By Shane Grant on Sep 9, 2021
based on 2 ratings
| 15,159 views
Biblical preaching does not seek to influence the modern world but wants to move people to a different world, a world that is unavailable to them without preaching.
Tags:
By Joe Hoagland on Feb 20, 2021
based on 2 ratings
| 9,767 views
When it comes to the art of preaching improvisation can play a big role, just like in music. Here at Rookie Preacher we advocate for a tight, well put together structure. But, that doesn’t mean you need to have every word memorized.
Tags:
By Lance Witt on Jul 6, 2023
based on 1 rating
| 16,295 views
Respect is a big deal to me. I am so blessed to have a wife who has always affirmed her respect for me. I can’t begin to tell you how life-giving that has been. Through the years as a pastor, the most consistent message I have given to wives is this…”Your husband can do without a lot of things, but the ONE thing he cannot do without is RESPECT.” It’s not just true in marriage, it is also true in leadership.
Tags:
By Erik Raymond on Aug 6, 2021
based on 11 ratings
| 41,459 views
We read, listen, talk, think, integrate, pray and listen. This is what we do. "In one very real sense, pastors don’t know what is original and what is not."
Tags:
By Bruce Frank on Aug 17, 2020
based on 24 ratings
| 53,329 views
Bruce Frank, lead pastor of of Biltmore Baptist Church, one of the top 50 fastest-growing churches in America, shares his sermon prep process.
Scripture:
Tags:
By Carey Nieuwhof on Jan 13, 2021
based on 2 ratings
| 8,246 views
Preaching is one of the most demanding tasks required of communicators.
You’re not just giving a ‘talk,’ you’re communicating the Word of God—faithfully (you trust). And you do this in front of groups of people who have more communication options and sources than at any point in human history.
Not an easy task.
Tags:
By Duncan Hamilton on Apr 16, 2024
Two years ago I travelled China’s Shandong Provence; specifically to the city that Eric Liddell knew as Weihsien and which is now called Weifang. I walked around the site of the camp where he died of a brain tumour six months before the Second World War ended. The earth that held him during that war holds him still. No one can identify where Liddell was buried. So, instead of a grave, he has a monument – an enormous slab of rose granite shipped from the Isle of Mull in the Hebrides.
Tags: