Welcome to Preacher's Magazine
Thanks for your feedback and suggestions on the first two issues of Preacher's
Magazine. Once again, for those who may have missed it, let us give you
a quick orientation to how this resource tool can be used.
While each edition will feature different aspects of the pastoral task
of preaching, the content will be focused on preaching material for those
seasons. The headings of each section list the seasonal Sunday, date,
selected Scripture, and possible title for the sermon (e.g., Pentecost
Sunday. June 3, 2001. "Knowing Our Identity: Citizens of the Alternative
Kingdom").
Following the headings are three categories for reflection on the passage:
Listening to the Text; Engaging the Text; and Preaching the Text. Because
the purpose of Preacher's Magazine is to aid in sermon preparation, each
section will have just enough material to begin the process, allowing
the preacher to shape and direct the sermon according to the needs of
the congregation. For your convenience a sermon for each text can be downloaded
from the Preacher's Magazine web site at www.preachersmagazine.org.
The following are some helpful insights to understanding our method in
each category:
LISTENING TO THE TEXT
There are at least three questions that help a preacher listen to the
text: (1) What is the context? (2) What is the form? (3) What is the content?
For a detailed discussion of how to ask each of these questions of a particular
text, go to www.preachersmagazine.org and click on "Past Issues."
The article "How to Use the New Preacher's Magazine" from the
Advent/Christmas 2000-2001 issue will give you guidance.
ENGAGING THE TEXT
Once questions of context, form, and content have been answered, the preacher
will move to theological reflection on the text. Although there are many
ways to reflect upon a text, we have chosen three simple questions.
1. What is the need of the passage?
This refers to the basic human problem or question that a passage of Scripture
is addressing.
2. What is God's answer to that need?
Just as every passage deals with a basic human dilemma, so every passage
also offers God's answer to that problem.
3. How does the passage call us to respond?
While hope for human need rests in God's grace and not our endeavors,
good preaching insists that people respond to God's activity in their
lives. The faithful proclamation of God's Word always calls forth a decision.
PREACHING THE TEXT
Once the preacher has listened to and engaged the text, it is time to
write the sermon. This becomes the natural time to consider contemporary
analogies or illustrations that will highlight and make clear an important
aspect of the passage. The preacher now begins to strategize creative
and imaginative ways in which the sermon can refunction its message to
the contemporary audience and communicate the original intent of the passage.
The ultimate goal of Preacher's Magazine is not to make preaching easier.
It is to make preaching better, and thereby bring glory to the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
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