Write About Now

preach it! (how?)

Lots of comments on the last post, with an overwhelming majority agreeing they would prefer more sermons working through entire books of the Bible instead of focusing on topics.

Concern for the integrity of the text was a major factor.

“Expository preaching…feeds everyone much like they must have been fed when these letters were read to the New Testament churches, wrote Victor. “It also forces preachers to preach the ‘whole counsel of God.’”

“How do we know if a topical treatment is accurate unless we know it’s backed up by a thorough survey of the Bible?” wrote Al.

And Randy writes, “Topical preaching also makes it much easier to decide what we want to say and then find a verse to support it rather than exegeting the text itself to see what *it* says.”


Others wondered about the lack of originality inherent in the topical approach. 

As someone who has worked on teams to come up with these themes, I can add that there really aren’t that many ways to apply a topic to your life: work, time, family, finances. (um… that’s 4, see?),” wrote Jan. “It also gave me pause to see so many different churches coming up with the same knock-off titles (Heroes, Lost, American Idols), and rehashing the same themes with “sexed-up” titles.”

Textual preaching requires a lot more time, effort, study, and prayer,” wrote Randy. “It also requires much more creativity in finding ways to present the material in a compelling, interesting way (to the average church-goer).”


Some guys may avoid exegesis because it’s more work, but I know lots of preachers who work tremendously hard at their weekly messages but still choose to preach mostly on a series of topics.

I agree with Kristie’s assessment of one possible reason: “It doesn’t surprise me at all in this soundbite generation that preachers feel the need to give ‘em what they want,” she says. “Most of us have a ‘how does this apply to me?’ mentality.”

Anita points out some of this may even be good. “Trying to distill exegesis in 52 week after week sermons can be really challenging,” she writes. “Having terse principles that can be applied to life is more apropo for the general public.”


But I repeat my question from the last post—how will people grow in biblical knowledge on a steady diet of verse-sized bites?


I think there are three issues here (there have to be three, in a post about preaching!):

1. This lack of biblical knowledge among many church-goers is both a cause and an effect of our current preaching focus.

2. Balance is a worthy goal. Topical preaching isn’t bad; as Bethany points out, Jesus often preached this way, using OT scriptures to make a point. And he certainly had plenty to say on money, relationships, service, justice and other popular series topics. However, unlike Jesus, we are not bringing a new revelation but instead sharing the Good News already given. I think we need to be intentional about how we approach that source text.

3. We’re assuming exegetical studies can’t have life application. Lora agreed on the balance thing, but wrote, “Yes, I need meat in my sermons, and I love the history of the texts…but I also sometimes need something to hit me right where I am.

The truth is ANY passage can “hit us where we are” because God’s Word is living and active.


When Rob Bell planted Mars Hill Bible Church in 1999, he preached verse by verse through Leviticus for the church’s entire first year. Today the church has a bazillion members (give or take).

Yes, Rob is a gifted communicator and could probably make my DVR setup guide interesting, but you get the point. This was before he was “The” Rob Bell. And he still hooked ‘em.

“Why start a church with Leviticus?” he writes. “Why not a series on relationships or finding peace? That would be the safer approach……This teaching hit home. Many of my listeners wanted to make sense of the Bible, yet they knew only fragments of the story. Leviticus taught us all to ask the difficult questions: How does this connect with the entire biblical narrative? How does this event point to the cross? How do I fit into the story?

“We discovered the Bible is an organic whole: these concepts do connect, these images do make sense. For the first time, many in our congregation began to realize, This story is my story. These people are my people. This God is my God.”

January 7, 2010 - Posted by | the church | , , , , ,

5 Comments »

  1. One facet of this discussion must look at broader questions, which include, “Why do we preach?” and “What means will we choose to teach the Bible to our congregations?” Certainly we cannot expect ANY method or approach to preaching to teach folks all the Bible they need to know. And certainly we can agree that asking folks to listen to a speech for 20-40 minutes per week will never teach them to consider the Bible for themselves. Churches with a well-thought strategy for Christian education/discipleship/spiritual formation or whatever you want to call it will include preaching as a PART of that strategy and will be more successful in developing mature Christians who know and live by the Bible–regardless of the style of preaching that happens on Sunday mornings.

    Comment by Mark | January 7, 2010 | Reply

  2. That’s why I enjoy Echo Church here in Cincinnati. I may be a bit biased (since my husband is the preacher, and all!), but I really do enjoy Steve preaching through books of the Bible. It’s been that way for 4 years now, and I’ve discovered more depth than I’ve ever experienced.

    I did know of Rob Bell before he became so famous because a friend of mine has gone to his church since he started through Leviticus. And I appreciated that so much.

    Comment by Kelly | January 7, 2010 | Reply

  3. Just to be clear: It’s not that I don’t think Scripture alone is living and active and can hit me right where I am. Quite the contrary, actually. I’m often “hit” with the Scripture, both in my personal study and in corporate settings.

    But when that balance is struck between true life right where I am Gospel and the Scriptures…it is breathtaking, beautiful and life-changing.

    And as I said, I’ve had years of Biblical training…and I know not all are blessed with that opportunity.

    It is a matter of preference in some ways, although I agree that there is a danger in topic-only sermons week after week. I guess for me (as long as it’s Biblically sound) I’m all for whatever works for you. Perhaps that’s why there are so many churches. That whole Great Commission thing may just have meant the avenue of the message as well. Not everyone speaks the same language, so it only makes sense that provision is made for all to hear the Gospel in the best possible way for them to receive it.

    Comment by Lora | January 8, 2010 | Reply

    • Great thoughts, Lora, and thanks for the clarification. I definitely didn’t mean to misrepresent your original comment!

      Comment by Jennifer | January 8, 2010 | Reply

  4. It is worth considering that both methods (working through entire books of the Bible and focusing on topics) share common weaknesses depending on the bias of the preacher. Augustine, for example, could preach through the entire Song of Songs and never apply it to the love between a man and a woman!

    Comment by Matt | January 8, 2010 | Reply


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