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Phillip Jensen:

Experienced preachers often get asked by young preachers to give them advice on their craft. How do I preach better? Should I preach longer? Or shorter? Should I use illustrations? Should I use a full script or just notes?

Each preacher develops opinions on these things, and before long the young preacher is offering advice to the even-younger preacher.

There are certainly techniques and approaches to preaching that can be learnt. There is also an element to it that seems to spring more naturally from the personality. A combination of learning techniques and listening to your mentors will most likely help you to achieve the goal of faithful, thorough and motivating Bible preaching.

Below is a list of seven tips for those who are beginning to preach. They are not an exhaustive program for preaching effectively; rather, they are simple ideas that I have found to bring more success than failure. They are focussed on one question: how do I keep it interesting?

Here is an outline of his seven tips:

  1. When you preach, be as good as you can
  2. Fledgling preachers tend to be boring
  3. Work out how long you can preach for and still be interesting
  4. Avoid commentaries [JT: read the whole comment for context!]
  5. Find the logic units of the book; don’t just preach on chapters or paragraphs
  6. Young preachers should start with bigger sections
  7. Expository preaching is worth fighting for (but a lot of other things are not)

I liked this one in particular:

If you’re not boring when you emerge from Bible College, you probably didn’t learn anything. Your head will be full of theology, Greek phrases, the latest ideas on running a service, and whatever else has grabbed your intellectual fancy.

Five years out of College, if you’re still boring, you have a problem.

You can read the whole thing here.

Phillip Jensen and Paul Grimmond have a new book out on preaching—a sort of follow-up to The Trellis and the Vine—which looks very helpful: The Archer and the Arrow: Preaching the Very Words of God. (You can read the preface and first chapter here.)

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