Thursday, October 31, 2024

Closure, Holy Spirit, 10.31.2024

     We are ever dependent on the Holy Spirit.  Though preaching still requires work, planning, reflection and perspective to prepare for this yearly task of creating calendar to guide our preaching, it should also be an act of devotion. At the end of a full month of intense preparation the work product should be a complete sermon calendar. Our attitude should be peace because we have achieved closure on one of our central, yearly tasks. 

    For me, most of the tasks are finished, there are just a few loose ends.  I have full sermon series planned. For each I have texts, titles, and themes. There is a little air in the schedule where I will allow developing circumstances to provide ongoing structure as to how a series or two plays out. I have already made a significant change reducing the overall number of distinct series to spend additional time focusing on the Gospel of Matthew. 

    I am dotting the “I’s”, crossing the “T’s”, and lining up my ducks. Big picture details become to-do items with checklists to channel the work-load day after day through 52 weeks of the year.  Bibliographies are prepared and resources sequenced for the most profitable process of reading, reflecting, taking notes and expanding my understanding of these portions of Scripture I will be preaching in 2025.

    Yes, it is work but it is a pleasant, joyful task. I am neck deep in scripture, praying and reflecting on God’s work among His people, and expectantly waiting the Spirit who both indwells the preacher and inspires the Biblical text. The preacher depends on this divine interaction to make the connections that provide for clear, articulate, understandable preaching. The difference between a sermon and a speech is the capacity to faithfully declare “Thus says the Lord.” If you preach, I would guess you agree with me when I say we have the best job in the whole world. 

    There are only a couple of days left in this month, and I am Five Sundays away from the first message listed on my 2025 Sermon Calendar. Over the next few days, I will shift from the planning phase to the study phase. I have books ready to be read and I have assigned time in my schedule. I know from experience that the growth of the preacher provides parameters for the growth of a congregation. A stale preacher makes for bored listeners. A well-prepared Sermon Calendar is not an end in itself. When it is finished, when you and I arrive at closure on this part of the work the next phase can begin. May God bless our work through the presence and perspective of His Holy Spirit working in our hearts and minds to speak to His people.



Thursday, October 24, 2024

Space 10.24.2024

     I’m late. I should have finished this first draft a couple of days ago, done some editing yesterday, polished it up this morning and then posted it. It’s nearly noon and I ‘m just beginning my draft. Why? Sermon calendar work was a priority, and I spent the morning revisiting, reconsidering, revising, then redoing the work I had already done. It is getting toward the end of the month, and I had the time to do this primarily because I built space into the schedule for this critical month. 

    If you work with your brain, you will find that you not only need diversion, but you also need room. If the well is too full it can be difficult to dip out the water without spilling some, wasting it or losing track of it. You need a little bit of room to grow, to breathe, to function. 

    I try to encourage you to work hard at fulfilling your ministry. Preparing to preach and teach is hard, exacting, lonely, frustrating, and invigorating work. We each need to allow space for the information we learn to be incorporated into our previous understanding. If you are diligent at good, applied exegesis you will gain insights that will require you to think, absorb, and recalibrate your approach. If you read commentaries, theologies, and other materials parallel to what you are preaching, you will need time to consider new and challenging concepts. If you hammer out good sermons you will want to let them sit for a couple of days, marinate, age, and tenderize. Then you will want to revisit them in terms of structure, accuracy, theological depth, and practical application. 

    Each of these scenarios expect the same thing. Enough time. Enough distance. Enough space. You need space. Your mind needs space. Your thinking needs space. Your sermons need space. I was able to totally revamp my sermon calendar this morning, something I had been pondering for at least a couple of days, because there was time and space. Even though there are still many practical matters to attend to, even after lots of revision and cutting, even after second-guessing and banging my head on the desk—three-quarters of next year’s preaching is scheduled in my Things to do list. 

    In fact, the space itself provoked the tinkering. It was because time and space were built into the process that I could make changes to my emerging plan. I have been doing enough preliminary reading, sketching, outlining, and thinking that I knew that this morning was the time to act on some of that tinkering. It was nearly time to transition from preparing my preaching calendar to actually scheduling work. If I wanted to make significant changes, this was the day, because this is where I had provided space for those kinds of changes.  The air in my schedule, the space left between tasks, the detailed reading, preparing Bibliography, and skimming resources gave me the chance to nail down what I thought would be important in 2025. I was able to think through things and pray for wisdom, discretion, discernment, and perspective. Without the time and space, it is not uncommon for our prayers to become desperate pleas for deliverance. 

