Thursday, October 27, 2022

John Woods, God is in the House: A Fresh Model for Shaping a Sermon

 

John Woods, God is in the House: A Fresh Model for Shaping a Sermon

Langham Preaching Resources, 2022

ISBN: 9781839732720 pb 225

 

Dr John Woods is a highly experienced free church pastor and preacher who has read deeply on the subject and has taught others to preach in the UK and around the world, especially in Latvia. This thoughtful and stimulating book is part manual part manifesto but it is more than a simple beginners guide. There is richness here and Woods is aware of the great privilege and profundity of preaching. It should go without saying, but the title is a useful reminder to us of the role of God in the preparation of the sermon and the aim of encountering God in his word studied and proclaimed. The priority of prayer and the centrality of the relationships between pastor and people shine through.

 

I imagine readers will differ on how helpful they find the controlling metaphor of housebuilding. I wondered at times whether the extra mental steps of remembering what was what and translating might have hindered. Some may find it makes the various elements memorable.

 

There is so much useful material in this book on many particular Bible passages too by way of illustration or application of the principles suggested. The reflections on the Biblical themes of place, house, building etc. are rewarding.

 

The key ideas of the model involve God the architect’s design of Scripture and how this should be reflected in the construction of the sermon. Christ is also the host and preachers are co-hosts. The door relates to introductions. Rooms might be the different moves in the sermon. Connections between them are considered (hallways, doorways, stairs, Wi-Fi, even!). The Bible provides pictures, windows and mirrors by which we see life, ourselves and God respectively (see p94f including the chart). How we exit really matters. Further chapters treat ambience and atmosphere, appropriate proportions (pace, variety), embodiment and the senses, and preaching Christ from all the Scriptures.

 

Absolute beginners might have benefited from a simplified summary but one of the strengths of this book is its openness. It gives principles and makes suggestions but it stresses truth through personality and the importance of our hearers’ context. There is place for imagination and creativity in preaching. We are warned against imagining that there is only one correct sermon from any given text.

 

I’m confident experienced preachers would benefit from this book.

 

Exercises are suggested.

 

Sample sermons are included on Jacob’s ladder (Genesis 28), Mark 2:1-12 and Revelation 22:1-6, with some introduction and reflection. A final chapter also discusses preaching at funerals.

 

Bibliography, Scripture index

 

Recommended reading:

Augustine, On Christian Teaching

Tom Long, The Witness of Preaching – best comprehensive book

David Helm, Expository Preaching – best short book

John Broadus, On The Preparation and Delivery of Sermons

 

* * *

 

Some bits I found especially noteworthy:

 

Foreword by Thomas Long:

 

George Steiner, Tolstoy or Dostoevsky p3, literary criticism “should arise out of a debt of love” – “In a manner evident yest mysterious [a work of literature] … seizes upon our imaginations. We are not the same when we put the work down as we were when we took it up.”

 

“good sermons are not prepared with a swagger but on our knees. Sermons are crafted in the environment of prayer, are formed out of a life of prayer and are not the trophies of skilled orators but are themselves the answers to prayer.” (Thomas Long, p. xvii)

 

Architect Yoshio Taniguchi: “Architecture is basically a container of something. I hope they will enjoy not so much the teacup, but the tea.”

 

* * *

 

Augustine, following Cicero, ***

 

Psalm 100:4, “Enter with the password: “Thank you!” (p.xxiii)

 

If preaching a sermon is like building a house, this does not consist of putting up the architectural plans on a notice board. “Cas Vos reminds us that true preaching “aims to provide music and not a lecture about music” (Sermon as a Work of Art, 372). “Preaching isn’t reading a road map; it’s taking people on a journey.” (Wiersbe, Preaching and Teaching with Imagination, 315)

 

“Christ is the foundation of every sermon. Every Christian sermon is the be preached in Christ’s name and every Christian sermon will in some way lead us to Christ.” (p10)

 

Tom Long – The preacher as witness. He must see something before he says something. The pulpit is not a lectern nor a podium but a witness stand. The preacher’s task s to tell the truth about what he has seen. (p11)

 

Homiletics is sometimes concerned to help preachers find their own voice, but their real task is to echo the voice of God in Scripture. Good preachers must first be good listeners and that requires an act of God – Isaiah 50:4 (p11)

 

"There is all the difference in the world between the person who always has to say something and someone who always has something to say." (p12)

 

The preacher as worker – 2 Tim 2:15 – a manual worker, someone like “a carpenter or a plumber, not a pen pusher sitting behind a desk” (Bray, Pastoral Epistles, p374) – handling correctly / rightly dividing a carpenter or butcher who can cut things up in the right way (Bray).

