Tag Archives: Expositional preaching

Expositional preaching Guards against hobby horses

Nothing can prevent a preacher with enough will and creativity from insisting on his hobby horses. John Stott retells the story of the Baptist preacher

“who had such pronounced views about baptism that he simply could not leave the subject alone. One morning he announced his text, ‘Adam, where art thou?’ He then continued, ‘There are three lines we shall follow. First, where Adam was; secondly, how he was to be got from where he was; and thirdly and lastly, a few words about baptism.’ ”

Even the best preachers are tempted to emphasize their favored subjects or to skip over the hard texts! But systematic expositional preaching does impose some much-needed discipline upon the pulpit and the preacher … and on the congregation too for that matter. After all, we may want our pet subjects addressed. We may believe that our priorities ought to be the priorities of every sermon (and of every other church member). But when preacher and hearer alike learn to submit themselves to the text, and the next, and to the one after that, we are spared from imbalance and idiosyncrasy. Peter Adam put it well when he said,

“Expository sermons help us to let God set the agenda for our lives. The danger of topical preaching is that it implies that we know what is important! Expository preaching lets God set the agenda in an obvious and public way.”

Expository Preaching (Blessings of the Faith), David Strain

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Expositional preaching models How to read the Bible

Preaching shapes those who listen to it, not just by what is being taught but, over time, by the way in which it is taught. When preachers give weight to the authority of Scripture and devote themselves to understanding the details of each text and the scope of the whole, they train their hearers to do the same. Faithful exposition works to avoid imposing meanings upon the text. It strives to avoid spiritualizing or reducing historical narrative to an arbitrary allegory. It shuns proof texts and mystical “words from the Lord” that care nothing for literary context. It nails the spiritual and ethical and doctrinal and pastoral and evangelistic burdens of the preacher and the hearers to the text itself. Furthermore, it disciplines us to patiently listen to God in his Word in the confidence that if we simply follow the teaching that is already there, rather than rush on to our own preoccupations and priorities, we will find the wisdom we need. The preacher is not just a Bible teacher and an evangelist and a pastor in the pulpit. He is also a model Bible reader. Regularly sitting under consistent scriptural exposition trains our interpretive muscles, informs our instincts as readers, and equips us to read both responsibly and profitably.

Expository Preaching (Blessings of the Faith), David Strain

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