Login Video Help for Logging In   E-mail Password
  Forgot password?    My Account 
illustrationssermon buildersmediapreaching skills
help & info
 search 
by: Topic or Word



• Browse Preaching Skills 
• Lectionary 
 1 of 3

PREACHING SKILLS
When You Don't Look Forward to Special Days
Should preachers address holidays, both secular and religious?


Topics: Expectations; Holidays; Pastoral concerns; Special Days

It was Mother's Day. I knew the two well-dressed elderly ladies glaring at me were visitors because they sat in the front row. In the middle of my sermon, one said aloud to the other, " This isn't about mothers. " The other responded, " What kind of church is this? " and together they looked down the row disapprovingly at the family members who brought them.

Choosing not to focus an entire sermon on a special day, as I sometimes do, can create a stir. On the other hand, some may avoid church on a special day because of the strong negative emotions attached. One man told me, " I skipped last week because it was Mother's Day. " When I asked why, he replied, " It was pointless. My mother's been dead for years. "

Special days present preachers with special challenges.

1. When we ignore a special day, we may suffer the consequences of disappointing people.
My experience has been that if you choose not to address a given holiday, most people will be happy provided it's a good sermon. But as the above story shows, that isn't always the case. Depending on the day, we encounter expectations from several sources:

If you choose not to address a given holiday, most people will be happy, provided it's a good sermon.

2. People may focus on the holiday rather than on God
This is probably the greatest danger of any special day. Humanism, hyper-patriotism, and outright idolatry can hijack worship. Biblical preachers must avoid dressing the gospel in patriotic clothes, tying the flag to the cross on July 4th, or turning Christmas into merely a sentimental family affair.

After one worship service, a member met me at the door with a mild rebuke: " I was a little disappointed not to hear a sermon about mothers today. "

" Why was that? " I said as casually as possible, dismayed that so many in the narthex seemed to be listening.

" It is Mother's Day, " she replied. " Shouldn't mothers get one Sunday a year? "

In a flash (of what I hope was inspiration) I responded, " Nope. God gets 'em all. "

That is the heart of the matter. There are many holidays and special events that demand attention, but the only thing that matters is that God be honored. As Stephen Rummage writes, " The purpose of the special day sermon is not to glorify the special day but to glorify Jesus Christ " (Planning Your Preaching,Kregel, 2002, p. 124).

3. The celebration pushes the sermon off to the side.
A word from God can be overshadowed by a musical extravaganza, a powerful drama, or cute children waving palm branches. Recognition of the oldest father present or the presentation of a lengthy special music number leaves less time for preaching. One Easter, our platform was filled with so much staging I had to preach from the aisle.

4. We may use Scripture wrongly to address the holiday.
When we try to speak to a special day, we may make a text mean what it never meant. For example, we may offer biblical characters as case studies in parenthood when that was not the intent of the text.

" A cord of three strands is not quickly broken, " Ecclesiastes 4:12, is not the right text for Trinity Sunday.

" But for those who fear you, you have raised a banner to be unfurled against the bow, " Psalm 60:4, is not a reference to our nation's flag and a call to patriotism.

5. The holiday theme is not what we sense God wants preached at this time.
Did you ever face a holiday and sense the theme seemed opposite to what God wanted? The calendar season was not the spiritual season of the church. It was Thanksgiving, but you felt the mind of the Lord was to deal with broken relationships. The holiday mood was celebratory, but you sensed the need for repentance.

Rather than automatically jettisoning either, try to wed the two. How does what you sense relate to the holiday? Another option is to ignore the holiday, and explain why. This only adds to the urgency of the message.

6. We have run out of fresh things to say.
Of all special days, the most significant are Christmas and Easter, and that makes them also the most challenging. Since each of those days tends to arrive every year, a pastor must find ways to declare powerfully the basic message of the incarnation and resurrection to the same audience. The preacher must be able to do more than declare " ditto. "


How to keep from running dry
Here are nine suggestions for producing fresh material for any special day.

1. Plan and study ahead.
When you suddenly realize Palm Sunday is a week away, it's hard to come up with something fresh. Planning ahead gives you time to think, pray, and be creative.

next page … |  1 of 3


share this pageshare this page

 reader reviews
Average Rating:  by 1 member. (Members, please login to rate this item.)



Sign up for a membership:

Monthly
Yearly




Free Newsletters
Preaching Connection
(weekly)  
Leadership Weekly  




RSS Feeds  
Illustrations
Sermon Builders
Media
Preaching Skills


Sunday, March 21, 2010
Fifth Sunday in Lent
Isaiah 43:16-21
Psalm 126 or Psalm 119:9-16
Philippians 3:4b-14
John 12:1-8





The Practical Journal for Church Leaders

Subscribe to Leadership journal