 

Carpenter’s rule – measure twice, cut once – careful accurate attention to detail

 

Walter Kaiser’s advice to preachers: “Keep your finger on the text.” (EMA 1987)

 

W. H. Griffith Thomas to ministers: “Think yourself empty; read yourself full; write yourself clear; pray yourself keen; then into the pulpit and let yourself go!” (p26)

 

Preachers must not only talk to people about God; they must talk to God about people (Dick Lucas, Colossians, p171f) (p27)

 

“Paul’s letter to the Ephesians consists of a two-part prayer [1:15-23; 3:14-21], boxed in theology, wrapped in exhortation and wrapped in love.” John White, People in Prayer, p125 (p29)

 

Keller – a friend lets you in and doesn’t let you down (p32)

 

Keller – one piece of advice for preachers: “More prayer. Much more.” (p33)

                                                                                                                       

James C. Howell: only preach if you have something big and true to say, something large which is the fruit of good seeing and thinking that can be said with some urgency (p36)

 

Haddon Robinson, Expository Preaching and “the big idea” (p37f)

 

Keller: “The concept of the ‘big idea’ within the text… is a bit artificial.”; “We must be careful of a kind of expository legalism in which it is assumed there can only be one exegetically accurate sermon and sermon theme on any one passage.” (Preaching, p250) (p38)

 

Proc Trust – theme sentence and aim sentence (p38)

 

Thomas Long – focus (controlling unifying theme – what the sermon is about) and function (what the preacher hopes the sermon will create or cause to happen in the hearers – the hoped for change) – the claim of the text: what we hear on this day, from this text, for these people, in these circumstances, at this juncture of their lives (p39)

 

The intention(s) of the text should give our sermon a sense of purpose (p41)

 

The door / introduction / beginning of the sermon (p45ff)

 

Jesus said nothing to the crowd without using a parable (Mt 13:34f) but the apostles don’t seem to have followed this example. We are not necessarily called to preach like Jesus but to preach Jesus (p54)

 

Patterns of five in the Bible (p65) – Torah; The Writings; The Five Scrolls; The Five Books of the Psalms; Matthew (p67); Mark (p68f)

 

Mark 4 – Great, v37, 39, 41 (p73, 83)

 

Paul Scott Wilson, The Four Page Sermon, trouble in the text, trouble in the world, grace in the text, grace in the world (p73f)

 

Mark’s intercalations / sandwiches (p83f)

 

David Jackman – it might be better if sermon headings / points are didactic rather than merely descriptive of decorative (p89) – i.e. they convey the content you want people to attend to

 

Westminster Standards: “The illustrations, of what kind soever, ought to be full of light, and such as may convey the truth into the hearer’s heart with spiritual delight.” (p100)

 

“Don’t stop, finish!” (Tim Hawkins) (p114)

 

“Our brother needs no introduction, but boy does he need a conclusion!” (Charles Swindoll) (p114)

 

“The secret of a good sermon is to have a good beginning and a good ending and having the two as close together as possible.” (George Burns)

 

Mark 1:21-45 – a day in the life of Jesus (p143)

 

“Is my sermon simply an exercise in information transfer; my notes to my hearers’ notebook?” (p147)

 

“Is my sermon so heavy on imperatives that my long nagging rant has lost connection to the indicatives of God’s word?” (p148)

 

The senses and the main sections in Mark:

Proclaiming the gospel: hearing

The cleansing of the lepper: touch

Miracles of feeding: taste

Miracles of restored eyesight: sight

Anointing with a fragrant ointment: aroma (p155f)

 

Augustine: “The Old Testament is a fully furnished room that is poorly lit” (p158)

 

Should we preacher the Bible or the Gospel? P. T. Forsyth Lyman Beecher Lectures at Yale – the Bible, the preacher and the church are all made by the gospel. The Bible and the gospel as conjoined twins – separation would threaten the life of both. Sermons must not be talks about the Bible but gospel messages p161

 

Reading suggestions on preaching Christ from the OT (p166, footnote)

 

Bullinger’s statement, Second Helvetic Confession 1566 chapter 1, “The preaching of the word of God is the word of God”. James Kay calls this “the most influential theological sentence ever written about preaching.” (p168)

 

Journey through Scripture, don’t just repeat map co-ordinates! Scripture not neat and manageable. Don’t micromanage or muffle it but allow it to speak for itself (p178)

