|

When They've Heard It All Before
by Craig Brian Larson
A year ago my wife's work schedule shifted, and preparing dinner became my responsibility.
My range of meals was limited: a bowl of Wheat Chex and a lunch-meat sandwich.
I quickly developed an expanded array of dinners for my boys to choose from:
spaghetti with Prego three-cheese sauce, spaghetti with Ragu traditional sauce,
spaghetti with Kraft parmesan cheese.
The first time or two their palates bathed in my spaghetti creations, my
sons cleaned their plates. But soon the proud chef began to get a different
response to his triumphant announcement, "Spaghetti's ready!"
"Aw, Dad, don't we have anything else?"
I was incredulous. "You don't want my spaghetti?"
"No, Dad, we've had that for days."
I learned something about my boys: They want a menu that looks like the
classified ads of the Chicago Tribune; they want more choices.
When they're really hungry, anything will doeven spaghetti. But otherwise
they get picky.
The same thing can be true in church. Sometimes it seems we preach to only
two kinds of people: the starving and the stuffed. Younger Christians devour
every sermon. To them it's all new, all delicious. But our homiletically plump
attenders, some of whom have been in church a lifetime, have indifferent appetites.
For them our sermons may seem like just another plate of spaghetti.
Must Bible truths inevitably lose their flavor? How do we preach to those
who have heard it all?
I discussed this challenge with some sermon connoisseurs and discovered
seven ingredients that can season a sermon, turning it from truck-stop fare
into an appetizing home-cooked meal.
Round Out Bible Characters
For many sermon veterans, familiar Bible characters are flat, one-dimensional,
either good or bad. Flat characters are fine for fairy tales, but real people
have inner tensions, complications, and mixed motives. Saints have their selfish
moments, and even in the darkest of souls a light flickers now and then. When
a preacher portrays that, weary listeners take interest. In his sermon "Good
Guys, Bad Guys, and Us Guys," Haddon Robinson looks at the Parable of the
Pharisee and the Tax Collector, and dispels the stereotypical view of the bad
guy.
"In the eyes of good and decent men of that day," says
Robinson, "the Pharisee was a religious and a moral success. He could
stand in the temple and pray, 'I thank you that I am not like other menextortioners,
evildoers, adulterers. I tithe all I take in. I fast twice each week.' I'm
sure he was praying sober truth. In business, he had not made his living by
driving his neighbor to the wall. His word was his bond. When he made a promise,
you could count on it. And in a day as sexually loose as our own, he had not
sacrificed upon some wayside altar.
"Measured by any conventional standard, ancient or modern, the Pharisee
was a religious success. He says that he fasted twice each week. That was
far more than the Old Testament had asked. In the ancient law, the people
of God were asked to fast once each yearon the Day of Atonement. But
in his devotion to his religion, this Pharisee would not be held to that.
So, twice each week, on Monday and Thursday, he denied himself food.
"He also says he gave a tithe of all that he took in. I suspect he
is saying more than that he was a tither. That would have been characteristic
of a great many people of his day. I think he is saying he tithed those
things the law did not ask him to tithe. Perhaps each year he figured up
his net worth and gave a tenth of that to God.
"This Pharisee was in deep earnestness about his religion; you had
to be serious about it to make yourself as uncomfortable as he made himself.
God was as real to him as the shekels in his pocket, and he was willing
to lower his standard of living a bit for him. And his religion had done
him good: the people in the community respected and admired him as an outstanding
citizen, a contributor to the community."
Robinson has destroyed the caricature of the Pharisee and reminds us we have
more in common with him than we ever want to admit. This technique sharpens
the sermon, giving listeners insight into both biblical text and their motives.
Rounding out Bible characters often requires sanctified imagination. The
Bible may not explain all the motives for someone's action, but if we put
ourselves in their silk or sackcloth, we soon appreciate what they were going
through.
Make Application Specific
A friend confessed frustration with his pastor's sermons: "He spends the
entire 30 minutes talking up in the clouds. I wish he would give me one concrete
example of what he wants me to do!"
