Every week, Preaching Today posts new illustrations - a mixture of stories, statistics, quotes, humor, and scenes from popular movies or TV shows. As a regular part of our PT Talk sessions, Brian Larson and I would like to take a moment to talk about how we might use some of our illustrations in a sermon. We decided to try this out on a classic: Master Violinist Goes Unrecognized. We felt it was the best illustration of 2007.
To hear us talk about specific and more abstract ways to use this illustration, click "Play" on the audio player below to listen to PT Talk via audio stream. If you'd rather download the audio file so you can have it on the run, there is a link just below the player.
To download this episode of PT Talk, click here.
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Posted by Brian Lowery at 7:47 AM on May 7, 2008 | Comments (0)
In late 2005, the long-anticipated movie version of The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe was released. It went on to earn $745 million at the box office worldwide (and over $1 billion in DVD sales). On May 16, its sequel—Prince Caspian—arrives in theatres. The world is abuzz. It's safe to assume it will be a hit. It's also safe to assume it will open the door to conversations over its Christological content. You might be planning to weave themes from Prince Caspian into your preaching. Here are a few links to helpful resources from our sister sites:
Continue reading ""Prince Caspian" Storms the Pulpit"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 7:55 AM on May 5, 2008 | Comments (0)
*Update: For some reason our audio player was streaming an older episode of PT Talk. The problem has now been fixed. Sorry about the inconvenience!
Sarah Baldwin, Preaching Today's editorial coordinator, recently ran an annotated bibliography on the theme of Relationships. For this episode of PT Talk, we talk about why you'll want to check this resource out (along with other bibliographies on Emotions, Money, and Spiritual Formation).
Click "Play" on the audio player below, and you can listen to PT Talk via an audio stream. If you'd rather download the audio file so you can have it on the run, there is a link just below the player.
To download this episode of PT Talk, click here.
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Posted by Brian Lowery at 8:00 AM on April 30, 2008 | Comments (0)
Here's what people are watching, reading, listening to, and learning about...
Top Five Movies (according to box office returns)
1. Forgetting Sarah Marshall (Rated R)
2. The Forbidden Kingdom (Rated PG-13)
3. 88 Minutes (Rated R)
4. 21 (Rated PG-13)
5. Prom Night (Rated PG-13)
Continue reading "Friday Pop Culture Roundup"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 3:40 PM on April 25, 2008 | Comments (0)
We thought that in light of the current news about the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, you might need some materials to work with in your church. Below are some book reviews and related stories that may help you find a way forward in addressing particular issues concerning Mormonism from the pulpit or in related pastoral settings. Please exercise caution, however, in relating all Mormon practice to the more fundamentalist branch that is being highlighted in Texas. Most of these resources speak to the Mormon faith in general with a few hints of insight into the FLDS.
Continue reading "Resources for Preaching on Mormonism"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 10:29 AM on April 24, 2008 | Comments (2)
PreachingToday.com recently ran an illustration that was the unfortunate victim of embellishment. We've posted the corrected version for your records. These retractions don't happen often for us, but when they do, they often happen because of the very issue just mentioned: embellishment. For this episode of PT Talk, we discuss what happened, why it happened, and how to make sure it doesn't happen.
Click "Play" on the audio player below, and you can listen to PT Talk via an audio stream. If you'd rather download the audio file so you can have it on the run, there is a link just below the player.
To download this episode of PT Talk, click here.
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:57 AM on April 23, 2008 | Comments (0)
Though I can't say I've read everything out there on the subject, I can say that Thomas Long's "Stolen Goods: Tempted to Plagiarize" is the best thing I've read so far about issues pertaining to preaching and plagiarism. Brian Larson, editor of PreachingToday.com, offered the same sentiments when he first received permission for us to run the article. If you haven't read it, take a moment to check it out. Also, we'd love for you to give a listen to the most recent episode of PT Talk to hear us discuss this controversial topic. This entry builds off of thoughts I briefly shared in that audio cast.
Continue reading "Experiential Plagiarism"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 3:02 PM on April 21, 2008 | Comments (3)
PreachingToday.com is currently running "Stolen Goods: Tempted to Plagiarize", an article by Thomas G. Long about the necessity of citation and the damage of deceit in preaching. The editors of Preaching Today wanted to use our new weekly audio feature - PT Talk - to chime in with a few thoughts on this controversial topic. Please use the comments section to share your own reflections.
Click "Play" on the audio player below, and you can listen to PT Talk via an audio stream. If you'd rather download the audio file so you can have it on the run, there is a link just below the player.
To download this episode of PT Talk, click here.
