I tend to be a bit of a perfectionist. That usually means agonizing over my studies so that I have everything “figured out” by Sunday morning. It didn’t take me long to realize that I never have the preaching portion all figured out. In more recent years I’m becoming more comfortable with the reality that all my interpretations are partial at best. I’ve also been able to look forward to what God will teach me during the teaching time. Virtually every weekend the preaching event, including the important interaction I enjoy with active listeners, adds to my understanding of the preaching portion. This means that my accuracy increases while I’m preaching. In Preaching & Preachers, Lloyd-Jones states, “…you never know what is going to happen to [the sermon] until you get into the pulpit and start preaching it….You will find that the Spirit Who has helped you in your preparation may now help you, while you are speaking, in an entirely new way, and open things out to you which you had not seen while you were preparing your sermon” (p. 99). Barth adds, “We should not try to master the text. The Bible will become more and more mysterious to real exegetes. They will see all the depths and distances” (p. 128 in Homiletics). I hope that you are finding this to be true of you–that you are learning while you preach.
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