An example is more powerful than an explanation.
There's a world of difference between telling someone that prayer changes
things and sharing a fresh example of a situation transformed by prayer. In
his sermon "Finding God in a Busy World," John Killinger concludes
his message on prayer and solitude with this story:
"I was in Brooklyn Heights some months ago to visit the church
where one of the greatest Congregationalist ministers had once preached, the
great Henry Ward Beecher. In the evening, I walked with one of my hosts along
the promenade that overlooks Manhattan. ... She talked about her life when
she had arrived there several years before. Her husband had left her, and
she was having difficulties with her only child, a daughter. She had come
to this place at night thinking she could not go on. She hadn't wanted to
take her life, but she didn't know how she could go on in the pain and the
agony she was feeling.
"She said she sat on one of the benches and looked across the bay
at the city. She stared out at Liberty Island in the distance, and she watched
the tugboats as they moved in and out of the bay. She sat, and she sat.
The longer she sat, she said, the more her life seemed to be invested with
a kind of quietness that came over her like a spirit.
"Down deep she began to feel peaceful again. She said she felt somehow
that God was very near to her, as if she could almost reach out and touch
God. Better yet, she didn't need to reach out. God was touching her. She
felt whole and complete and healed as she sat there that evening. It became
a turning point in her life.
"'Since then,' she said, 'whenever I feel under pressure at my job
or from any personal problems, I come down here and sit on this very bench.
I'm quiet; I feel it all over again, and everything is all right.'
"'Be still and know that I am God.'
"When we know that, everything is all right."
Giving concrete examples of how to put a sermon into action doesn't always require
telling a story. It can mean just being specific about what you want people
to do. For example: "Let me suggest four specific ways that you might improve
your Bible reading in 1996. (1) Some people are helped by using a one-year Bible
that organizes Scriptures into a reading for each day of the year. (2) Others
like listening to the Bible on audiotapes in the car or while they work around
the house. (3) Some benefit from a special Bible that gives study notes or discussion
questions or illustrations. (4) Others need to be accountable to a friend to
discuss the highlights of their reading."
There are many ways to get specific with application. By employing these
techniques, we put the ball in the listener's court. A plan of action is presented.
A challenge is issued. The rest is up to them.
Let It Grip Your Soul
A critical quality in preaching effectively to those who've heard it all is
sincerity. If our sermon is honest and heartfelt, a truth as common as "Jesus
loves you" can thunder for listeners.
Authenticity is heightened when we are humble and transparent. When we pray
through our message until it grips our soul, we can preach with honest passion
and avoid the sin of self-righteousness.
In his sermon "Valley of Death's Shadow," I felt Leith Anderson's
sincerity as he preached about overcoming fear:
"I have seen men and women walk through evil that stinks,"
says Anderson, "and they're strong and fearless. And I've experienced
it myself.
"There have been times when I've been lost, away from home, and panic
struck my heartand yet alone I experienced the wonder of the comfort
of the Shepherd.
"There have been situations in my home and family that brought me
to a point of worry that I don't even have any words to begin to describeonly
to discover that the Shepherd was there and that it was okay; there was
a calmness of heart.
"I've laid on my bed, and I have wept for people in the horrors of
their circumstances and somehow felt responsible that I've got to do something
to helpyet knowing that their needs far exceeded any capacity or capability
that was mine, and seeing and feeling the transformation of those tears
to trust.
"So in my own limited way, I know what it's about to fear no evil.
But if I'm going to be candid with you, let me tell you that it's often
not like that, that I forget that the Shepherd is there, that I reach out
and take the problems that a moment ago I thought I gave away, and I pull
them back, and I hold them close, and that I struggle and grope with them.
I let my imagination run wild, and I can worry myself sick about the evils
that endanger me and those I love.