Posted by Brian Lowery at 11:54 AM on April 18, 2008 | Comments (0)
PreachingToday.com is currently running "Stolen Goods: Tempted to Plagiarize", an article by Thomas G. Long about the necessity of citation and the damage of deceit in preaching. If you're a member of Preaching Today, you can read it at any time by clicking on the link. Brian Larson (chief editor) and I will be discussing the article and its implications in the next episode of PT Talk (to be posted very soon). In the meantime, here are a few juicy quotes from Long's work:
Continue reading "Preaching and Plagiarism"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 4:32 PM on April 16, 2008 | Comments (1)
Here's what people are watching, reading, listening to, and learning about...
Top Five Movies (according to box office returns)
1. 21 (Rated PG-13)
2. Leatherheads (Rated PG-13)
3. Nim's Island (Rated PG)
4. Horton Hears a Who (Rated G)
5. The Ruins (Rated R)
Continue reading "Friday Pop Culture Roundup"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 8:16 AM on April 11, 2008 | Comments (0)
A section from Gary Thomas's The Beautiful Fight struck a deep chord with me this morning:
Continue reading "With a Finger on My Shoulder"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 1:57 PM on April 7, 2008 | Comments (0)
Here's what people are watching, reading, listening to, and learning about...
Top Five Movies (according to box office returns)
1. 21 (Rated PG-13)
2. Horton Hears a Who (Rated G)
3. Superhero Movie (Rated PG-13)
4. Tyler Perry's Meet the Browns (Rated PG-13)
5. Drillbit Taylor (Rated PG-13)
Continue reading "Friday Pop Culture Roundup"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 10:02 AM on April 4, 2008 | Comments (0)
Scot McKnight recently reviewed Anthony Thiselton's The Hermeneutics of Doctrine for the folks at Christianity Today. McKnight offers this synopsis of Thiselton's thoughts on doctrine and belief:
Continue reading "Preaching Performatory Doctrine"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 1:41 PM on April 1, 2008 | Comments (1)
Here's what people are watching, reading, listening to, and learning about...
Top Five Movies (according to box office returns)
1. Horton Hears a Who (Rated G)
2. Tyler Perry's Meet the Browns (Rated PG-13)
3. Shutter (Rated PG-13)
4. Drillbit Taylor (Rated PG-13)
5. 10,000 B.C. (Rated R)
Continue reading "Friday Pop Culture Roundup"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 3:00 AM on March 28, 2008 | Comments (2)
PreachingToday.com has posted part three of a three-part article on dialogical preaching. In part three, Bob Hyatt, paints a picture of what a dialogical approach to the sermon event looks like at The Evergreen Community and offers a few ideas for any who would like to introduce dialogue into their preaching
Posted by Brian Lowery at 2:13 PM on March 24, 2008 | Comments (0)
At the National Pastors Conference in San Diego, PreachingToday.com's Brian Lowery got to interview N. T. Wright about his latest book—Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church—and how it relates to preaching. Since we are all in the midst of the Easter journey, his words are timely, challenging, and above all else, hopeful.
Preaching Today: In your book Surprised by Hope, you talk about a deeper understanding of hope "that provides a coherent and energizing basis for work in today's world." How has that deeper understanding influenced your preaching through the years?
Bishop N. T. Wright: [Studying] the Resurrection for an earlier book, Resurrection of the Son of God … ended up rubbing my nose in the New Testament theology of new creation, and the fact that the new creation has begun with Easter. I discovered that when we do new creation—when we encourage one another in the church to be active in projects of new creation, of healing, of hope for communities—we are standing on the ground that Jesus has won in his resurrection.
Continue reading "N. T. Wright on Resurrection"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 8:54 AM on March 19, 2008 | Comments (23)
PreachingToday.com has posted part two of a three-part article on dialogical preaching. In part two, Bob Hyatt addresses some of the concerns people have with dialogical preaching. In part three—to be posted next Monday, March 24—Hyatt will paint a picture of what a dialogical approach to the sermon event looks like at The Evergreen Community and offers a few ideas for any who would like to introduce dialogue into their preaching
Posted by Brian Lowery at 2:34 PM on March 17, 2008 | Comments (0)
PreachingToday.com has posted part one of a three-part article on dialogical preaching. For the first quarter of 2008, Preaching Today has focused on the idea of group sermon preparation. More and more preachers are putting together their messages in community, allowing for insightful, idea-producing dialogue with others. For more about this process, check out our interview with Dave Ferguson on "Group Sermon Preparation" (part one and part two) and an observational piece entitled "Loosening My Grip." For the final stretch of our quarter's theme, we decided to add a twist to the concept: What happens when a preacher engages in a similar type of dialogue—but during the Sunday sermon itself?
