Posts Tagged ‘J. H. Jowett’s The Preacher: His Life and Work’

The great preachers who have influenced their generation have all borne witness to the need for conscientious preparation. Stott identifies 6 steps most preachers must pass through to prepare a sermon. I just read a brief biography of Stott by Jon Bolin which is helpful in understanding Stott’s writings and his preaching.

1. Choose Your Text

Stott suggests four main factors that can help us choose our text.

The first is the liturgical or Christian calendar. Even if you are in a series on Romans, when Christmas morning rolls around don’t go ahead and preach on election out of Romans 9, break out of the series and preach on the Incarnation or the Hypostatic Union of Christ or his great Kenosis (just use laymen’s terms).

The second is external or some some event in the life of the nation such as an election, the death of a public figure, national scandal, flood or plane crash.

The third is pastoral or some event in the congregation. The best preachers are always good pastors. Stott recommends the church staff assist in choosing series.

The fourth is personal. The best sermons we ever preach to others are those we have first preached to ourselves. G. Campbell tells how he was in Dr. Joseph Parker’s vestry at the City Temple one day when a man came in and said to him, “I want to thank your for that sermon. It did me good.” Dr. Parker looked at him and replied: ‘Sir, I preacher it because it had done me good.’

2. Meditate On It

In meditating on a text we answer first the question, “What did it mean when first written.” E. D. Hirsch said, “a text means what it’s author meant.” The second question is, “What does it say? “ or what is its contemporary message.

As we exegete the text we are also crying out to God, “Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous thing from thy law.”

3. Isolate the Dominant Thought

As we meditate and pray and exegete we should be looking for the main theme, first, because every text has a dominant thought. J. H. Jowett wisely explains the importance of finding the proposition: “I have a conviction that no sermon is ready for preaching . . . until we can express its theme in a short, pregnant sentence as clear as a crystal. I find the getting of that sentence is the hardest, the most exacting and the most fruitful labor in my study . . . I do not think any sermon ought to be preached, or even written, until that sentence has emerged, clear and lucid as a cloudless moon.”

4. Arrange your Material to Serve the Dominant Thought

a. There must be structure to subordinate our material to the theme of the sermon. One danger is a too prominent outline like the protruding skeleton of a starving prisoner of war. Double or triple alliteration of main points is an example. Another danger is artificiality of outline. The form of the text must influence the form of the sermon.

b. Also our words must be chosen carefully. Our words need to be as simple and clear as possible or otherwise “the good news of the gospel is lost in the bad word choice of the preacher.” Our words should not only be simple but vivid with concrete examples so our listeners can visualize our message.

c. In addition to supporting structure and simple and vivid words we should use illustrations to serve our dominant thought. There is a Biblical precedent for illustrations. For example, Jesus used concrete examples in his parables. There is also a psychological need for illustrations. Our people need to hear often, “For example.” We ought also to guard against sermons that have too few or too many illustrations. A house with no windows is a prison and a house with all windows is too weak.

5. Add the Introduction and Conclusion

Introductions are usually too long or to short. Introductions should be like the porch to a house, not too large or too small.

For variety sake, start with the situation instead of the text, and with the topic instead of the text. Instead of first announcing the text start with your attention step and create an interest in them for your sermon and then invite them to find the text.

Conclusions must go beyond recapitulation to direct, piercing, and  personal application. Stott used three metaphors for convicting conclusions given  by three different preachers: Storming the fort by G. Campbell Morgan, striking and breaking the hard heart, instead of stroking it, by Richard Baxter, and hitting them with the punch line by Paul White.

Spurgeon challenges preachers to aim at our audience with sharp applications: “Some preachers remind me of the Chinese jugglers, who not long ago were everywhere advertised. One of these stood against a wall, and the other threw knives at him. One knife would be driven into the board just above his head, and another close by his ear, while under his armpit and between his fingers quite a number of deadly weapons were bristling. Wonderful art to be able to throw to a hair’s breadth and never strike! How many among us (preachers) have a marvelous skill in missing!

6. Write Down and Pray Over Your Message

Stott identifies three ways to write a sermon. The first two are extremes to avoided by most preachers.

The first is complete extempore preaching without written preparation. Charles Simeon advised his students not to try this until they had first preached 300-400 written sermons or had been preaching three to four years.

The second extreme to abstain is reading a word for word manuscript. Some have succeeded at this method such as Jonathan Edwards. The rest of us mental and spiritual pigmies should opt for the third method.

The third way to write a sermon is write the sermon as a word for word manuscript but reduce it to an outline to take into the pulpit.

“After the writing of the sermon comes the praying. It is on our knees before the Lord that we can make the message our own, possess or re-possess it until it possesses us. Then when we preach it, it will come neither from our notes, nor from our memory, but out of the depths of our personal conviction, as an authentic utterance of our heart.”

