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I remember Chuck Swindoll once saying that the hardest thing about the Christian life is that it’s so “daily”. For preaching, maybe we could modify his statement just a bit to say “the hardest thing about preaching is that it’s so weekly”. It’s so true, isn’t it?  Sunday is always coming… and it comes with relentless consistency.
 
As a pastor, you know that the moment you finish this week’s message, the countdown has begun toward next week’s message. And when you do this month after month, year after year, you can begin to just crank out sermons rather than craft sermons. Sermon prep can become purely mechanical and just another task on your to do list. It can become more burden than blessing and begin to feel more like a grind than a gift. 
 
Every pastor knows what it is to preach a sermon when your heart isn’t in it and your life isn’t living it. That has certainly been true of me more times than I want to admit.
 
Perhaps the hardest thing about preaching is keeping your heart in it.
 
We all know Proverbs 4:23 (NIV) where Solomon admonishes us… 
Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.
 
We don’t usually think about that verse in relationship to preaching, but I think it is very applicable. Guarding my heart has huge implications for my preaching. My passion, my effectiveness, my boldness, and my spiritual power flow out of the heart.
 
So, how do you keep from becoming a Pharisee in your preaching?  How do you keep motivated and your heart engaged week after week?
 
Through the years, I have found three ways that help me stay motivated and preaching from a healthy heart.
 

1. Give sermon preparation priority in my schedule.

Nothing sucks the joy out of preaching like scrambling to pull together a sermon at the last minute. Just like you, I have had weeks where all the urgent things or distracting things pushed my message preparation to the fringes. Sometimes the intrusions on my prep time couldn’t be helped. But the truth is, most of the time I just let the urgent crowd out the most important.
 
Preaching is the one time when most of your congregation is present and you have the chance to shepherd, cast vision, instruct, comfort, and share the mind of Christ in the space of an hour. That deserves priority space on your calendar.
 
Also, by getting started early in the week (or even weeks ahead), I can allow my soul to marinate in the text or topic that I am preaching on. As I think about the message and ponder it, it begins to live in me rather than become just another sermon I deliver
 
So, what do you need to say “no” to so that you can give your best to your message prep?
 

2. Spend time pursuing Jesus not just a sermon

There is significant research that reveals many pastors struggle with this. There have been seasons where my walk with Christ was stagnant and my time in the word was mostly for sermon prep.
 
The irony is that I can actually become relationally disconnected from the very one I am preaching about on Sunday.
 
Because I know my tendency, it has become very important for me to put a firewall between my personal pursuit of relationship WITH Jesus from my pursuit of leadership FOR Jesus.
 
One of the things that has really helped me with this is reading not only the Bible, but reading books that feed my soul. I would encourage you to weekly engage books that help you love Jesus more deeply.
 

3. Remind myself what’s at stake.

One of the things through the years that has helped me keep my heart in it is to remind myself of the “why” of preaching, not just the “what” of preaching.
 
I remind myself that . . . 
• God has called me to represent Him in my community. 
• spiritual warfare is real.
the gospel changes lives.
marriages are hanging in the balance.
I get to help people know God’s plan for a great life.
THIS MATTERS FOR ETERNITY.
 
I know that preaching from a pure and engaged heart is no small task, but it is worth the struggle. So, here is the question I want to leave you with: What step do you need to take to insure that your heart is in your preaching?  Sit with that question for a few moments. Let God’s Spirit speak to you. And then, obey whatever He reveals to you. 
 
Share your ideas in the comments below. I look forward to connecting with you next week.
 
 
 
 

Lance is the founder of Replenish ministries and is often referred to as a Pastor’s Pastor.  He is also the author of the book Replenish, which is dedicated to helping leaders live and lead from a healthy soul.  Before launching Replenish, Lance served 20 years as a senior pastor and 6 years as an Executive/Teaching pastor at Saddleback Church. 

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Talk about it...

Mike Kramer

commented on Jan 22, 2016

Awesome Lance! Thank you.

Mary Gill

commented on Jan 22, 2016

Really enjoyed, reading your "WHY" open my eyes. It made me remember I was to preach, teach, help, and listen to all of God's children, but especially the one that are in the street, on drugs, drunks you know the ones the Pharisees wouldn't preach to.

