Pastor's Pastor

Pastor's Pastor: Preparing to preach

Pastor's Pastor: Preparing to preach

The difference between dull, lackluster presentation and pulpit brilliance will be fashioned through the diligent effort of a detailed preparation process. Preach with a plan.

James A. Cress is the Ministerial Secretary of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.

Every pastor must preach; usually every week. Some preach well; others so horridly that congregants conclude their minister must have slept through homiletics class and they now hope also to snooze through that which they must endure. The difference between dull, lackluster presentation and pulpit brilliance will be fashioned through the diligent effort of a detailed preparation process.

Preach with a plan. Failing to plan is planning to fail. Rarely does God answer your prayers for a "Friday-night miracle" with a top-quality sermon. If you wait until just before your message to search for something to say, your procrastination will be clearly evident.

Determine to plan at least a year in advance. If you begin immediately, this process will begin to bear rich fruit within six months and will refresh your preaching the longer you proceed.

Devise a preaching planbook with dated pages for each sermon of the coming year. Establish now a balanced diet of spiritual food which you intend to present. Select major doctrines, practical topics, serial passages from each chapter of an epistle, narratives of great Bible stories, gospel parables, issues confronting society, calendar holidays and special events, or even a lectionary cycle. The most important concept: write it down right now!

If you design a sermon schedule, the Holy Spirit will begin to drop ideas into your mind which you can place in the appropriate pages of your book. While God's omniscience may foretell what you will eventually preach, if you have no plan, you cannot recognize that with which the Spirit will happily enrich your sermons. Of course, circumstances might occasionally necessitate realignment, but overall, your plan will pay rich dividends.

Preach with participation. Take your planbook everywhere. Jot a note when ideas strike you. Even interrupt a conversation to capture the thought before it escapes. Enlist others to assist by sharing their ideas, then publicly recognize their contribution in your sermons. More will join your process. Engage parishioners through interactive dialogue. Poll for topics or texts which they hope you will preach.

Preach with power. By relying on your relationship with Jesus, born out of quality time invested in reading, praying, fellowshipping, witnessing, and seeking God's will, your proclamation will exude more power than you can imagine. Your messages will come with heaven-sent authority that clever plat form histrionics could never equal.

Preach with purpose. When preparing each sermon, ask yourself, "What do I want my listeners to do next Tuesday as a result of what they hear me say?" Once you determine your objective, make that intent the goal of your sermon and conclude with specific, "how to" recommendations for following God's will. Always make an appeal. If you expect nothing from your audience, why waste time?

Preach with place. Recognize that you enter the pulpit as representative of the King of kings. Your words have holy purpose as you stand between the living and the dead. You warn people to shun hell while you call them to embrace heaven. You deliver a message from the throne room of the universe which delivers souls from Satan's grasp. Always remember this lofty responsibility which has placed you to proclaim for Almighty God.

Preach with priority. If you utilize this planbook system, you need not scratch around for something to say. Instead, you will have more ideas than you can develop—so many that you can prioritize the most important. Select major topics, eliminate minor curiosities, emphasize essentials, and establish the choicest of great themes.

Preach with passion. Reject hum-drum, lifeless, willy-nilly meanderings. Express your convictions in such a way that people will know that you believe. Preach "as if" you have faith and you will gain it! Ask your questions in the study and refuse to parade doubts in the pulpit. William Willimon describes his future father-in-law's endurance of one minister's tentative tap dance. "That particular Sunday, the preacher was a master of ambiguity and equivocation. Mr. Parker squirmed in his pew as the preacher carefully qualified just about every statement . . . The poor preacher continued to flail away, poking here and there at his biblical text, rather than delivering it. 'We need to be more committed to Christ... but not to the point of fanaticism, nor to the point of neglect of our other important responsibilities. We must have a greater dedication to the work of the church. Now I don't mean that the church is the only significant organization of which you are a member. Most of us have obligations to various community groups. . .' On and on and on!" After the service Pastor Parker shook his finger at Willimon, himself about to enter seminary, and thundered, "Young man, if God should be calling you into the pastoral ministry, and if ever you should be given a church by the bishop, and if ever God gives you a word to say, for God's sake would you say it.'"1

Preach with a person. Lift up Jesus in every presentation. Exalt Him as the answer to every need. He promises to accompany your efforts with consequential success.

1 William H. Willimon, "Rev. Parker's Last Stand," in Christian Century, May 4, 2004; 10.


Ministry reserves the right to approve, disapprove, and delete comments at our discretion and will not be able to respond to inquiries about these comments. Please ensure that your words are respectful, courteous, and relevant.

comments powered by Disqus
James A. Cress is the Ministerial Secretary of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.

August 2004

Download PDF
Ministry Cover

More Articles In This Issue

Marriage: twin of the Sabbath, but a day older

A Christocentric view of the Seventh-day Adventist belief in marriage and the family.

Open letter from a struggling pastor

A pastor's personal appeal for help in handling his sexual addictions.

Integrated family life evangelism

Approaching evangelistic outreach through focusing on family issues (Year of World Evangelism feature)

Thoughts on the republished Questions on Doctrine

An alternative view on the human nature of Christ expressed from a theological-historical perspective.

Professional counseling agencies: how does a pastor know where to turn?

When asked for help in arenas beyond our expertise, how may we refer with confidence?

Bringing up great PKs

Basics for providing a healthy foundation for pastor's children.

View All Issue Contents

Digital delivery

If you're a print subscriber, we'll complement your print copy of Ministry with an electronic version.

Sign up
Advertisement - RevivalandReformation 300x250

Recent issues

See All
Advertisement - SermonView - WideSkyscraper (160x600)