The one thing most of us would rather do than preach, is hear another great
preacher. I mean a "Great" preacher. I've learned plenty from hearing
the best preachers, especially in a live setting. For most of my life, when
sitting under a great preacher, I've taken dual sets of notes, including
content on one list, and a separate set of notes on their communication skills.
What have I discovered in these 40 years’ worth of notes? Here's my summary:
1. Content:
All of
my "Great Preachers" had something to say. Even as "great
communicators," they didn't substitute style for substance.
2. Passion:
The
best Preachers I've heard had a passion for what they said which seemed to
spring from a general spiritual burden for people, which is different from just
loving to preach. Messages are easier to love than people.
3. Credibility:
Great
Preachers practice what they preach -- they live it.' "Great
Communicators" might get away with all kinds of private sin, but not truly
"Great Preachers." I've had to downgrade some of my "Great
Preachers to "Great Communicators" over the last few decades.
4. Prepared:
Great
Preachers don't "wing it" -- even if the people couldn't tell. (They
can.)
5. Notes:
Most
Great Preachers limited their use of notes. Thanks to TV, preachers can no
longer read to a crowd with their nose buried in their notes.
6. Simple:
Great
Preachers have a way of bringing high truths down to the bottom shelf, yet
without compromising the greatness of truth. In this they are like Jesus.
People don't leave a truly great preacher saying, "Boy He's smart!"
They say, "Now I understand!"
7. Short:
While
Great Preachers are able to hold your attention in a preaching marathon, most
were able to also preach a great sermon in 30 minutes or less. (I don't know
about you, but I've discovered that 30 minutes is plenty of time for a preacher
to give a sermon, except in the few instances when I myself am the preacher.)
8. Convicting:
People
hear God prick their conscience when Great Preachers preach. They give more
than a "sermon" or "talk" -- they deliver a
"message" from God.
9. Self-revealing:
Great
Preachers know how to tell personal stories on themselves. They become real to
their listeners. Yet they do this while avoiding the ego-centric
self-absorption of many pop preachers who make themselves the subject of the
sermon instead of God.
10. Confidence:
Great
Preachers don't seem scared. Maybe they are, but they never seem to show it.
11. Tone:
While
the great preachers of the past often thundered out salvos like a giant
cannons, the Great Preachers of today almost all use a conversational tone of
voice. They know that people today don't listen to speakers who shout.
12. Story-telling:
All
Great Preachers through history have this trait in common: they are good story
tellers. That goes for both telling story illustrations and direct Bible
stories.
13. Prop:
I've
noticed that some Great Preachers use an object or prop to get their truth
across -- usually an ordinary thing like a salt shaker, a packet of yeast, or a
glass of water.
14. Humor:
Many
Great Preachers are funny, though not all of them. The humorous preachers are
able to "get them back" after they've been on a roll, so that the
message can stay central, not the humor. Those who can't keep the message
central are merely "Great Communicators" or "Christian
Humorists," not "Great Preachers."
15. Pace:
Evan
fast-paced Great Preachers use pauses where you can catch your breath. The
listener then can digest their last few bites of truth without bolting the
whole meal down undigested. Many Great Preachers follow the traditional
Afro-American pace in the poem: "Begin low; Continue slow; Rise up higher;
Catch on fire; Sit down in the storm."
16. Eyes:
Great
Preachers keep their eyes glued to their audience. Each person in the
congregation feels the preacher is "looking right me."
17. Fast-on-feet:
Most
Great Preachers are able to work in the surprises in a service like thunder,
scratching on the roof, sirens etc.
18. Intensity:
The
Great Preachers I've heard varied their intensity -- sometimes they were
louder, then they'd get as soft as a whisper, sometimes they'd be so intense
that my own stomach would ache, then they'd drop back and adopt a tender or
even chuckling style.
19. Movement:
Most
Great Preachers I've heard used their bodies to preach along with their words.
They seemed to intuitively know that a congregation is getting a full 55% of
the communication from their facial gestures and body movement.
20. Decision:
My
Great Preachers never gave a message and walked away. They called for my
specific and personal decision in response to God's truth. They preached for
decision, not for entertainment or education. Perhaps I call them
"Great" partially because God changed me under their influence.
21. Landing:
All
the really Great Preachers I've heard were able to land their message on the
first pass. Most lesser preachers circle the airport several times before
bringing it in, or (worse still) do several "touch-and-Go's" before
landing. You know, it's a funny thing... I can always see when the other guy
should land his sermon, better than knowing when to bring my own message down
on the runway.
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Your response: Tuesday@indwes.edu
By:
Keith Drury, 1996. You are free to transmit, duplicate or distribute this
article for non-profit use without permission.
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