Useful discussion with Revd Dr Michael Ovey in Christians in the Modern World lecture today led to some thoughts:
A rhetorical (structural) analysis of a usual sermon:
Introduction
Good gag / funny story / set piece illustration
State
Re-state
Explain
Illustrate (story / comparison)
Apply
Leave (move on) REPEAT X3
Conclusion
Or maybe, as I discussed with Liam Beadle, a more Anglican model:
(Something or other – for non-evangelicals only)
Biblical text (optional for non-evangelicals)
Something else
Relation of Bible and something else in some way or something
Repeat with other texts a number of times
(The eucharist – for Anglo-Catholics only)
Suitable something or others are poems, quotations from Kafka or anyone clever (these could be from a book of quotations or even a book of quotations to be used in sermons and need not be in context or understood), clever allusions, Latin tags, allusions to the second world war or holocaust, spurious statistics from some dodgey survey, articles from The Spectator or Guadian, views from the study window, what my wife said, funny incidents involving embarrassing my children, anything about me (count the personal pronouns in any sermon), anything else.
Other models:
Meditation – sloppy sermon with gaps or questions
One main point – from the text
Lots of points – maybe the number suggested by the text
Something interesting from the text
Various puritan models – uses of doctrines for different classes of hearers
Themes / Topics
Overviews
Whole sermon on one word
Sermon on whole Bible
Mock interviews
Imagine you were... Sermons in the voice of or perpective of
Fill in the handout preaching
Tell them what you are going to tell them
Tell them
Tell them what you told them
Stand up
Speak up
Shut up
Preach as Father, Judge, King from your throne
Sermons addressed to God as prayers - he has heard enough prayers that are sermons so he's used to putting up with it
Keep it fresh!
Any other ideas?
2 comments:
On camp we go for: State, Explain, Restate, Illustrate, Apply, Leave. Which has the advantage of forming the acronym SERIAL.
Just teach the bally Bible.
Post a Comment