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Volume I: Called to Serve, January 1929-June 1951 |
Notes on Sermon Theory30 November 1948-16 February 1949 Types Of Outline (1) The ladder sermon-it takes one from point to points. It is a type of structure well adapted to argument persuasion and the appeal to reason. There is always a place for reasoned argument in the practice of preaching. (2) Jewel sermons-this consists of turning and idea around as one might turn a jewel in his fingers. Its usefullness consist in unity of theme, with diversity of relationship and application (allowing) diffeent facets to catch the light and throw it into different realms of experience. (3) The classification sermon-this is based in dividing people and things into different classes or types. When a speaker says, "there are four ways of acting in this situation," many of Jesus parables are classifications. (4) The skyrocket sermon is also very interesting. It is usually a life-situation sermon. This name is given because its movement follows that of a skyrocket in that it begins on the ground, rises to a height, then breaks into pieces and comes down to earth again. So the sermon begins on ground, in life; it travels up to a spiritual truth which has meaning for that situation on earth; and then the sermon comes down in seperate divisions to that situation. (5) The turn Sermon-So called because it has two divisions. It is usually setting forth opposing or contrasting aspects of one truth or one word of scripture. A good example is a sermon on "Living one day at a time." (6) The analogy sermon-This is the effort to impress a truth by analogy. A good example is that used in the forth Gospel. "I am the door," "I am the good shepherd." (7) The surprise package sermon -This is a sermon which, after it gets started and the ending scene predictable marks a surprise turning into unexpected territory. For an instance the text, "It is more blessed to give than to receive" may be a good starting point. Later the audience discovers that the point of the sermon is that is is also good to receive, the sermon being on the grace or art of receiving. (8) The chase sermon-This is in essence getting an audience to explore a problem and pursue a solution rather than merely anouncing the results to them. (9) The rebuttal sermon-It is, in the main, an answer to something that is considered false and dangerously misleading. A good example is to preach against the the statement of Karl Marx, 'Religion is the opiate of the people.' Sermon-And Seeing the Multitude he went up into the maintain-All preaching grows out of the needs of the people.
Preperation of the Minister
Beecher- Matthews - Psuedoepigraphs 228 M43 Preaching is a mixture of emotion and intellect. The dominant factor is a sermon is the object to be attained. Title - is the way of indicating I must attempt to get people to see, do, or be something. Preaching is for the When you deliver a sermon you must take into account the condition in which the sermon is preached. It is not an isolated fact. The sermon is a distinct art form just as the drama, an essay.
Title - is primarily for advertising purposes. The title is not the theme or subject. Conclusion Obedience to the Unenforceable. There is an area in life which can't be enforced by law. Are we obedient to the unenforceable? Preaching is not having to say something, but having something to say. the best way to get inspiration in through prespiration. Sorces of Material Ways to collect material for sermon Roach - Preaching Values in the Bible Last week we attempted to discuss the purpose of education. This week our discussion maoves toward [illegible]. Preaching from the Bible. If we agree that a sermon is the conveyance of a truth, then it is not necessary to preach from the Bible. A man should not read the bible to get a sermon; he should read the bible and get a sermon. A man should not read the bible to get inspiration. He should read the bible and get inspiration. Job 19:25 [Collosians?] 2:21 Acts 26:28 Gen 31:49 Ps 121:1 |