"What I need to do always is what we all need to do always: trust
the Shepherd. Understand, that's not some power of positive thinking; that's
not some manipulative self-talk; that's not some Yoga technique. It is hard
reality that I will fear no evil because the Shepherd is with me.
"He's here. He's here! He keeps his promisesHe really does,
in even the deepest and the darkest of valleys."
Through his presentation, Anderson's congregation knows its shepherd has tested
the principles he preaches.
Address the Tough Questions
We would like to think that hearing a lot of sermons would answer most of a
person's questions. Yet even people who have heard it all love to hear a preacher
tackle the tough ones.
In "Getting Sober for Christmas," Mary Graves says during the
Christmas season we need to deal with sin so Christ can truly come in our
heartsand that raised a question.
"I was talking to a Christian therapist, a marriage-and-family
counselor," says Graves, "who was confiding in me the trouble she
was having with the teaching in her church. They had done a whole teaching
on the new confession of faith put out by the Presbyterian church, called
the 'Brief Statement of Faith.' It is a great confession. The problem that
she had was with one line in this confession, line 39, which says, 'We deserve
God's condemnation.' She looked at me with tears in her eyes and said, 'Do
you realize how many people I see in my practice who are so beaten down with
self-condemnation that they can hardly function? When they come to church
on Sunday mornings, they don't need to hear that they deserve God's condemnation.
They need to hear that they deserve God's love.'"
At this point, Graves must choose either to breeze by this issue of self-condemnation
or to deal with it.
"She raised a good point, something that we need to clarify
before we can move on. For what does it mean to be humbled before God? What
does it mean for me to say that I am a sinner who needs to be cleansed, that
I need baptism, that I need repentance, that I need forgiveness? What does
it mean for us to say that we are sinners who deserve God's condemnation?
"John Bradshaw wrote a book called Healing the Shame That Binds
You. At the beginning of that book, he talks about two kinds of shame.
One shame he describes as toxic/life-destroying shame. That is the shame
that binds. It is the shame that cripples and condemns. It's the shame that
this therapist I was talking to was weeping over. My friends, it is the
shame that God weeps over and seeks to heal.
"Bradshaw goes on and says there is also a healthy shame. There is
the shame that heals. This is the kind of shame that comes from God's truth.
... It is the shame that sobers. It is the shame that recognizes that my
self-centeredness has led me astray, the shame that recognizes,'I have been
so self-absorbed, Lord, that I have forgotten about you and your ways. ...'"
This is not some casual aside or homiletical meandering. Graves has first raised,
then addressed, an issue that even longtime listeners want to understand.
Probe Their Spiritual Condition
The will of God is infinitely challenging, and the sinful nature finds unlimited
ways to sin. It's nice to be profound. It's more important to be penetrating.
When we probe the depths of the human heart, enabling our listeners to see
how their lives compare to God's will, we will challenge people. Sincere followers
of Christ earnestly want that challenge on a regular basis. And even those
who have heard it all may admit they are not assimilating every sermon.
In his sermon "Christmas 365 Days a Year," Stuart Briscoe brings
listeners face to face with their spiritual condition:
"The Bible says we're being changed from glory to glory even
by the Spirit of the Lord. Do you know what you ought to be able to do at
the end of a year? You ought to be able to look back and see some specific
ways in which you have grown spiritually. There ought to be evidence of new
habits, new attitudes, and new abilities relating directly to the fact that
you're being changed by the Spirit of the Lord.
"Can you think of one overwhelming weakness that had you by the throat
at the beginning of this year? Do you honestly believe that if Jesus Christ,
risen from the dead, came into your life, he could release you from it,
and you could live in newness of life?
"You say,'I don't know about that.' Nothing is impossible with God.
If it is part of the divine will, it rests well within the divine capability."
Briscoe refuses to let the subject of spiritual change remain abstract. His
probing questions will lead all but the most hardened listeners to self-examination.
Harness the Power of Story
Jesus preached to people who had heard it all before. He came telling stories.
