I never want sermon prep to become a routine that doesn’t involve the Holy Spirit. My aim is to help you feel comfortable speaking in step with what He is saying in any given moment. After years of practicing, here are a few of my tips which have helped me prepare preaches that are breathed on by the Holy Spirit.
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Hi guys, I want to talk to you a little bit today about something I’m really passionate about which is preaching but not just a kind of dry preaching but prophetic preaching if you like. Preaching that’s been breathed on by Holy Spirit and where we feel confident and comfortable to speak and step with what he’s saying in the moment. So, just a few basics about how I approach preaching and how I approach preparing for sermons that I bring. I think every good sermon has to have three good, strong elements and these three elements I’d say are, firstly, revelation, secondly, crafting and thirdly, good delivery. So what do I mean by them? Well, the revelation is the moment where you get an aha moment, where you’re reading the Bible, where you’re reading something, and suddenly Holy Spirit lands on that in a way that it comes alive or fresh to you in that moment.
Where I’m preaching that’s where I start, I’m looking for that aha moment, I’m looking for that revelation moment where the word has come alive to me in a fresh way. Because if I can find that, then I know I’ve got kind of fresh bread to offer, a fresh treasure to show people. So, I think every good sermon starts with that where the person preparing has found that piece of revelation that comes alive to them. And then secondly, there’s the crafting, and this is, I think, where a lot of people fall down in preparing sermons. Sometimes we feel like the revelation in and of itself is enough and whilst it’s so important, unless we do some work in crafting a sermon, from that moment of revelation, we’ll struggle to take people on the journey in order for them to have their own aha moments.
So the second process part of preaching prep, if you like, is crafting, is taking that revelation that you have, and then intentionally building a sermon around that, that is clear, that is concise, that has illustrations that will bring life to that point. A sermon that really builds towards that one area of revelation that you had, and that crafting is so crucial. So that when you stand up to deliver what you’ve prepared, it’s not just your aha moment and then you’re hoping everyone else will catch on, but actually is something that you’ve crafted very deliberately to allow people to walk alongside you so that they can get to a moment of revelation for themselves. And then there’s the delivery, there’s the clear communication, there’s all the helpful kind of communication tools in terms of keeping eye contact and not using your hands too much that I often do. And on the delivery side, there’s the part where the prophetic comes in.
See, when I prepare my sermons it’s not so much that I write a script, but my crafting is very intentional. So, I will have a sermon structure that I’ll be able to use again and again in different settings. But in reality, whenever I preach the same sermon in different contexts, it can come out very differently. And that’s because when I’m speaking in the delivery part of the sermon, in all honesty, I’ve got two conversations going on in my head, even as I’m speaking the sermon. The one is focused on the preach, the one is focused on the thing that I’ve crafted so carefully, but the second conversation that is going on in my head is with Holy Spirit. And even as I am carefully preaching my sermon, I’m asking Holy Spirit, “Where are you landing on today? Which points that I carefully put together are really important to spend some time on today? And which points that I carefully put together are irrelevant for this congregation?”
And so, there’s this dual conversation going on in my head and it’s so important as preachers that we have those two conversations as we’re preaching. It’s so important that we don’t just rely on what we very carefully crafted but we understand that delivery is more than just being able to speak eloquently. But it’s actually about taking all that we’ve got, and then putting it at the feet of Jesus and leaning on him and saying, “Holy Spirit, now that I’ve got all of this that I’ve created so diligently, which part of it should I use and which part of it should I put aside for today?” Sometimes being a preacher can mean that you become scared to take risks, it becomes safer to lean on what you created rather than to lean on the quiet voice of Holy Spirit. But I wanna encourage you, all you preachers out there, do your work, do the crafting carefully, steward your gift really well and put the time in to create great preachings.
But don’t just rely on the work that you’ve done. In the moment when you’re standing on a platform and when you’re delivering to a congregation be asking Holy Spirit, what are you saying, and don’t be afraid to go off script, don’t be afraid to do whatever you feel Holy Spirit leading you to. Because at the end of the day no matter how incredible the preaches are that we prepare, they become powerless unless Holy Spirit breaths through our words. And so, that’s where the prophetic element comes in. That’s where the risk element comes in for us as preachers. We’ve done the work at home but when we’re on that platform, really it’s us with Holy Spirit partnering together, to deliver something that will bring life to people, that will bring transformation, and you can’t do that in and of yourself. No amount of work at home will be able to do that in and of itself. We need Holy Spirit inspired moment.
So, don’t be afraid to listen to him and to do what he’s telling you, even though it might not be in your notes. You never know, that might be the most life-giving element of your sermon. So, follow him, go where he’s leading and that’s where the adventure is at. And that’s where you really see that’s transformed.