Preach Better: 10 Ways to Communicate the Gospel More Effectively
By Chris McCurley, Adam Faughn, Steve Higginbotham and
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About this ebook
You preach…
But you probably wish you could be better. How many Sunday nights have you sat and wished you were a better preacher? How many Friday afternoons have you spent wishing you had crafted a better message for Sunday? You know you'll never be the best preacher in the church, but you sure wish you could be better. You attend seminars, lectureships, conferences, workshops, and summits. You read books and listen to others, but it seems no one ever says, "This is how you do it." How many times have you listened to another preacher and wondered, "How'd he learn to do that?"
If you've ever wanted to be a better preacher, this book is for you. Inspired by the Preach BETTER conference, this book offers the wisdom and counsel of ten preachers who want to help you preach better. Covering topics such as sermon planning, the invitation, lesson illustrations, passion in your delivery, and the preacher's prayer life, this book will inspire and equip you to be a better communicator of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
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Preach Better - Chris McCurley
PREACH BETTER
© 2015 by Start2Finish
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
ISBN 978-1-941972-33-5 (softcover)
ISBN 978-1-941972-47-2 (hardcover)
ISBN 978-1-941972-34-2 (ebook)
Library of Congress Control Number 2014957471
Published by Start2Finish
Bend, Oregon 97702
start2finish.org
Cover Design: Evangela Creative
Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Version 1.1.2023.03.06
In memory of
Jimmy Jividen
for helping us all to be better.
contents
Foreword
by Dale & Jeff A. Jenkins
Introduction
better planning
by Chris McCurley
better invitations
by Keith Parker
better illustrations
by Steve Higginbotham
better relevance
by Chuck Monan
better passion
by Michael Whitworth
better balance
by Jay Lockhart
better application
by Jacob Hawk
better preparation
by Wayne Roberts
better attitude
by Trey Morgan
better prayer life
by Adam Faughn
foreword
You preach! Or at least you want to. You may preach a lot. You may preach several times a day or once a quarter. You may preach before a packed house, or it may be a small house. You may preach to tens or tens of thousands. Every preacher, regardless of the place or the number, has at least one thing in common—we wish we could be BETTER.
How many Sunday nights have we wished we were better? How often on Friday afternoon have we wished we could be BETTER? We know we’ll never be the best preacher in the brotherhood, but we sure wish we could be BETTER. We attend lectureships and seminars—we read books and listen to others—all hoping to learn the secret of being BETTER. We hear that guy
and think, If I could just preach like him…
or maybe we just think, If I could preach BETTER than I do now…
But it seems no one ever says, Here is how you do it!
Anyone who stands before a group of people with an open Bible surely feels the urge to be BETTER at communicating God’s life-giving Word. The BETTER Conference was born out of that desire. We love our fellow proclaimers, and now it is our prayer that this book will enhance that desire and affect even more lives for Christ.
The BETTER Conference and this book have a singular focus—to provide the tools and information to help you BETTER present the Gospel, to preach BETTER. The goal of both is to focus solely on the craft of preaching.
We are thankful for our good friend, Chris McCurley, for making this book available. We know and love each of the authors who have contributed to this book. If you read their words carefully and work to put them into practice you will be a BETTER preacher.
— Dale & Jeff A. Jenkins
The Jenkins Institute
preachbetter.com
introduction
In the sport of track and field, there is an event known as the high jump. The high jump is a rather simple event, at least in theory. It consists of a horizontal bar resting on two standards in front of a large mat. Competitors stride up to the bar and attempt to thrust themselves over without knocking the bar off of the standards. Each time a jumper clears a certain height, the bar gets raised a little higher. The winner, of course, is the one who clears a height no one else can.
Using a technique known as the Fosbury Flop, some of the more skilled contestants can clear heights above seven feet. A man by the name of Javier Sotomayor is the current record holder in the event. He set the mark in 1993 with a jump of 8 ft. ¼ in. While talent certainly plays a role in the success of a high jumper, one cannot dismiss the hours of training involved. I have been told that, during workouts, competitors are taught to imagine the bar to be much higher in their minds. This mental imagery is meant to assist them in clearing the bar more easily.
As preachers, let us imagine the bar much higher. Let us continually raise the bar in order to enhance our effectiveness and improve our impact. It’s okay to fall short. We all fail from time to time. There is no shame in reaching higher and missing the mark. What is a shame is to aim too low.
