-
Preaching The Truth At Weddings
By SermonCentral .com on Feb 14, 2025
John Piper managed to offend people by simply preaching the truth at weddings. Maybe you should, too.
How do you decide what to preach at weddings?
I don't perform nearly as many weddings as I used to. I've got folders just chock-full of wedding homilies. And in my first 10 or 15 years, I hardly ever repeated a wedding homily.
I've got at least 60 wedding homilies that are different, and the answer to deciding what to preach is that you preach on anything that relates to love or anger or greed or money. And then you apply it to their wedding.
One of the most controversial weddings I ever did, I think, was when I preached to a couple where the guy was in medical school. I took as my text that you shouldn't want to be rich, and I said, "One of the biggest temptations that you're going to be facing as a married couple is that, after you finish medical school, you're going to make a lot of money. And that's really dangerous for a marriage. So may I warn you about that and give you some ideas for how to handle it?"
I found out later that not everybody at the wedding liked what I said. I did that all the time.
I remember I did the same kind of thing for David and Edith Carlson. They're still here. I did that wedding 26 or 27 years ago, and she's the librarian at the church here. And I can remember the sermon on money and simplicity of life in the old chapel. They loved it, I think, because I knew where they were.
So basically, any truth can be a marriage sermon. You just then apply it to two human beings who are going to have to relate to each other in some really tough situations. And the whole Bible relates to that.
I think pastors should try to say fresh things and not feel like they have to come back to Ephesians 5 every time. We're going to weave it in somewhere, probably, that the meaning of this marriage at its heart is that it is a symbol of covenant-keeping love between Christ and his church. But you don't have to preach on Ephesians 5 every time and make that your main point every time. Because there are a hundred things to say that are fresh and good and powerful that will be needful for this marriage.
I've preached several times using my cow-pie analogy: that you need to develop a compost pile in your marriage, because as soon as you step out of this church one of you is going to put your foot in a cow-pie, and it's going to stink and the relationship is going to be messed up.
What are you going to do with it? Walk around in it all day? Come back to it? Smell it every day? No! You take it, and you throw it in the compost pile, and you go over and live in the green grass.
But you know that issue still exists, and you may have to go over and deal with it every now and then. And as you walk through life, you're going to be putting your foot in one cow-pie after another of relational difficulty and sin. And some people just live there, and it makes life totally impossible if you live in your cow-pies.
And it is possible to take each one, put it in the compost, know it's there, look each other right in the eye and say, "I don't like this about you" and "I don't like this about you either," and then say, "OK. We're leaving that, and we're going over here and living with what we love."
A lot of people tell me that they don't like that analogy, but it's my way of doing it. And I think it's helpful.
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.
-
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.
-
Why I Love To Preach
By Joseph M. Stowell on Nov 25, 2021
Preaching is a strange mix of joy, agony, insecurity, and calling; this article explores why pastors keep returning to the pulpit and how God uses their weakness.
Sermon Central