Continue reading "Dialogical Preaching"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:51 AM on March 10, 2008 | Comments (0)
Scot McKnight, professor of religious studies at North Park University, Chicago, IL, and author of The Jesus Creed, recently designed a hermeneutics quiz to help us raise questions about how we both read our Bible and don't read our Bible. As Scot is careful to point out in his introduction to the quiz: "No single test can reveal all the nuances needed, but broad answers are enough to raise the key issues." In other words, this quiz will at least help you get a big picture of where you land on a hermeneutical scale. Are you a conservative when it comes to hermeneutics? A moderate? Are there any progressives among us? Take the quiz and find out. Though you'll probably have a few quibbles here and there with the questions and the answers from which you get to choose, I think you'll find it incredibly helpful as a student and preacher of the Word.
Posted by Brian Lowery at 10:52 AM on March 4, 2008 | Comments (2)
You really ought to take a look at Tim Keel's "An Efficient Gospel?" He challenges the reader/preacher with a number of provocative thoughts, including this:
In a modern world, we tend to reduce the complexity and diversity of the Scriptures to simple systems, even when our systems flatten the diversity and integrity of the biblical witness. We reduce our sermons to consumer messages that reduce God to a resource that helps the individual secure a reduced version of the "abundant life" Jesus promised (John 10:10).
How do we contend with the common reductions of the gospel that have come with modernism? In that contention, the over/under factor in championing the gospel's complexity and diversity runs awfully high—you can overwhelm your audience and just as quickly underwhelm them. How have you navigated that tension in your preaching? When was the last time you challenged the gospel presuppositions of your audience, and how did you do it? Any series ideas you'd like to share? Textual ideas? Thematic ideas? Illustrations? Helpful resources?
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:08 AM on February 18, 2008 | Comments (2)
Dan Kimball, pastor of Vintage Faith Church in Santa Cruz, California, has written a short editorial for Leadership journal about preaching on hell. Check it out and swing on back over to the PT Blog to share your thoughts...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 1:15 PM on February 12, 2008 | Comments (0)
Leadership journal recently ran an interesting article about ministering in the age of Zoloft. In a study conducted in 2006, researchers found that over 190 million prescriptions were given for antidepressants. Another worldwide study found that America ranks at the top of a list of countries that suffer from immense depression. That means we preachers are preaching to a congregation whose faces are stained with tears.
Please take a moment to read through the Leadership article. Take a moment to think through your own pastoral situation and your congregational context. How does the current state of things affect our preaching?
Posted by Brian Lowery at 8:20 AM on January 17, 2008 | Comments (1)
Out of Ur recently posted an entry about addressing the issue of politics from the pulpit. Check it out and head back here for some conversation on the matter...
Now that you've read the article, a question begs to be answered: regardless of what the preacher is allowed legally to do, should he/she address politics from the pulpit? Why or why not? If you feel preachers should, to what extent should they address it - should he/she offer something along the lines of a more general, theological overview or something much more specific, like a personal endorsement?
Posted by Brian Lowery at 8:02 AM on January 10, 2008 | Comments (4)
Our sister site, Out of Ur, recently initiated a conversation about the potential dangers of pursuing excellence in ministry. The conversation is built upon an article that was written by Daniel Schantz for Christian Standard magazine. You can find the full article by Schantz here.
The conversation on Ur mostly focuses on big picture issues (i.e. excellence in overall programming). I'd like to hear from you all about something specific: excellence in preaching. What do you perceive are the dangers in pursuing excellence in preaching?
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:31 AM on January 7, 2008 | Comments (2)
Here are the top ten PT blog posts from 2007. Enjoy—and please feel free to leave a comment or two in spite of being late to the party!
1. When Biblical Illustrations Are a Bad Idea
2. When You Have to Prepare More Than One Sermon per Week (part one and part two)
Continue reading "Top Ten PT Blog Posts of 2007"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 12:04 PM on December 19, 2007 | Comments (0)
This topic is raging about on the Internet--perhaps due to Willow Creek's recent revelation. Any thoughts you'd like to share from a preacher's standpoint?
Posted by Brian Lowery at 6:08 AM on December 17, 2007 | Comments (2)
My refuge from the musical monotony of the Christmas season has been Sufjan Stevens' five-disc set, Songs for Christmas. I wanted to buy it when it came out last year because I think Sufjan is one of the more exciting artists out there these days. But a certain lack of cash snowed on my parade. This year I finally got my hands on it, and I'm not sure what else to say except that which is cliché: I can't stop listening to it.
