Say Something!: Simple Ways to Make Your Sermons Matter
By Charley Reeb
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About this ebook
People looking for a church home value good preaching most of all - as shown by a recent Pew Research study.
While tasty coffee, edgy technology, and flashy worship services are effective, if visitors don’t hear inspiring sermons they will not come back to your church.
The lesson is clear: if you want to attract people to your church you must make preaching your number one priority. Now that’s a strategy for church growth!
If great preaching is essential to church growth, how does one become a great preacher? This book will show you how.
Charley Reeb shows why so many sermons miss the mark - usually due to design issues, rather than poor content. He introduces 6 critical characteristics of effective sermons, how to capture the attention of the listener, the best method for having maximum impact with a sermon, and many other helpful ways to be an effective preacher.
Charley Reeb
Charley Reeb is the senior pastor of First United Methodist Church in Lakeland, Florida. He has a passion for preaching and loves helping other preachers hone their craft. He teaches preaching for the Course of Study at Candler School of Theology, Emory University, in Atlanta, Georgia, and the License to Preach School for the Florida Conference of The United Methodist Church. Charley is the author of That’ll Preach and Say Something, a contributing writer for Feasting on the Word. He has written for Ministry Matters, Preaching Magazine, and Leading Ideas. He is a frequent preacher on the national radio program, Day1, and is a popular speaker and presenter at conferences and events.
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Say Something! - Charley Reeb
If Protestantism ever dies with a dagger in its back,
the dagger will be the Protestant sermon.
—Donald Miller, The Way to Biblical Preaching
If autopsies were performed on many dead churches the cause of death would be clear: pulpit failure. Nothing kills a church faster than poor preaching.
Recently Pew and Gallup did research on church growth. The results are a wakeup call to preachers. Pew’s research showed that people looking for a church home value good preaching most of all.¹ Similarly, Gallup concluded that the number one reason people remain at a church is the quality of the sermons.² The lesson is clear: if you want to grow your church good preaching must be a top priority. While tasty coffee, cool music, and dynamic children’s programs are important, if visitors don’t hear inspiring sermons they will not come back to your church.
A MOMENT OF TRUTH WITH MY DOCTOR
While writing my previous book, That’ll Preach! 5 Simple Steps to Your Best Sermon Ever, I went to see my doctor for a physical.³ After checking my blood pressure and listening to my heart, he asked about my stress level. We both chuckled because he knows what I do for a living. Being a local pastor is always on that notorious list of most stressful vocations. I told him my stress level was high because I was trying to finish a book. What’s the book about?
he asked. Preaching,
I replied, expecting him to move quickly to a question about my diet. Instead he perked up and said, Oh really! You mean a book on how to preach?
That’s right,
I said. It’s a book to help pastors improve their preaching.
His eyes widened. Well, when it’s published I want a signed copy for my pastor. If there is one thing he needs to improve it’s his preaching!
I was taken aback because I had never seen my doctor so expressive. He pushed away from his desk, leaned back in his chair, and his clinical demeanor completely disappeared. For the next several minutes he shared why his pastor’s sermons were so dreadful. He told me that his church’s worship attendance was dwindling because no one could bear to sit through his pastor’s sermons.
I abruptly switched from patient to homiletics professor
and asked, Well, do his sermons lack focus? Are they difficult to follow? Is it his delivery? Do his sermons not have interesting or relevant content? Does he not explain scripture so people can understand it?
Yes,
he replied, all of the above.
Then he looked at me and said, Don’t get me wrong. I like the guy and he has done some good things for our church, but people want to connect with their pastor and hear good preaching. Folks also need the fire of faith stoked every once in a while. Do seminaries not teach preaching anymore?
I told him that seminaries do teach preaching but sometimes they leave out key components of an effective sermon. And what are those?
he asked. I winked and said, It’s in the book.
He smiled and replied, When it comes out, make sure I get a copy.
He then got back to his examination.
This conversation was an unforgettable reminder that preaching matters. If it mattered enough for a doctor to stop his examination, we as preachers better have our act together.
Every church wants a good preacher. When staff parish and pastor search committees are looking for a new pastor, what is always at the top of their list of wishes? We want a good preacher.
You never hear of a church that is content settling for a poor preacher, although unfortunately many do.
Many churches suffer because they are served by clergy who have no business being in the pulpit. Many pastors have the ability to preach but were misguided in seminary about what constitutes an effective sermon. They lecture the life out of their churches. Other pastors simply don’t make preaching a priority. Instead, they spend precious time catering to the dysfunctional people in their churches.
Effective preaching is essential to the spiritual health of churches. Churches desperately need someone called by God to stand up and proclaim the gospel with skill and passion. Great preaching alone will not grow vital churches, but you can’t grow vital churches without great preaching. I dare you to show me a healthy and vibrant church that does not have an effective preacher in the pulpit.
A CHURCH-GROWTH TIP THAT WORKS
Today there is much emphasis on leadership and church growth. Gurus continually pop up selling their formulas for congregational success. Some work and some don’t. Many church-growth tips are not one size fits all.
But there is one church-growth tip that fits virtually every ministry context: preach well. I affirm the importance of leadership, but in our desperate search for ways to grow churches we often overlook one essential fundamental: effective preaching.
You lead from the pulpit. You are never more of a leader than when you stand before your congregation and preach well. Preaching is the one act of ministry that does the most good. In one sermon you can provide pastoral care to your entire congregation. You can cast a vision. You can motivate a large group of people to serve. You can share the gospel to several hearts so that it spreads and multiplies. When done right, one sermon can accomplish what it would take countless hours for you to do in other modes of ministry. CEOs of Fortune 500 companies would love to have the same opportunity to stand before their people once a week and remind them of the company’s vision. Week in and week out preparing and delivering sermons is the best stewardship of your time. How much time are you spending on your sermons?
If more preachers spent time improving their preaching half of our problems with church growth would disappear. I dare say if I could wave a magic wand and have an effective preacher in every United Methodist pulpit, our denomination’s decline would come to an abrupt halt. Within a couple of years, we might experience growth again. I believe the same is true for every mainline denomination. It is a bold statement, but I can back it up. Jesus came teaching and preaching and his sermons changed the world (Matt 9:35). It was also the sermons of the early apostles that grew the church and spread the gospel like wildfire throughout the world. If Jesus and the early apostles thought there was a better way to do ministry they would have done it.
It is clear that many sermons today are missing the mark. What is the answer? How should preachers go about delivering sermons that transform lives and grow churches? Turn the page and find out.
A large crowd came together because they heard the noise. They were surprised because, as the apostles were speaking, everyone heard in their own language.
—Acts 2:6 ERV
A friend of mine once had lunch with the late Billy Graham. He used the opportunity to ask Graham a question about preaching. He said, "Dr. Graham, you have preached all over the world to millions of people. And when you preach you seem confident that you are preaching the very word of God. But how do you know it is really God’s word