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Expository Preaching: Sermons, Thoughts, and Resources of Todd Linn

Preaching Post Fridays

The Preacher’s Joy In Sermon Preparation

Most pastors find sermon preparation and delivery to be the most enjoyable work of their ministry. While other aspects of ministry are essential, there is a special joy derived from hours spent studying a biblical text. And, while study can be grueling at times, most pastors delight in the work, agreeing with the apostles’ stress upon giving oneself “continually to prayer and the ministry of the Word” (Acts 6:4) and Paul’s charge to “correctly handle the Word of truth” (2 Timothy 2:15). To cultivate and maintain your joy in sermon preparation, consider these three important principles:

1) Avoid Using Commentaries Too Soon

We’re often tempted to turn to commentaries before spending adequate time wrestling with a passage ourselves. It is certainly wise to consult commentaries, and failure to do so may be a mark of pride. As Charles Spurgeon wisely noted: “It seems odd that certain men who talk so much of what the Holy Spirit reveals to themselves should think so little of what he has revealed to others.”1

Using commentaries too soon, however, may rob the preacher of the joy of discovery. There is a singular pleasure experienced by the preacher when the Holy Spirit enables him to understand the meaning and implications of a text. The preacher who prematurely studies the insights of others–including sermons–will not experience the same degree of wonder as the preacher who has first poured over the passage himself.

2) Involve Both Head And Heart In Your Study

“Headwork” tends to come naturally to most preachers. They enjoy thinking through a passage, analyzing it, and outlining it. Equally important to involving one’s head, however, is involving one’s heart. The preacher experiences greater joy in sermon preparation when he allows the truth to move from his head to his heart, prayerfully internalizing that truth and feeling it deeply.

As E.M. Bounds helpfully suggests: “A prepared heart is much better than a prepared sermon. A prepared heart will make a prepared sermon.”2

3) Trust God To Work Uniquely Through You

God has called us individually and equipped us uniquely to preach to our particular congregations. While each congregation is similar to others, it is also different from others. It has its own history, character, and needs. In the same way, each pastor is in some way different from other pastors. God has sovereignly called each of us and has placed us in each church for His glory. When we trust Him to work through our own personality, study, and delivery, we’re more likely to experience the joy of His using us to speak to the hearts of His people.

  1. Charles Spurgeon. Commenting & Commentaries (London: Passmore & Alabaster, 1876), 1.
  2. E.M. Bounds. On Prayer (Peabody: Hendrickson, 2006 ), 138.

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