    I think it is best to work in partnership with God and to use all the tools we have available. Panic is not nearly as effective as planning. We have books and essays, calendars and to-do lists, paper and pencil, colleagues, congregants, and students. Our own past preaching and the piles of work we have laid in store. When we dedicate the time and allow for enough space, we give God’s Holy Spirit plenty of room to move so that God’s voice is clearly present and artfully articulated in our preaching.


Thursday, October 17, 2024

Paperwork 10.17.2024

     Asana is a company that provides project and work management software for individuals and teams. The origin story for the company comes from the system the company's founders put into place at Facebook to streamline work processes. Every job has a disproportionate amount of what Asana calls “work about work.” These tasks are, in Asana's marketing often derided as drudgery, “make work”, or mere paper-pushing. However, for real people living in the real world these tasks are vital, even essential to doing what we might call “adult person” work. These unfashionable duties are often the bones and sinews that hold together projects, bring work in on time, and provide context for the next project. This is no less true of the critical work of studying and preparing to preach

    When “work about work” is denigrated, marginalized, overlooked, or just plain ignored, when you don’t pay attention to those details you can endanger or even shipwreck the entire operation. The Asana mythology is nice. Out here in the real world, we realize that “work about work” is, in fact, actually just work. Plain old, unglamorous, painstaking, detailed work that needs to be done well  so that tasks can be approached appropriately, work product can be usefully stored, and the final output--in this case our weekly sermon--is ready to be presented.  

    In the 21st century the physical aspects of virtually any job have been altered by our digital reality. I’ve personally used computers to research and write sermons since 1985. It is really within the last 20-25 years that we have been able to move virtually the whole research, writing, storage, filing, tracking process into local or digital storage.  Here’s a quick review of the analog process for you youngsters who be too young for the "age of paper".

     In 1997 (just picking out a year) I would start with  a case of legal pads and other necessary stationary. This meant a hanging file folder for each sermon series. Depending on the part of Scripture each series came from I might also have a separate hanging folder just for research. In the “Sermon” folder went a manilla folder for each sermon. Into that folder would go all notes, outlines, illustrations, clippings, drafts, edits, and final preaching copy for that particular sermon. Given all that paper, most preachers could have had “Tree slayer” as their nickname.  Notes and typewritten copy were stored on a computer. Much of the time I stored each years work its own floppy disk. In addition to the stationary products there were consumables for the computer and printer and the final piece of the puzzle--filing cabinets for storage. Besides preaching preparation there also was Pastoral work, Professional growth and interaction, Planning and Leading, and Programming. Even in a ministry setting with secretarial or administrative assistance most of that "work about work" was mine to organize and execute. 

    The digital age has both changed the process and intensified it. It is possible for me to read, review, and research far more material and keep richer records because none of it ever leaves my computer. Virtually all of it is  in the cloud accessible on every device available to me. Since 2012 virtually every sermon and point of research I have prepared is available to me on phone or iPad. I rarely print paper for notes. I still take take a lot of handwritten notes and if what I write down is something essential that I need to keep for possible future reference I snap a scan of if with my phone and store it in the appropriate folder on my computer.  

    It is somewhat easier to do this basic administrative work with our interconnected digital technology. Yet It is still important to review and consider these mundane processes because the depth and breadth of the information, coming at us at ever greater velocity,  still needs to be organized and accessible—not merely “piled” on a distant hard drive. 

    I’m preparing to preach from Matthew this winter. I have at least five complete sermon series from Matthew available to me at the click of a button! I need to know what I have said in the past, what I’ve said recently, and what materials I have researched and to what degree. Yes, it is easier to just rifle through files on a computer than it is to pull and review a physical folder. Easy or difficult, digital or analog it’s got to be done and despite the Asana folks wanting to shill on doing away with such paper-pushing, real jobs require personal and institutional context. That context comes by intentionally connecting the past to the future. That process is real, necessary work.

    And we must do it. During Sermon Calendar month I will go into the folder on my hard drive cleverly named: 2025. I have already labeled the following folders: 1. Preaching. 2. Pastoral Care. 3. Planning/Leading. 4. Professional. 5. Programming. The primary focus of this month will be that first folder--Preaching. I have prepared subfolders: A.M. Preaching. Theology. Improving Interpretation. Sermon Calendar Work. There are a few scattered files that will be properly filed as I go through the process. A.M. Preaching has a subfolder already for each series I’m planning. Each sermon series gets subfolders for research, preaching manuscript, slides, handouts. This system takes a few more clicks than some methods. I can also do a quick search using the Alfred utility on my Mac and just find it the hard way. Following the folder tree reminds me that this is not a random process. There is a purpose and direction to what I’m doing. No. You certainly don’t have to do it this way. If you want to use card stock and envelopes that’s fine. You either are organized or not. Yes it takes time. It can be drudgery and I do work as quickly as possible to just hammer through the "paperwork" so that I have as much time reserved for study as possible. The time is not wasted. Presumably that study will result in notes, drafts, preliminary outlines, and strategies. If I'm going to be able to find it 12 weeks from now that will only be because I've done that administrative work in advance. 