 

Westminster Directory of Public Worship 1644, burial of the dead without ceremony (p209)

 

Capturing the essence of the deceased in a way that is evocative not exhaustive (p209)

 

A prayer provoked by a funeral (p210)

 

The story of Arthur Stace, Mr Eternity – Bible Society Australia (p212f)

Friday, October 21, 2022

Nick Tucker, 12 Things God Can’t Do… and how they can help you sleep at night

 

Nick Tucker, 12 Things God Can’t Do… and how they can help you sleep at night

(The Good Book Company, 2022)

ISBN: 9781784986766 pb 185pp

 

It’s a pleasure to be able to recommend this book which seeks to introduce and apply the classical doctrine of God. Conversational in style with interesting introductions.

 

Tucker argues that God cannot sleep, learn, be surprised, change his mind, be seen, bear to look on sin, change, be lonely, suffer, die, be tempted, lie or disown himself. And shows why these apparent limitations are good things – glories of God.

 

Each claim is grounded in Scripture and applied. There are some good quotations from the Fathers. Interludes consider the incarnation in which God slept, went to school, appeared, suffered and dies alone, and was tempted, as a man.

 

I especially enjoyed the little outline on Mark 4: a mega windstorm (v37), a mega calm (v39) and a mega fear (v41). “The disciples end the story more afraid of having Jesus in the boat than they were at having an increasing quantity of the see in there” (p22)

 

Pp73, 95f – 1 Timothy 1:17, the invisible God, whom no one has seen or can see (6:15f) – cf. the appearing of Jesus 3:14-16; 6:14-16 – the appearing of the invisible God!

 

1 Sam 15:29, 35

Sam Chan, How To Talk About Jesus (Without Being THAT Guy)

 

Sam Chan, How To Talk About Jesus (Without Being THAT Guy): Personal Evangelism in a Skeptical World

Zondervan Reflective (2020)

ISBN: 9780310112693 pb 153pp

 

Sam Chan (an Australian medical doctor with a PhD from TEDS) has written a helpful and accessible book of practical wisdom on evangelism in a post-Christendom context.

 

The main thing of course is to love Jesus and love your neighbours, and be prayerful and ready to speak. This book is not long on what is the gospel or motivation to share it, but it comes out of practical experience of friendship, hospitality and seeing others come to Christ. And helping Christians to come out to their friends and talk about Jesus.

 

This is a quick engaging read I reckon many believers would benefit from.

 

(Chan is also the author of a bigger book: Evangelism in a Skeptical World: How to Make the Unbelievable News about Jesus More Believable (Zondervan) and blogs at http://www.espressotheology.com/)

 

 

Stetzer in the Foreword: “Jesus’ last words [in The Great Commission] should be our first priority.” (p.xi)

 

Don’t just do evangelism, be evangelistic. Evangelism is a lifestyle change.

 

8 tips:

 

Tip 1 (p1ff) - Community (your friendship circle) strongly influences your plausibility structures, what seems believable to you. Seek to merge your Christian and non-Christian friendship circles. Evangelism is a team sport! Belonging often precedes believing.

 

It takes about two years to form a new network of friends (p10)

 

Sociologist say we need a tribe of 150, a network of 30 friends and an inner circle of 5 trusted friends. And in the West we often lack these. (p13)

 

Asking for a favour is a great way to build relationship (p14)

 

Tip 2 (p23ff): Go to their things and they will come to your things. Get involved in the village hub. Build trust and social capital.

 

Showing up need to mean total approval / adoption p31ff

 

Tip 3 (p35ff): Three concrete bite-sized achievable steps of evangelism: coffee, dinner, gospel. Or it could be beer, pizza, gospel – be creative!

 

Conversations typically progress through layers: (1) coffee, descriptive of interests (2) dinner, (prescriptive) values (3) worldview, frameworks by which we interpret the world (p36ff)

 

Nudge questions can give permission to move through the layers towards religion / spirituality / what really matters / God (p41f)

 

Hospitality in the NT (p44)

 

Hospitality is the secret sauce of evangelism which gives space and permission for gospel conversations to occur (p44f)  Share food, connect, relate, listen (p47)

 

Of course hospitality can be costly in terms of time, effort, money etc.

 

Tip 4 (p51ff): Listen! The golden rule of evangelism: evangelise as you would be evangelized!

 

Unless your friends feel heard, they wont listen

 

Hear, understand (summarise), empathise (how do they feel?)

 

Let the other person speak first and more. They will likely reciprocate and listen to you.