The Proposition is the sermon reduced to one sentence. If one of your members were asked by a friend at work on Monday, “What did your pastor preach about yesterday?” Your church member ought to be able to reply, without hardly thinking, what your proposition was or your sermon reduced to one sentence. “Our pastor preached, ‘You must be born again from John 3.’”

Some homileticans call this one sentence the big idea, theme, thesis or the proposition. One of England’s finest preachers, J. H. Jowett, said this about the importance of the proposition: “I have the conviction that no sermon is ready for preaching, not ready for writing out, until we can express its theme in a short, pregnant sentence as clear as crystal. I find the getting of that sentence is the hardest, the most exacting, and the most fruitful labor in my study….I do not think any sermon ought to be preached, or even written, until that sentence has emerged, clear and lucid as a cloudless moon” (J. H. Jowett, The Preacher: His Life and Work. New York: Harper, 1912, 133-34).

Four Different Kinds of Propositions

James Braga identifies four different kinds of propositions, which the preacher could use to avoid monotony in presenting the timeless truth of the proposition.

The Declarative Form: This proposition is a simple declaration of the subject a preacher intends to discuss, develop, prove, or explain in a sermon (James Braga, How To Prepare Bible Messages. Oregon: Multnomah, 2005, 129). For example: “Jesus demands the new birth for all people in John 3.”

The Interrogative Form: This proposition is a question instead of a declaration (Braga, 150). The above declarative form could, for variety sake, be stated as a question: “Why must all people be born again?” or “How can a person be born again?”

The Hortatory Form: This is what we call a Demand proposition. The declaration is converted into a demand (Braga, 151). “You must be born again according to Jesus in John 3.” The demand proposition helps our listeners to be “doers of the Word and not hearers only.” The demand proposition is the decision for which you are preaching.

The Exclamatory Form: This proposition is an exclamation of praise (Braga, 151). This form is appropriate for Psalms of praise where the Psalmist is declaring God’s praise as in Psalm 103. For example: “Praise the Lord for what He has done and who He is.”

Some General Principles Concerning The Proposition

1. The proposition should just include one demand not two.

F. B. Meyer made this point when he said, “In a sermon we don’t talk about seven different things, but we talk about one thing seven different ways.”

One proposition enables the preacher to focus his sermon on the one piercing truth to which he seeks his congregation to respond. You would not preach this proposition: “You must be born again and take up your cross and follow Jesus.” “In the military museum of the Invalides in Paris is a memorable relic of the Napoleonic wars. It is a polished brass breastplate, apparently taken from the body of a dead horseman. The man must have died of a single cannonball through the middle of the chest” (Robert Delnay, Fire in Your Pulpit. Schaumburg: Regular Baptist Press, 1990, 44). We want our sermons to be like a single rifle shot aimed for the heart rather than shotgun blasts that pepper our listeners but do not penetrate their consciences.

“The sermon is not like a Chinese firecracker to be fired off for the noise it makes. It is a hunter’s gun, and at every discharge he should look to see his game fall” said Henry Ward Beecher (Bruce Mawhinney. Preaching with Freshness, p. 205).

2. The proposition needs to a complete sentence with a subject, ought word, and action verb.

We would not say to our congregation, “Today I am preaching on Prayer.”

A. The proposition should have an action verb rather than a state of being verb.

B. The proposition should be in the active voice rather than the passive.

C. The proposition should be in the affirmative rather than the negative.

With these three points in mind the above proposition would be better stated: “You can and must pray effectively for powerful results.” Convert the following negative propositions into positives:

“Christians must not abuse their bodies”  ____________________________________.

“It is sin for Christians to worry” ______________________________________.

“The sinner must stop rejecting Christ as Savior” __________________________________.

3. Propositions address your current audience not the original audience.

Evangelists Maze Jackson was preaching on left-handed Ehud stabbing obese Eglon and his theme was: “When lefty let fattie have it.” That was humorous but not relevant. Later in this lesson we show how to convert the exegetical idea, what the passage meant to the original audience, to a homiletical idea, or what the passage means to your modern audience.

4. Propositions must be concise not including all the main divisions or what you are going to say about the proposition.

For example, recently I preached on “The Need to Pray For Spiritual Needs” from Ephesians 1:15-23. My proposition did not include the four spiritual needs Paul prayed for in the text. This robs the sermon of suspense. This is, however, in opposition to the teaching adage: “Tell them what you are going to tell them. Tell them. Tell them what you just told them.” I must say, however, for variety sake, you can follow the adage.

In our next post, we will continue to examine Step 3: The Proposition (Part Two)