    If you are not organized, you will spend a lot of time simply looking for things that you have but can’t find. You will likely not prepare preliminary drafts and do much editing because you’ll find it difficult to remember where you’re at in the process. You’ll be able to leverage the power of modern computing to find things, but you won’t really know where they’re at, or why. Much of what I write in this space encourages you to be thoughtful and intentional in your preparation and preaching. Part of that process is storing the fruit of study so that you are able to use it. Real study should be a journey of discovery. Don't get lost in the undeveloped country of your own work. 

    You might be thinking “I didn’t get into ministry to do paperwork.” Get over it. Real jobs include real work. Adults don’t just get to have fun. Doctors need to take and maintain good notes. I want engineers to keep their materials organized rather than risk unnecessary road or bridge failures. Lawyers do briefs and are organized. Accountants keep accounts straight. Even professional athletes study their playbooks, review their film, and keep notes on their past performance and the tendencies of their competitors. Simple or complex, real jobs have work product and deliverables. Preaching has a different focus and domain, but you still do the work (work product) so that you can preach on Sunday (deliverable). 

    My point is, given that we will do something let’s make sure that it is intentional, storable, usable, and discoverable. Your life’s work needs more attention than a tangled mess. If we are going to heed God’s call on our life and do the work, let’s do it well.


Thursday, October 10, 2024

Glue 10.10.2024

 

    As you consider your course of preaching—your sermon calendar for the coming year—what will be glue that holds it all tougher. Sunday morning is not sneaking up on you. It isn’t a surprise. The new year is not upon us for many weeks. Each of us has the opportunity to look at the big picture, to think of the coming year, as a whole. 
    Those Sundays need not be thought of as 52 separate entities. Yes, you and I will go into the pulpit week by week with God’s word for His people for that specific week, but effective, pastoral preaching should be strategic and cumulative. In fact, the weekly logistics and tactics of preaching this text, this week, to these people is actually easy if each individual sermon is contributing to your overall preaching campaign. 
    So back to the question. What is the glue that will hold it all together. A well-balanced Biblical diet will be drawn from the full counsel of God. Gospel, Epistle, and the Old Testament all have a role to play. However, the sermons are not simply falling like mana to be gathered by us. Each message is the result of a life lived in devotion to studying and teaching scripture. Fifty-two scraps of unrelated, scattergun, spur-of the moment messages will not only leave the congregation to figure out the big-picture—you will exhaust yourself chasing down enough ingredients to make a healthy meal. 
Leaving the nutritional analogy behind us let me ask the question yet a third time. What is the glue? What is the theme? What is the focus? What is the “big picture” going to be for your preaching in the coming year? Taking an entire month to focus on a sermon calendar only seems like an extravagant luxury when we have already decided that our ministry calling primarily consists of something more important than “Devoting ourselves to prayer and the ministry of the word.” (Acts 6.4). If that is the case what I write will be of little help to you because you are actually doing something different. 
    You know what’s coming, when, and how frequently. What is the glue—what holds it all together?  You need some kind of a thread to run through the whole year that links Advent to Easter to Autumn, to next Advent. People need to understand that if they miss a Sunday that they be missing a vital piece of a story that you are unfolding throughout the full year. It may take you time to teach your people. If you are diligent in your preparation and persistent in your practices, they will not only understand what you are doing but will appreciate the impact that it has on their spiritual development and maturity. 
    Haphazard preparation makes for slipshod sermons which devalues the entire worship experience. Good preaching creates good listeners. Good listeners crave good preaching. We’d like to think that the magic happens in the pulpit. Suffice it to say, there is no magic. Acceptable outcomes come from hard work. Hard work occurs in an environment of planning. Planning is not an end in itself but the environment in which ongoing preparation occurs. If you want to improve your preaching—improve your planning and you will find that you have more time to study, write, pray, and think about what you will say every week. You won’t be thinking “What will I preach, what will I say?”
    Will your plan evolve throughout the year? Of course. We’re not talking about crazy glue here! The only permanent frame of reference is the Bible itself. The Bible, does not however, read itself. It does not preach itself. It requires interpretation and incarnation. This is what we are called to do! It is not an act of faith to leave this ministry to chance. Waiting for some kind of nebulous nudging to a text and sermon is an act of hubris if not malice. You are called and equipped and filled with the Holy Spirit. God trusts you to do this. Faith requires that we expect Him to work in, with, through, and by our efforts. Yes, occasionally, some sermons will fall flat. If that occurs it should be through no lack of effort on our part. 
    I will be talking about the Church in 2025. That “theme” is the glue that will hold my sermon calendar together. We will work through several New Testament scriptures, and some Old Testament texts. Each series will to some degree consider the topic of what it means to be God’s People. To some a theme like “the Church” is simple, even naive. Where are the big “topics?” What about the hot items people are yim-yamming about on Social Media? What about clever and entertaining titles driven by contemporary content? Well, I’m not a luddite and I’m aware of the “times and the seasons.” Good preaching needs to be aware of the contemporary context without being driven by it. The Bible provides the form and content for each message. The broader Biblical theme gives coherence to the whole year. That’s the glue. To foreground cultural, social, or community concerns tends to put the proverbial cart before the horse. 
    The process of “mixing the glue” is pretty simple. Look at your past preaching. Consider the texts you preached and the trajectories you traced through the various books. Review each year as a whole and remind yourself of the glue that held those previous years together. Even when you are preaching familiar texts—books you have perhaps preached many times you will find that a close reading provides a fresh way to contextualize what is written. As you look year by year, series by series, you have the opportunity to find the commonality in the books and or topics that will allow you to formulate a plan for your year. If nothing else this is simply a good process for reviewing your own preaching and study of the Word. When it is done well you will find that the glue of your sermon calendar may just be the glue that allows your preaching to stick in people’s minds.

