First Sunday of Advent
December 3, 2006

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

These are the sermons as they appear in Preacher's Magazine. Go to the home page and select Sermons from the menu bar to get to the full length sermons.

Series Overview


Sermons for Advent and Christmas

The preaching helps and sermons for Advent this year are provided by Dr. Steve Estep. Steve recently completed a doctoral program in preaching and is serving as senior pastor of the Harrisonville, Missouri, Church of the Nazarene.

Introduction to the Series


Advent means coming. During this season we anticipate the Second Advent, and celebrate the first. But it’s also a time when we see the advent, or coming of people, to the sanctuary who aren’t often there. After a decade of Advent preaching, I continue to be frustrated when folks come for the Christmas program or Cantata and never get it that Jesus’ coming was supposed to make an every-day difference for all of us. It causes me to keep asking, “How can our Advent preaching help people get it?” Somehow, we have got to preach sermons that help people not only hear, but also experience the gospel.
Experiential preaching requires the preacher to give attention to the hearer’s emotive process. According to Dr. Frank Thomas, appeal to the senses begets identification.1 If hearers identify with the preacher, it opens the door for emotional involvement. Once the hearer is emotionally engaged, they will be interested in whatever else the preacher has to say, and as a result their mind and heart are open to new possibilities. In other words, a hearer who identifies with the preacher, becomes emotionally engaged in the sermon, and has an interest in what is being said, is a hearer who will be receptive to change. Attention to this emotive process calls the preacher to be intentional in sermon design, so hearers are given the opportunity fully to experience and willingly embrace the implications of the gospel—which more often than not call for some kind of change.
Advent, maybe more so than any other season of the Christian year, is full of possibilities for the preacher to engage the hearers through sense appeal. The sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and touches people experience throughout Advent can be a deep well from which the preacher can draw to evoke identification from the congregation. In a season where so many non-Christians make their annual obligatory visit to church, it is imperative that we preachers make connections that at least open the door for life change to happen. This sermon series is designed to capitalize on the sense appeal of Advent so emotionally engaged hearers might not just hear, but experience the God who has come to dwell among us.

Sermons for Epiphany

The sermons for the weeks between Epiphany and Lent are provided by Dr. Brad Estep (no relation, as far as they know). Brad is senior pastor of the Winter Haven, Florida, Church of the Nazarene. He holds a Ph.D. in homiletics from Union Theological Seminary.

Introduction to the Series


If the weeks of the year were divided like a pizza into 10 slices, these Sundays (January 14-February 11, 2007) would probably not be the first slice chosen and devoured. In the Christian calendar, they are squeezed between Epiphany (which occurs on Saturday, January 6 but would be celebrated in most churches on Sunday, January 7) and Transfiguration Sunday (February 18; the last Sunday before Ash Wednesday on February 21). This portion of the year is called “Ordinary Time.”
For many churches, other factors influence these weeks much more than issues related to the Christian calendar. These weeks at the beginning of the year are sometimes devoted to stewardship campaigns or to revival preparation or to “priority evaluation.” In America, these are the weeks of football playoffs and Super Bowl hype. Also, these are the weeks in which the frantic preparations for Christmas and the exhausting celebrations of the New Year meet the letdown of resolutions made and already broken.
Because this series of sermons is not tied to the lectionary readings for these particular Sundays, it would be possible to move them a week forward and therefore begin them on the first Sunday of the new year (January 7) or move them backward and have the series conclude on the last Sunday before the beginning of the Lenten season (February 18). These kinds of decisions are best made well in advance and are subject to the idiosyncrasies and circumstances of particular congregations and settings for ministry.