-
Do This And Improve Your Preaching This Sunday
By Peter Walters on Sep 9, 2022
We have a new family in our church with no church background at all. When I prepare to preach I think of them and go the extra mile to make my message as understandable and relatable as possible.
It’s tough when you’re trying to play “catch up” with what everyone else already knows. I didn’t take biology in Grade 10 but because I needed 2 sciences to graduate I had to take it in Grade 11. Early in the course, my teacher told me I would fail.(Not sure if this was a backward way of inspiring me or if he just thought I was stupid.) It was tough sitting in class day after day feeling left out of the conversation and having to whisper and ask what certain terms meant.
The same thing happens in church when we use terms like, “saved”, “the blood”, “converted”, “here I raise my Ebenezer”, “have you been through the waters”.
Shall I go on?
Let’s add some theological terms, “justification”, “sanctification”, “incarnation”.
Keep going?
How about “eschatology”, “pre-tribulation”, “the rapture”, “the second coming”. Tired yet?
Do This And Improve Your Preaching This Sunday
So what, are we not suppose to use those terms at all? That’s not what I am saying. Using “insider language” is only of benefit to those who believe. When you explain terms you let new people know that you understand they are there.
"Our evangelical churches once operated in societies in which Christian vocabulary was not wholly alien to any listener. That is changing rapidly." – Tim Keller
This quote should be a guidepost as we prepare our messages. It’s not difficult to address this fact by taking a few moments and adding an extra sentence or two when you bring up a term or idea you know may be foreign to many in the audience.
- Justification – “Just as if I never sinned.”
- Incarnation – “The theological idea that Jesus was fully God and fully man at the same time.”
- The Rapture – “When Jesus comes back in the clouds to take those who believe in Him to heaven.”
- Water Baptism – “The way the Early Christians identified themselves as Jesus followers.”
But these words and ideas are deep and you just touched the surface and you are exactly right about that. My goal is to help orient listeners to the idea not bog down the message with a theological defense. For instance, I was addressing the idea of being chosen and needed to talk about “calvinism” and “arminianism”. I explained that this is a debate that has been ongoing for years and bigger minds than mine have written on this. Then I simply explained the two concepts and continued with the message.
"Once we know something we find it hard to imagine what it was like not to know it." – Chip/Dan Heath, Made To Stick
As you prepare for Sunday take a few moments and ask yourself, “What might be new or hard to understand for a new people this Sunday?” Of course, you can’t address every issue but which ones are important this Sunday. This simple adjustment can really improve your message.
We have a new family in our church with no church background at all. When I prepare I think of them and go the extra mile to make my message as understandable and relatable as possible. Seems to me that’s what Jesus did.
Related Preaching Articles
-
Can We Preach The Tithe?
By Dean Shriver on Apr 2, 2025
Scripture presents covenantal, legalistic, and worshipful tithing. Only worshipful giving reflects New Covenant generosity rooted in gratitude, allegiance, and grace.
-
Just What Is Pulpit Plagiarism?
By Ron Forseth on Jan 1, 2024
A thoughtful look at plagiarism, quotation, and citation in preaching, showing how conscience, diligence, and trust shape ethical and faithful sermon use.
-
Why Preparing Sermons Takes Me So Long
By Joe Mckeever on Jul 31, 2020
A candid walk through sermon preparation, showing how prayer, Bible study, reflection, and disciplined refinement shape faithful and Spirit-led preaching.
-
Why I Said Yes To Pastoral Ministry
By Chuck Warnock on Dec 16, 2022
Pastoral calling can fade under pressure, success, or discouragement. This reflection uncovers why ministers lose sight of their call and how to remember it again.
-
Five Things God Never Said
By Dr. Larry Moyer on Jan 1, 2025
Common sayings about God and salvation often distort the gospel. Exposing five popular misconceptions helps believers regain clarity, confidence, and grace in evangelism.
-
Building A Healthy Pastor–worship Leader Relationship
By Chuck Fromm on Mar 4, 2020
Pastors and worship leaders thrive when unified. Addressing conflict, clarifying roles, and pursuing Spirit-led collaboration strengthens worship and the church.
-
Busting Out Of Sermon Block
By Haddon Robinson on May 28, 2020
Weekly preaching can feel creatively exhausting. Learn a two-phase approach, practical rhythms, and daily habits that keep your sermons biblical, fresh, and deeply fed all from Haddon Robinson.
-
The Power Of Multisensory Preaching
By Rick Blackwood on Jun 2, 2020
Multisensory preaching engages more of the listener, increases clarity and retention, and can reignite your joy in teaching by making sermons more vivid and memorable.
Sermon Central