it while I'm in here working on the details.

Contrast Stanley’s take on sermon series preparation with Alistair Begg’s reasoning behind systematic, consecutive, expository preaching of the Scriptures:

  • Expository preaching gives glory to God, which ought to be the ultimate end of all we do. (Notice there is no glory given to the “whole team approach” or a “gift” or “creative” people. The glory is God’s.)

  • Expository preaching demands that the preacher himself becomes a student of the Word of God. (Not “other people out there thinking about it.”)

  • Expository preaching enables the congregation to learn the Bible in the most obvious and natural way. (As opposed to “the average person [giving] me all the credit for that wonderfully delivered message.)

  • Expository preaching prevents the preacher from avoiding difficult passages or from dwelling on his favorite texts. (As is the inherent danger in starting with questions asked of people instead of asking them of the Text: “What do you think about this? Does this make sense?”)

  • Expository preaching assures the congregation of enjoying a balanced diet of God’s Word. (As opposed to “a team of people and me just throwing things up on the board at every level of preparation.”)

  • Expository preaching liberates the preacher from the pressure of last-minute preparation on Saturday night. (It also liberates the preacher from “creative pressure”.)

Comparing and contrasting quotes like these only serves to deepen my conviction to systematically, consecutively preach expository sermons. I want people to see the glory of Christ in His Word, not the collaborative creative genius of the team behind the production. Preaching God's Word is far too important to simply throw topics against the wall to see what sticks.

Nehemiah 8:8

3 comments:

  • heath lloyd says:
    March 26, 2009 at 12:55 PM

    "yeah, but does that expository preaching through the Word draw 22,000 members at three campuses?"

    Lord, deliver us from consumer-driven pragmatism.

  • C.J. Adkins says:
    March 26, 2009 at 11:30 PM

    Grand slam, Pastor Jim!
    Thank you for that powerful comparison and for shining a bright spotlight on one of the growing weaknesses in our pulpits across America.
    Well said, brother!

  • Jim Drake says:
    March 27, 2009 at 8:08 AM

    Thanks for the encouragement CJ!

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