Dishan W

commented on Jan 22, 2016

Great stuff Lance. Simple but profound.

John Ong

commented on Jan 22, 2016

I raise my hand and say "Yes, I am guilty at times..." I read the bible for my sermon purposes... :(

Ade Oni

commented on Jan 22, 2016

Good talk. God bless you.,

Guy Martin Nomel

commented on Jan 23, 2016

Thank you very much Lance. God bless you for those simple but deep and helpful advices. May the Lord increase you!

Anonymous Contributor

commented on Jan 23, 2016

Excellent! Very Timely. I'm preaching on Proverbs 4:23 for the past two weeks. What makes it even more difficult for me is that I am bi-vocational (40 hours secular job and 30 hours per week pastoring). What's also challenging is that many articles I see even though this is very applicable to me, generally assumes the Pastor is not bi-vocational. How can you help us?

Lance Witt

commented on Jan 23, 2016

I know being bi-vocational makes these issues even more challenging. I think the 3 steps I gave in the article can still apply. My biggest concern for you is working 70 hrs. per week.As I write these articles I will strive to be sensitive to the unique challenges of bi-vocational pastors. Blessings

David Pittman

commented on Jan 23, 2016

At this time in our ministry, this is refreshing. It reminds us of the calling and anointing placed on our lives. IT is in our HEARTS. ,

Audry Walton

commented on Jan 23, 2016

Awesome info! Thank God for you.

Audry Walton

commented on Jan 23, 2016

Great information. I thank God for you!

David Nwogu

commented on Jan 23, 2016

What a priceless piece!I'm blessed Lance.

Rodney Lake

commented on Jan 23, 2016

Thank you! Just what I needed, when I needed it most. May God's blessing continually be upon you. ,

Benjamin Lee

commented on Jan 23, 2016

Thank you for the truth of your heart, for we all if we're honest feels the same. Thank you!!!,

Stanley Francois

commented on Jan 23, 2016

What i need is to stay out of distractions.

Isaiah Adegoke

commented on Jan 24, 2016

I am richly blessed

Phil Merioles

commented on Jan 24, 2016

Great words to remind us of the "sacradness of the call". I too am a bi-vocational pastor, and this area is such a challenging balancing act. Blessings - Pastor Phil (Alaska),

James Brewer

commented on Jan 30, 2016

Very Good Truths, as an elderly bi-vocational pastor for many years, I find that reading, absorbing, honing, and polishing truth, how refreshing when are reminded that " in all things HE is to be pre-eminent". Thank you.

Paul Matheri

commented on Jul 21, 2020

Am Rev. Paul Matheri from Naivasha, Kenya in Africa. I am learning from many others about being a bio-vocational pastor. That is who I am and I find myself having very little time to prepare my sermons. Sometimes I have to complete my sermons a few minutes before preaching time. Its by the Grace of God that I end up sharing inspiring sermons but feel guilty for not giving enough time for sermon preparation. This article speaks well about me.

Timothy Maloi

commented on Oct 6, 2020

Nice to meet you Pastor Paul, This is a great platform. I am from Narok but live in Atlanta Georgia and learn a lot from how God is talking to us in this forum.

Timothy Maloi

commented on Oct 6, 2020

There was a deep revelation on spending time pursuing Jesus not sermons.

Roydal Simon

commented on Mar 1, 2021

Thank you Lance. I have been following a similar practice when preparing my sermons. Being bi-vocational, I set a theme and while driving, bathing, eating, walking etc. keep pondering and giving structure to my message. During this time I research the Holy Bible for passages, references and cross-references. Finally my message takes root and penned for the final practice prior to deleviring. Yes! I firmly believe that the recipie of the message should contain the following ingredients: 1) it should come from the heart 2) it should be self-practiced to be convincing 3) it's essence should apply to our daily life 4) it should be motivating to ask the golden question - how do we apply it to our daily walk of life. The congregation should always be able to carry home the flavour and ponder upon applying it to their routine.

Neville Wilson

commented on Sep 13, 2021

Real thought provoking.

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