Continue reading "Through a Phone, Breathlessly"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 1:38 PM on December 12, 2007 | Comments (1)
Here's one of the ten illustrations we have to offer this week to members of PreachingToday. After you've taken a moment to read it, please brainstorm with us in the comments section. How would you use this story in a sermon?
Philosopher J. P. Moreland's Healing
The Sunday evening service on February 20, 2005, had just ended and I wanted to get home. I was frustrated. …The previous Thursday a virus landed in my chest and throat, and in a period of less than three hours I went from being normal to having the worst case of laryngitis in the thirty-five years since college. On Friday I went to our walk-in clinic and received the bad news. The doctor warned that this virus was going around, she had seen several cases of it in the last few weeks, and there was nothing that could be done about it. I just had to wait it out. The laryngitis would last seven to ten days.
Continue reading "FREE Illustration"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 2:29 PM on November 26, 2007 | Comments (1)
Here's one of the ten illustrations we have to offer this week to members of PreachingToday. After you've taken a moment to read it, please brainstorm with us in the comments section. How would you use this story in a sermon?
Experiencing Emmanuel in Prison
Locked behind the razor-wire fences of a Florida prison is no place to spend a holiday. I'd spent 15 Christmases under these less-than-festive conditions, but this year my situation looked even bleaker. I was stuck in confinement—a prison inside a prison where the supposed troublemakers are sent. In reality, anyone can find himself in the hole by irritating the wrong person.
Continue reading "FREE Illustration"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:07 AM on November 19, 2007 | Comments (1)
Here's one of the ten illustrations we have to offer this week to members of PreachingToday. After you've taken a moment to read it, please brainstorm with us in the comments section. How would you use this story in a sermon?
Holding All Things in Common
I had been praying regularly with the deacons for one of our members. His wife, Pat, attended our small congregation faithfully, but John hadn't been to church in years. So every Sunday afternoon before the evening service, we prayed for ways to communicate our commitment to John and his family.
Continue reading "FREE Illustration"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 7:06 AM on November 12, 2007 | Comments (1)
Here's one of the ten illustrations we have to offer this week to members of PreachingToday. After you've taken a moment to read it, please brainstorm with us in the comments section. How would you use this story in a sermon?
Bad Relationships Are Bad for Your Health
Researchers from the University of Utah found there's a price to pay when couples don't get along. Videotapes recorded 150 husbands and wives discussing sensitive issues (how money is managed or doing household chores) and found the following:
Women who buried anger rather than speaking out were more likely to succumb to heart disease than wives who were vocal, the study found. And when women became domineering and controlling, rather than seeking consensus, damage was done to husbands' coronary health.
Continue reading "FREE Illustration"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 8:29 AM on November 5, 2007 | Comments (0)
Here's one of the ten illustrations we have to offer this week to members of PreachingToday. After you've taken a moment to read it, please brainstorm with us in the comments section. How would you use this story in a sermon?
Brett Favre Breaks NFL Record
On September 30, 2007, Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre broke Dan Marino's record for throwing the most touchdown passes in football. His new record stands at 421 passes and counting.
Continue reading "FREE Illustration"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 8:57 AM on October 29, 2007 | Comments (0)
Take a look at this article from copyblogger.com. The idea of confident feet is obviously couched in terms of blogging in this particular article, but I'm curious about your thoughts on the importance and necessity of confident feet in preaching. The author of the article writes:
What I would like to talk about is healthy motion. Like many things, motion when speaking in front of people is a case of balancing extremes. No motion is boring, and too much movement gives off a nervous vibe. Check out this quote from Lin Sexton in a recent column for Worship Leader Magazine:
Continue reading "Confident Feet"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:12 AM on October 24, 2007 | Comments (1)
Here's one of the ten illustrations we have to offer this week to members of PreachingToday. After you've taken a moment to read it, please brainstorm with us in the comments section. How would you use this story in a sermon?
Continue reading "FREE Illustration"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 7:42 AM on October 22, 2007 | Comments (2)
In case you missed the article in the print edition of Leadership journal, Skye Jethani's "Glimpses of Glory" is now an abbreviated post on Out of Ur. I'd love for you to take a look at what he has to say and then make your way back to the PT Blog to leave a comment or two in reflection. Does Skye have a point about the difference between preaching and teaching? How does this challenge the dichotomy we've often created between visionary preaching and "regular" expository preaching? Is this something you've been wrestling with as a preacher? If not, how would you contest Skye's thoughts? If you have been, how has this challenged and even changed you as a preacher?