Listeners will rate even the most elementary idea as great preaching if
we can help them feel it one more time in their hearts. In his sermon "A
Purpose Runs through It," Bryan Wilkerson covers a familiar passage,
Romans 8:28-30, and an age-old truth, God's good purpose, and makes waves
with an analogy:
"One of the most beautiful movies of last year was 'A River
Runs through It.' The movie told the story of the Maclean family, who lived
in Montana early in the twentieth century. The father was a Presbyterian ministerstern
but loving. They had two sons: firstborn Norman, who tells the story, and
a younger son, Paul ...
"The real protagonist in the story is the river that runs through
their part of Montana. That river becomes the focal point of their family
life and the catalyst for everything significant in their lives. It was
walking along the banks of that river on Sunday afternoons that the father
forged a relationship with his young boysturning over rocks, teaching
them about the world, about life, and about the God who made it all. It
was the river that the boys ran to after studies were over, and sibling
rivalry and brotherly affection flourished as they fished for trout together
on that beautiful stream.
"When it came time for these adolescent boys to prove their moxie,
they took a death-defying ride down the rapids in a stolen boat. It was
on the river that young Paul made a name for himself as the finest fly-fisherman
in the territory. When Norman came back from college searching for himself
and his roots, it was to the river that he went to fish, alongside his brother.
"The Maclean family knew failure and success and laughter and fighting
and change and disappointment, but always the river was there. It was the
defining force and the spiritual center of that family. Montana would have
been just a wilderness; their home, four walls and a roof; their individual
lives just sound and furyif not for the river running through it all.
"I would like to suggest this morning that there is a river that runs
through the lives of Christian people, and that river is called the Purpose
of God ..."
For the remainder of the sermon Wilkerson deals with the tough questions
people in his congregation were facing after the death of a little girl in
the church. As he explains difficult theological concepts, he repeatedly comes
back to the image of the river, concluding with these words:
"Christian, whatever has happened to you in the past, whatever
your present circumstances may be, whatever the future might hold, know this:
A river runs through it, and that river is called the Purpose of God."
The ability to paint pictures on the walls of the soul is a hallmark of
great preachers.
Utilize Surprise
When we tell stories from an unexpected point of view, adopt the contrarian
perspective, or use a surprise ending, we can catch people familiar with the
conventional.
In "The Writing on the Wall," William Willimon ends a sermon on
the topic of God's judgment with a surprise:
"Some of you have heard me tell about my early ministry when
I served a little church in rural Georgia. One Saturday we went to the funeral
of a relative of somebody in my church. It was in a little country church
not of my denomination. I grew up in a big downtown church. I had never been
to a funeral like this one. They had the body out there. The casket was open,
and the funeral consisted of a sermon by their preacher.
"The preacher pounded on the pulpit and looked over at the casket.
He would say, 'It's too late for Joe. He might have wanted to get his life
together. He might have wanted to spend more time with his family. He might
have wanted to do that, but he's dead now. It is too late for him, but it
is not too late for you. There is still time for you. You still can decide.
You still are alive. It is not too late for you. Today is the day of decision.'
"Then the preacher told how a Greyhound bus had run into a funeral
procession once on the way to the cemetery, and that could happen today.
He said, 'You should decide today. Today is the day to get your life together.
Too late for old Joe, but it's not too late for you.'
"I was so angry at that preacher. On the way home, I told my wife,
'Have you ever seen anything as manipulative and as insensitive to that
poor family? I found it disgusting.'
"She said, 'I've never heard anything like that. It was manipulative.
It was insensitive. Worst of all, it was also true.'"
Willimon's surprise ending jolts listeners out of their complacency. Those
who've heard it all may seem to have stony hearts and minds. But "the
finest edge," said John Lyly, "is made with the blunt whetstone."
Preaching to the whetstones in our midst can sharpen our communication skills.
Craig Brian Larson is interim pastor of Lakeshore Assembly of God in Chicago,
Illinois.
Copyright (c) 1995 Christianity Today, Inc./Leadership Journal
|