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THE HOMILETICAL PATTERN . NARRATIVE LITERATURE PREACHING GOD’S STORIES. FOUNDATION for Biblical Preaching. Expository preaching What is it? What is included in it? B asic oral presentation What works? What are our options? Idea formation from Scripture
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THE HOMILETICAL PATTERN NARRATIVE LITERATURE PREACHING GOD’S STORIES
FOUNDATION for Biblical Preaching • Expository preaching • What is it? • What is included in it? • Basic oral presentation • What works? • What are our options? • Idea formation from Scripture • How do we handle didactic literature? • What do we do differently for narrative literature?
Review the Meaning of Expository Preaching " . . . the _____________ of a biblical ______________, derived from and ____________________ through a_____________________, ____________________, and _______________ study of a passage in its _________________, which _______________ first applies to the ___________________ and _________________ of the preacher, then through him to ___________________."
Expository preaching Definition: “Expository preaching is the proclamation of a biblical concept, derived from and transmitted through a historical, grammatical, and literary study of a passage in its context, which the Holy Spirit first applies to the personality and experience of the preacher then through him to his hearers.” (Robinson, Biblical Preaching, 20)
Homiletical Priority • What the Biblical writer had in mind MUST determine the direction of the sermon that is preached. • Biblical Exposition is in large part a philosophy • Not first a method • Initiative: what is my purpose in preaching? • My thoughts must adjust to Scripture not visa versa • Am I willing to adjust my thinking, theology, and traditions based upon what the Scriptures reveal? • Do I approach the Bible with simple faith to hear what God has to tell me and then retell it through me?
IT IS all about the Concept • the definition focus is communicating the concept • Some confuse the emphasis of words over concept • Words are the means that form the concept • Authority is found in the Bible not the speaker • “historical” what was the meaning by authors? • “grammatical” how language communicates is vital • “literary” the setting of the passage flavors everything including narrative literature
Essential audience hermeneutic • Preachers must provide sufficient evidence that what is said is clearly what the Bible says • Understanding must make a historical journey and back again • The audience gives believability to the preacher therefore, he must honestly speak with care
Expositors are moved first • Preacher’s personality linked with the sermon. • Spiritual growth is a clear bi-product of preaching. • We must first live what we will later proclaim. • Loving heart + disciplined mind = effective tool in God’s hand
Three objectives for every preacher • Exegete: what is God saying in His Word? • Christian: what does God want me to do now that I understand His Word? • Preacher: how can I now challenge God’s people with this truth?
Application must be fresh • gives purpose to the sermon • must be creative or the sermon will be boring • A preacher must speak to his day • Confront people about themselves • Always speak to people as they, where they are
Precisions is required • Fragmentation without assimilation leads to confusion • Each sermon: • Explanation • Interpretation • or Application • of a single idea • supported by other ideas • clearly derived from Scripture
Central idea is fundamental • Rhetoricians consistently advocate this • Terminology variation: proposition, theme, thesis, main thought, pericope • Focus on one specific theme
Forming an idea • Two essential elements • Subject: • what am I talking about? • Must be precise, complete and definite answer • Not a grammatical subject, never a single word • Complement: • what am I saying about it? • This completes the subject • Ideas can explain, prove or apply (explanation, validation, application)