 

Logos (what is said); pathos (how it makes one feel); ethos (how one lives)

 

 Tip 5 (p63ff): Tell a better, more attractive story, which makes them wish that Christianity is true

 

Western Christians can sometimes feel or be told that they are on the wrong side of history. “Right now, secularism is actually declining all over the world – and Christianity is the fastest-growing religion.” (p68)

 

Some stories about Jesus etc. we could share with our friends in different situations (p69ff)

 

Ditch the Christian jargon (p71ff)

 

A helpful gospel outline (cf. Tim Keller): manger (incarnation), cross (atonement), king (restoration) (p79)

 

Telling your story (p81ff)

 

Tip 6 (p91ff): Tell them stories about Jesus

 

We should see our friends as gifts from God, not means to an end. But we also want to look for opportunities to speak of Jesus. We are looking for that sweet spot of continuing the friendship but speaking about Jesus. (p93)

 

The value of a nudge question to move the conversation deeper (p93)

 

Perhaps we should evangelise more like counsellors than preachers – being skilled at asking the right questions to help others talk and discover answers for themselves. Evangelism through conversation not monologue (p94)

 

Tip 7 (p103ff): Become their unofficial de facto chaplain so that in a time of crisis they will look to you for connection to the sacred / transcendent / God

 

The value of wisdom / living wisely as a way of making the Christian faith seem believable

 

Chaplains know people’s names and remember their kids, what they said etc. – take an interest, show you care, pay attention – be a calm, non-anxious presence – offer to pray

 

Medic joke: You only need to ask two questions to be a psychiatrist: (1) “How are you doing?” (2) “How are you really doing?” (p112) – The power of the second question

 

Tip 8 (p117ff): Lean in to disagreement

 

It is inevitable that our non-Christian friends will disagree with the gospel at some point. We don’t need to be disagreeable. They are really disagreeing with Jesus, not with our personal views.

 

Gently challenge – “Everyone is only two “why” questions away from not being able to give a rational answer.” (p122)

 

e.g. what basis for human rights / dignity / equality / freedom beyond Western convention

 

Not only responses to some common non-Christian objections / defeater beliefs but also positive reasons to believe / want to believe / need to believe

 

Win the friendship not the argument. No one really wants to have to admit they were wrong and lost the argument. It is not us verses them. We may want the same things as our non-Christian friends but have different starting points. We are not trying to beat them but to invite them to consider something from a new perspective (p130f)

 

Appendixes on resources and work place evangelism (coffee – dinner – gospel – next steps leaflet)  

Thursday, October 06, 2022

Judges 11

 You may wish to look away now if you are going to listen to this sermon! 

There is nothing like a snappy outline to a chapter which James Jordan calls probably the hardest story to understand in the book of Judges. (Jordan, Judges, p204). Wilcock (IVP BST) p80 – one of the greatest characters of Judges – one of the most enigmatic – his story perhaps the most gripping, most moving, most confusing and puzzling in the book

Judges 11 (p254) – WHO WILL BE KING?

 

Chapter 10 had a cliff-hanger ending - 10v17f - No leader / judge – Wil God send a rescuer? Who?

 

(1) JEPHTHAH & THE PEOPLE: LET JEPHTHAH BE KING!

 

Jephthah a sinner, of course, but a deliverer sent by the LORD (1 Samuel 12:11 ) and a hero of faith (Hebrews 11:32)

 

But an unlikely saviour with a strange birth - the son of a prostitute! (v1)

Illegitimate children were excluded from full citizenship in Israel (Deut 23:2)

 

Prostitution in Israel literal and spiritual – a strange woman and strange gods

 

Jephthah despised and rejected by his brothers (v2)

Divisions amongst God’s people

 

Jephthah flees and a group of adventurers gather round him as his followers (v3) like Abimelech (9v4) (“vain / empty men”) and like David (1 Samuel 2:22)

 

Israel drove out Jephthah but they could not drive out the Ammonites

They get rid of their brother but will they get rid of their false gods? 

 

The people cry out to Jephthah to be their leader in their desperate distress (vv4-6)

 

Jephthah: “Will you really be loyal to me?” (vv7ff, v9ff)

 

The people: “Yes, Jephthah, save us, be our head, we will serve you loyally” (vv8, v10ff)

 

Their treatment of Jephthah parallels their treatment of the LORD – who do they want as king? Will they really be loyal? (cf. 10:10ff – or just a desperate cry for help?)

 

A man who shouldn’t even be a full citizen becomes their Saviour and ruler!

