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Recently, I talked about passion that can become off-putting. But what about the preachers who are devoid of all passion, preaching sermons as limp as soggy cardboard? If you know one, I’ll leave you to figure out how to get them to read this article. If you know you are one, perhaps this will help.

1. Hear what people are saying, and hear what you are saying.

If people are saying your preaching is dull, you need to hear that feedback. Don’t blame them. Don’t ignore them. Hear them. Equally, if you will just listen to yourself or watch yourself on video, you will see just how bland the sermon presentation actually is. You may say, “Oh no, I am much more passionate than I come across!” OK, but you don’t come across as passionate, so it is actually irrelevant how passionate you may be on the inside.

2. Is it frozen delivery?

It is common for speakers to freeze when presenting to a crowd of people. What feels so fiery on the inside comes out as a restricted vocal range, monotonous tone, limited gestures, solidified facial expression, and the natural movement of a broken robot with fading batteries. It may simply be that you need to grow in the area of delivery, not learning to be someone else, but learning to be yourself freely in front of the folks.

3. Is it personal fatigue?

Maybe you are preparing half of Saturday night and then skipping breakfast and preaching on empty. Sometimes emergencies occur, and we have no choice but to preach on an empty tank. But generally speaking, it isn’t a good idea, or good stewardship of your ministry, to eat poorly, sleep inadequately, exercise rarely, and preach in a state of physical breakdown.

4. Is it a loss of vision?

Ministry can take its toll. Well-intentioned dragons can sap energy like nothing else, like the repetition of services with minimal response, or an overloaded ministry schedule because you are the only person active in ministry in the church, etc. Before long, you are struggling to preach with any vision other than getting it done for another week. Not good.

5. Is it eyes unfixed and heart gone cold?

Here’s the big one, whether it is true or not. Preaching without passion comes across as if what you are preaching about isn’t really that important. Unbelievers will be put off the gospel and believers will be discouraged. The greatest solution to the greatest problem in passionless preaching is to get your eyes fixed back on Christ and allow the sunshine of God’s grace to bring your heart back to the boil. When we taste and see that the Lord is good, it becomes much harder to preach without passion.

Peter Mead is involved in the leadership team of a church plant in the UK. He serves as director of Cor Deo—an innovative mentored ministry training program—and has a wider ministry preaching and training preachers. He also blogs often at BiblicalPreaching.net and recently authored Pleased to Dwell: A Biblical Introduction to the Incarnation (Christian Focus, 2014). Follow him on Twitter

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Talk about it...

Keith B

commented on Oct 25, 2011

Good words. It's humbling to watch yourself on video--but you'll see it pretty quickly if you come across differently than you thought you were.

Anonymous Contributor

commented on Oct 25, 2011

Great title and article !!! We rarely sound the same the second time , as we thought we did while delivering a message. There's always much more that we can learn to improve our ministries !!!!!!!

Howard Renker

commented on Oct 27, 2011

Good points, particularly when one has multiple services and the passion level in the presentation can drop without us realizing it.

Adekunle Ajayi

commented on Aug 10, 2024

God bless you all

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