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Octoberific! 10.3.2024

     For some, the first days of October are exhilarating because of the crisp, Fall air. Others, for reasons I do not—and care not to understand, look forward to indulging in pumpkin spice. For some October means playoff baseball. Other sports fanatics are encouraged as both the NFL and Collegiate Football seasons begin to winnow out the haves from the have nots. 

    And for me? October means Sermon Calendar preparation for the coming year. It may be a personal tradition, but it is a tradition, nonetheless. And if you follow me in this space you have heard about it many times. I will never stop declaring the empowering freedom of knowing every single week what you will preach. There is no need to lose sleep or fret over the task at hand. Preparation and planning provide a birds-eye view of 52 weeks of preaching that enhances weekly study and, with a little discipline will make you a better preacher. 

    It is still early. The month is just started. Yet, in just a few hours this afternoon I was able to map out a big-picture strategy for the year. Now I have 29 days not only to secure resources and plan out individual messages I have a yearly theme that I can pray over beginning right now. 

    A sermon calendar may seem overly nerdy and a little obsessive. And it may be those things. But when I come to the first Sunday of Advent I will know where I’m going and how Christmas season leads directly to Easter, Easter to Pentecost, Pentecost to the rest of the year. 

    I can begin right now to read in the secondary literature for the whole year. I have time to consider books which I may have avoided because they are too long or don’t seem relevant, knowing that I am preparing for a long-term season of study. 

    Last month I wrote about reviewing and taking inventory and different strategies for controlling the flow of information. Some of that information will be resurfaced and pigeon-holed for use in the coming months. Other information will be filtered entirely out or re-filed for another day. I’ve already began going back through my past preaching on the texts chose for the year to ensure I do not unduly repeat myself. I have already found materials used in different setting that I will repurpose and reedit into a series of sermons. 

    While the fall may be terrific for some, and others celebrate Rocktober, for me it is Octoberific. A deep dive now will yield fruit, save time, provide quality control, and keep me focused. It is more important at this stage in my ministry than it has ever been before. Only the experienced are truly tempted to be lazy. 

    For example, when I opened Matthew 1 in Logos Bible Software today, without looking for a specific pericope, I was presented with 126 different documents. There were sentence flow documents and other research, but mostly sermons. Sermons I have written from Matthew. Some might find it tempting to re-preach those old sermons, or at least reuse much of that old material. I find it informative and helpful, but I am committed to preparing fresh sermons from current exegesis. This preliminary work is a help to me, not a substitute for doing the hard work I am called to do. The process of exegesis, outlining, writing, editing, rewriting, and ultimately preaching is a spiritual process—a drama in several acts that should result in better preaching—because the process makes for a better preacher. 