How bad things are if the best man available ought to have been disqualified

The Ammonites are called to repentance and offered peace (v12)

 

And reject peace in stubborn self-righteousness (v13-28)

 

Jephthah’s arguments:

Israel took the land from the Amorites not from the Ammonites (vv21-22)

God gave the land to Israel (vv23-24)

Sarcastic / mockery - “How’s your false god working out for you, Ammonites?!” (v24)

Israel has possessed the land for 300 years (v26)

 

11v27: “The LORD is judge” could be said to be the central statement of this book

 

Through this surprising Saviour, the LORD delivers his people and judges his enemies (v32-33)

 

(2) THE LORD: I AM KING!

 

Jephthah’s vow (v30) – his only child wholly devoted to the LORD (v31)

 

There will be no dynasty for Jephthah – no heir, no child to be “king” next

 

The LORD is king

 

Humble service of the LORD and his kingdom, not my own plans / dynasty / empire

 

(3) THE LORD: I WILL SEND MY KING!

 

The LORD’s perfect rescuer-king, the Messiah, is yet to come

A king born in unusual circumstances, with a strange birth

But unlike Jephthah, as promised from the tribe of Judah (Genesis 49:10)

Who will be despised and rejected (Isaiah 53:3)

Who will save God’s people and judge his enemies

 

Covenant loyalty to the despised and rejected surprising Saviour

  

A prayer for sermon preparation

 

Do you have favourite prayers you pray as you come to prepare your sermon? Here’s some things I think it’s worth praying.

Maybe the main thing to pray is "Lord, prepare me as I seek to prepare my sermon!"

 

Our Father in heaven, thank you for your powerful, life-giving Word.

And thank you that I have this time to study it.

And the awesome privilege of proclaiming it to others.

Please would you meet with me afresh in your Word.

Give me a teachable heart.

Open my eyes, that I might see marvellous things out of your Law. [Psalm 119:18]

Nourish my soul.

Renew my joy and confidence in the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Give me grace to live in the light of all that you teach me.

And help me as I prepare to speak your Word to others.

Increase my love for you and for your hearers.

Please give me insight and wisdom into the good news of the Lord Jesus and into my hearers’ needs and situations.

Help me to concentrate and use my time well for the edification of your body, for the salvation of sinners, for the good of my own soul and for your glory.

Cause me to trust your Spirit’s power to use my weak efforts and to give the growth.

In Jesus' name.

Amen.


The end of Psalm 19 also makes a suitable prayer:

After speaking of God's revelation in creation and in his Law:

But who can discern their own errors?
    Forgive my hidden faults.
13 Keep your servant also from willful sins;
    may they not rule over me.
Then I will be blameless,
    innocent of great transgression.

14 May these words of my mouth and this meditation of my heart
    be pleasing in your sight,
    Lord, my Rock and my Redeemer.

Monday, October 03, 2022

Hymns and songs which are prayers

In addition of course to many of the Psalms, here are some random examples of songs and hymns which are prayers (with thanks to those who have added to the list):

(Prayer can of course include praise. There is no hard and fast division but I have generally gone here for hymns or songs which directly address God, or one of the divine persons, and which include some kind of petition or request)

Abide with me

As we gather may Your Spirit work within us

Away in a manger

Be Thou My Vision

Bind us together, Lord

Breathe on me, Breath of God

Come down O Love divine

Come, Holy Spirit (Veni Sancte Spiritus)

Come thou long expected Jesus

Dear Lord and Father of mankind

Eternal Father Strong to Save … for those in peril on the sea

Father hear the prayer we offer

From the depths of shame and sorrow https://www.praise.org.uk/hymn/from-the-depths-of-shame-and-sorrow/

God be in my head

God save our gracious King! – The National Anthem

Guide Me O Thou Great Jehovah / Redeemer

Lead us, heavenly Father, lead us

Lord, for the years your love has kept and guided

Lord of the church we pray for our renewing

Lord the light of your love is shining.... Shine, Jesus, Shine 

Love divine, all loves excelling

Make me a channel of your peace

May the mind of Christ my saviour dwell in me from day to day

O Breath of life, come sweeping through us

O great God of highest heaven - (Valley of Vision) Sovereign Grace Music

O Lord, my Rock and my Redeemer (Sovereign Grace Music)

Open the eyes of my heart, Lord

Speak O Lord as we come to you

Take my life and let it be consecrated, Lord, to thee

Teach me, my God and king, in all things thee to see

Thine be the glory, risen, conquering Son