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:02 AM on October 18, 2007 | Comments (0)
Stephen Langton, a professor who later served as Archbishop of Canterbury, added chapter-verse divisions to the Bible in 1205. The widely accepted divisions were then added to the actual Hebrew text (1330) and Greek text (1516). As you well know, the church has never looked back. These are our cherished coordinates in large and small worship settings. Reading plans and preaching plans bend to the traditional framing, telling us when to stop and when to begin again. Would a Bible be a Bible without the little numbers scattered across its pages?
Continue reading "The Naked Text"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 7:57 AM on October 10, 2007 | Comments (0)
What would you like to see us tackle on the blog? Are there any burning issues you'd like addressed? Do you want more illustrations? Would book reviews be helpful? What about open forums about certain issues, where we pose a question and leave it wide open for you all to hash it out and interact with one another? How can we better help you through this interactive resource? I'd really like to know! You all are a relatively quiet lot, comments-wise, but if you could click on the comments section and toss me a few thoughts, that would be much appreciated.
Continue reading "Help Needed (and a few other random things...)"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:30 AM on October 8, 2007 | Comments (3)
Hopefully you've been able to check out the Preaching Today interview with Kent Carlson and Mike Lueken on preaching for spiritual formation. Mark your calendars: the second part comes out this Friday. In the meantime here's something from the cutting room floor...
How did the topic of spiritual formation in preaching become important to you?
Kent: Our interest in preaching for spiritual formation is directly related to the story of our church. We were a seeker-targeted church that had experienced rather rapid growth in our area. We were having great fun and, in terms of attendance and decisions for Christ, were experiencing great success. By 2000, we were finally in our first permanent, large building, so we no longer had facility demands. This gave us flexibility to evaluate where we were and listen more carefully to what God was saying.
Continue reading "From the Cutting Room Floor (Kent Carlson and Mike Lueken Interview)"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 10:49 AM on October 3, 2007 | Comments (0)
Another great article from our sister site, Leadership. Check it out and feel free to come on back to the PT Blog to share your reflections.
Posted by Brian Lowery at 8:33 AM on September 27, 2007 | Comments (0)
In his workshop "The Three Questions of Preaching," Colin Smith examines three questions that guide the preacher toward Christian expository preaching. One of the key questions he lists is, "Does the sermon say what the text says?" Smith argues that if the preacher's answer is an honest "yes," the sermon is more than likely an expository one. He then offers a personal illustration about his coming close to abusing a text from the Book of Micah. In the original recording, he goes a step further to offer another personal illustration that includes a fascinating word about the dangers of topical preaching. I'd love to hear your thoughts about the concern he raises in the quote below:
Continue reading "From the Cutting Room Floor: Colin Smith"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 2:26 PM on August 27, 2007 | Comments (0)
Our cart was filled with red ink pens, file folders, scotch tape, and blocks of putty for hanging posters. That can only mean one thing for my wife the teacher: back to school. While I walked the aisles beside her, I spotted a family of four. The boy held his dad's hand while he stared back longingly at the bikes. The girl hung her head and walked slowly behind her mother, peeking up every now and then when asked what folder she liked best. I felt like I was watching a funeral. In a way, I was: summer, may she rest in peace.
The same scene is probably being played out right this very moment at your local Target or Wal-Mart. Shopping carts are banging into one another, and they're all filled to the brim with the usual array of school supplies. If two Boston fathers have it their way, there among the High School Musical folders and colored pencils you'll find a backpack—a bulletproof backpack. The long shadow cast by Columbine, Virginia Tech, and other assorted school shootings inspired the two men to design a $175 knapsack that is lined with a lightweight, bulletproof plate. Should a shooting occur, the student need only curl up behind the bag or wear it across their chest for protection ("Back-to-School Armor," TIME [8-27-07], p. 17).
Continue reading "There Among the School Supplies"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 9:41 AM on August 20, 2007 | Comments (0)
The first book on preaching I ever read was Bryan Chapell's Christ-Centered Preaching. I was a sophomore at Lincoln Christian College in Lincoln, Illinois. As best I can recall, the syllabus called for us to read it over the course of a month. I read the whole thing in a day, pent-up in my dorm room, trying to ignore blasting stereos and the two guys who always seemed to want to wrestle just outside my door. My roommate was speechless when I explained, "I couldn't put it down." By uttering that line usually reserved for the literary likes of Harry Potter books, Stephen King novels, and other assorted thrillers, I sealed my fate as a nerd; but I was only being honest. That book left my heart racing as a young preaching major, and it still has its hand on my shoulder when I'm preparing a message, urging me to always make my way toward Christ when I ride that ball of fire we call preaching.
Continue reading "The Preacher's Shelf"...
Posted by Brian Lowery at 4:32 PM on August 15, 2007 | Comments (3)





