July 14, 2010

Extemporaneous Preaching

I’ve previously mentioned an article R.C. Sproul contributed in The Preacher and Preaching: Reviving the Art in the Twentieth Century. What I didn’t mention was that in the same article he discussed the subject of extemporaneous preaching. It was around that same time that I listened to a lecture by Dr. John Carrick entitled The Extemporaneous Mode of Preaching. All of this, coupled with being challenged by my own pastor and my preaching lecturer, left me with some decisions to make in this regard. With a lot of prayer and a deep breath, I decided to move away from the safety of the fourteen-page manuscript I would normally take into the pulpit and instead I took only four.

As regular readers will know, extemporaneous preaching is just one of a number of areas related to preaching that has been on my mind over the past months.

Well, with that as a little bit of background, extemporaneous preaching has come up again. This time David Murray has re-posted an article originally written by his friend Jerrold Lewis, Pastor of Lacombe Free Reformed Church. You can read the article in its entirety here; however, here’s a short snippet:

I have found out recently that whenever you mention extemporaneous preaching to others, especially to others in the ministry, you are often met with some serious cautions such as, “Extemporaneous preaching lacks direction. It is less doctrinal. You will find yourself falling into the same rut, saying the same thing over and over”, etc. But what I have come to discover is many people confuse extemporaneous preaching with impromptu preaching. There is a big difference. Impromptu preaching is preaching on the spot, off the top of your head with no preparation, relying on the Holy Spirit to guide you. I am opposed to this practice as a model based on 2 Timothy 2:15, “Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth”. I think this is mysticism plain and simple. However extemporaneous preaching is not of this species, not at all.

So preacher, what has been your experience with full manuscript vs. full notes vs. less notes vs. nothing, in the pulpit? Is there a one size fits all, or must we each examine our own giftings and preach by the enabling of the Spirit as best we can?

Read all of Without Notes.

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July 7, 2010

Evangelistic Preaching

When Iain Murray gave several warnings regarding today’s resurgence of “expository preaching”, one of his concerns was the general demise of the “evangelistic sermon”. Remembering this, when I saw David Murray’s series, “What’s happened to Evangelistic Preaching?” I immediately download it. In that series David Murray addresses four key points:

  1. The Rarity of Evangelistic Preaching
  2. The Reasons for Evangelistic Preaching
  3. The Range of Evangelistic Preaching
  4. The Results of Evangelistic Preaching

This subject has been on my mind since Iain Murray first raised it, so David’s subsequent words have been extremely helpful in understanding what it is they were on about. I confess, I’d never considered anything within the Church besides a “teaching sermon”. I think I would fall into David Murray’s a “teaching sermon with an evangelistic PS” category. That said, I always aim to preach Christ and bring the Gospel forth throughout the sermon as the Gospel is for Christians too; however, if you read the series you’ll realise that “evangelistic preaching” is different again.

I’ve been challenged by this and I’ll continue to pray and read in this area. May I encourage you to read David Murray’s series, and I’ll leave you with a fascinating quote by Martin Lloyd-Jones (quoted in David’s series):

“If I am asked which sermons I wrote, I have already said that I used to divide my ministry, as I still do, into edification of the saints in the morning and a more evangelistic sermon in the evening. Well, my practice was to write my evangelistic sermon. I did so because I felt that in speaking to the saints, to the believers, one could feel more relaxed. There, one was speaking in the realm of the family. In other words, I believe that one should be unusually careful in evangelistic sermons. That is why the idea that a fellow who is merely gifted with a certain amount of glibness of speech and self-confidence, not to say cheek, can make an evangelist is all wrong. The greatest men should always be the evangelists, and generally have been; and the idea that Tom, Dick and Harry can be put up to speak on a street corner, but you must have a great preacher in a pulpit in a church is, to me, the reversing of the right order. It is when addressing the unbelieving world that we need to be most careful; and therefore I used to write my evangelistic sermon and not the other…”

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June 7, 2010

Six Questions To Ask Yourself As You Examine Your “Call” To Pastoral Ministry

David Murray has put together a quick check-list of questions to ask yourself as you examine and test your “call” to pastoral ministry. His motivation? Him continually being asked, “How can I know if I am called to pastoral ministry?”

Here are the six questions:

  1. Do you have a holy desire (1 Tim. 3:1)?
  2. Do you have a Christ-like character?
  3. Do you have spiritual maturity (1 Tim. 3:6)?
  4. Do you have the necessary gifts (1 Tim. 3:1-7; Titus 1:6-9)?
  5. Do you have a proven track record?
  6. Do you have external confirmation?

Be sure to read David’s explanation of each question.

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June 1, 2010

What’s “Normal” Pastoral Ministry?

In a couple of really helpful and extremely practical posts David Murray outlines what his “normal” week of pastoral ministry looked like, and what one of his “normal” pastoral visits looked like. If you’re in the ministry or preparing to enter the ministry then I’m confident you’ll be blessed, if not challenged, reading those posts.

Whoever says pastoral ministry is easier than a typical 9-5 job doesn’t know what happens Monday to Saturday!

A “normal” week of pastoral ministry
A “normal” pastoral visit

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March 29, 2010

Video: Dispensational Premillennial Timeline

For those interested in the Dispensational Premillennial view of eschatology, you may find this short video by David Murray helpful: Dispensational Premillennial Timeline.

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Video: Premillennial Timeline

For those interested in the Premillennial view of eschatology, you may find this short video by David Murray helpful: Premillennial Timeline.

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March 25, 2010

Video: Postmillennial Timeline

For those interested in the Postmillennial view of eschatology, you may find this short video by David Murray helpful: Postmillennial Timeline.

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March 24, 2010

Endtimes Q&A (Free E-Book)

David Murray has produced a free e-book entitled, Endtimes Q&A.

This is some of what David Murray has to say about it:

” In the interests of clarity, precision, simplicity and brevity, the material is presented in question and answer (or “catechism”) format…As this is only an introduction to the four main millennial views, I have kept things brief. I have also focused on the mainstream of each view rather than all the variations within each.”

Download Endtimes Q&A (PDF).

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Video: Amillennial Timeline

For those interested in the Amillennial view of eschatology, you may find this short video by David Murray helpful: Amillennial Timeline.

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February 18, 2010

Oh Boy! Oh No! Oh Well. Oh Wow!

…are four stages of software development that David Murray suggests can parallel the preacher and his sermon preparation.

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