My aim for this book is simple: to help preachers become better. When we think of being better preachers, we often think of better delivery or better content. Certainly these are important aspects to preaching, but being better is not limited to what occurs in the pulpit. Raising the bar often takes place outside of the pulpit. Aiming higher involves better planning, better study habits, better organization, and a better prayer life. Our effectiveness on Sunday is determined by our efficiency on Monday through Saturday. This does not mean, of course, that certain facets pertaining to content or delivery are unimportant. Better preaching demands a focus on things like using illustrations effectively, applying the lesson, and offering an invitation. In short, raising the bar involves a commitment to excellence in and out of the pulpit.
To help us in our endeavor to preach better, I have solicited the help of nine godly men who are well acquainted with the intricacies of preaching. These men have agreed to provide wise counsel, practical insight, and loving encouragement. This is not a compilation of scholarly essays. This is real-life, real-world information intended to be easily understood and applied. Each chapter is written by a faithful servant who has been in the trenches so to speak. They are writing with one goal in mind: to assist preachers in being better.
I have been told that half way up Mt. Everest, there is a lodge where people can sit and relax and gaze upon the majestic scenery. Many folks like the accommodations so much that they decide not to climb any further. I can’t say that I blame them. More than 160 people have died attempting to reach the summit of Mt. Everest, so I perfectly understand why someone would settle for half way. Half way is easier. It requires less sacrifice and commitment. But while half way may be acceptable for someone climbing Mt. Everest, it is certainly not acceptable for someone occupying the pulpit on Sunday.
It is so easy for complacency to set in. It is easy to get satisfied. There is always a desire to kick your feet up and say, I have made it. That’s good enough.
To keep climbing is much more difficult and demanding because it requires sacrifice. It requires a total commitment. It requires everything you have got.
Do not be satisfied with half way. Raise the bar. Keep climbing.
Preach better!
— Chris McCurley
Abilene, Texas
1
better planning
chris mccurley
Every day, we eat. We eat because we like the taste of food. We eat to get the proper nourishment and live a healthy life. We eat to give ourselves the energy we need to function. We eat because we are bored, or because we are sad. Whatever the reason, we all eat, and we all eat on a regular basis. There are a lot of things we can put off or skip until a more convenient time, but when it is time to eat, the world stands still. As we consume food, it goes into our bodies and begins to be digested. Through the digestion process, the body keeps what it needs and eliminates what it does not. As a result, much of what we eat actually becomes a part of our bodies. In John 6:35, 48-51, Jesus stated this:
I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall never thirst. … I am the bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in the wilderness, and they died. This is the bread that comes down from heaven, so that one may eat of it and not die. I am the living bread that came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever. And the bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh.
Just as we consume food, we consume Jesus as well. When we eat of his flesh and drink his blood, He becomes a part of our bodies—His thoughts, His words, His character, His way for us. When we eat his flesh and drink his blood (in a figurative sense, of course), we digest all that He is and all that he gives. Christ is life, and we should devour all that He is and that He did so that we are ate up
with Him. We consume Christ so that He will consume us. When we take Him in, we take Him on. The apostle Paul summed it up perfectly when he wrote: I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me
(Gal. 2:20).
Jesus was encouraging the crowd in John 6 to hunger for something more. Droves of people were following Him, not because they craved spiritual insight, but because they wanted to be fed again. Jesus had just filled their stomachs with a mere five loaves of bread and two fish. To be full in that day and age was extremely rare. Most people teetered between hunger and starvation; therefore, this mob stayed hot on the heels of Jesus in the hope that He would whip up another meal as soon as their stomachs started to growl. Our Lord dashed their hopes and messed with their heads as He informed them that He would no longer cater to their physical appetite. Our Lord bypassed their stomachs and offered the people soul food. By inviting the crowd to eat of His flesh and drink His blood, Jesus was presenting them with eternal sustenance.
Everyone must eat in order to sustain life. Yet, even if we eat a balanced diet with just the right amount of servings from the dairy group, and so many servings from the meat group, and the proper amount of servings from the bread and cereal group, along with the recommended servings of fruits and vegetables, we can never sustain life indefinitely. If we drink the recommended 64 oz. of water per day, if we do not gulp our water while we eat, and if we do not eat anything after 7:00 p.m. as the experts advise, we may be the picture of health, but we will not live forever. The healthiest person on the planet still has a standing appointment with death. Jesus wanted the