    God has called us to stand for Him every Lords Day, to represent Jesus and to proclaim, “This is what God says!” The only way to do that with integrity is to be listening intently to His resonating voice in the text.  

    Let’s saddle up and do the work He called us to do. Let’s enjoy the company of the Biblical authors and the great cloud of exegetical witnesses that has gone before. Let’s join with our colleagues and commit to not only preparing sermons that will be the heart of worship, but to seasons of preparation which are themselves acts of worship. I am convinced that God will honor that work and that if you stick with it, you, too will find the process Octoberific.


Friday, September 27, 2024

Music 9.26.2024

 One of my favorite Singer-songwriters, J.D. Souther passed away last week. It is both thought-provoking and unsettling. I had already decided to write about music as an interpretive activity this week, and though distracted a bit, will soldier on. 

    People of my generation often say, “Our music is the best!” This comment is also heard by previous generations, following generations, the present generation, and those still to come. Twentieth century innovations like the automobile, the radio, broad distribution of evolving, affordable recording media made music a defining public presence. Prior to the modern era, music was always live. You played it or listened at home, or you went to hear it in some kind of a public venue—church, opera house, concert hall, saloon, salon. That was it. They did not have radios or Bluetooth speakers in their bathrooms, bedrooms, offices, or studies. 

For us music plays and expanding environmental role. Before the twentieth century people paid closer attention to music because any access to it required intent. Listening to music was more like going to a library. Consequently, it was a foreground rather than a background experience. For many of us, music rarely transcends being the background for our lives. Our lives have become increasingly cinematic and virtually all music has become a soundtrack. 

    This may not seem to be a big deal. You may question why I’m bringing it up during a month dedicated to inventory and reviews for next year’s study and preaching. I do so because I am also inventorying my playlists and favorite albums for listening in my study. I try not to allow music to be merely an amorphous soundtrack but to help establish focus for the detailed work of study. Most of what I listen to will not have lyrics. I try to focus on composers, groups, and artists whose work is spiritual, meditative, or intellectually stimulating. I like to read about the composer, songwriting, performer. I try and understand what it is they are hoping to accomplish. How do they view their own art. For me music is not merely background. If exegesis is worship, and the work in the study brings honor to God, then the music one listens to is significant. 

    So yes, even your choices in music should be intentional and they will knowingly or unknowingly impinge on your habits of study and thought. I personally like classical music, ambient music, and “jazz”. These forms of musical expression create an atmosphere of intellectual focus. They are musical genre’s that engage the mind as well as emotion. Did I listen last week to some J.D. Souther? Yep. His whole discography. When I selected that music, I did so during parts of the day when I knew that I would not be “creating.” I can listen to music with lyrics when processing Email or doing routine administrative tasks. Otherwise, I choose music that keeps my mind alert, provides focus, and lacks lyrics. 

    You may be thinking a couple of things. First you may have concluded that I am just weird. That is fine. Others have made the same judgment; I’m a big boy and I can take it. I do, however think you are missing out on things that can enrich your life. Secondly, you may be saying “I just don’t like those kinds of music.” Understood. I used to hate cottage cheese and Brussels Sprouts. I didn’t decide to like them until I had tried them, and I found that my own unfounded prejudices kept me from enjoying and benefiting from something which I found to be enriching. 

Our preferences “for” and against certain kinds of music are often shaped by prejudices against and caricatures of the genre’s we don’t like. And apathy. We don’t know something and consequently don’t like it. One of the matters that we need to consider is that you can appreciate something even if it is not what you prefer. And it is in exercising this appreciatory capacity that we can grow.  In short, you need to listen to more music and choose things outside your normal “preference.” 

    You will find that such an exercise helps you to develop deeper discernment and a more focused and intentional critical approach to all “incoming” stuff. You won’t like everything you hear any more than you like everything you read. Some of us view motion pictures which had rave reviews and we think that they are unentertaining, boring, or bad. There are some genre’s that you may never learn to appreciate. I don’t listen to rap, and I don’t watch “slasher” movies. Others disagree and that is OK. 

    My goal this month has been to encourage you as a preacher-scholar-pastor to process, curate, appreciate, and grow from what you read, see, and hear. Music can be a profound, life-changing experience. Oddly enough, the present generation though they have access to massive catalogues of recorded music often have little opportunity to hear it played live. With unequalled choice, most choose to listen only to what is popular or “hot”. When I was in school, we had local concerts and dances and could hear live music fairly regularly. Ironically, for many growing up in the twenty-first century the only time they ever hear a live band is when the attend Church, and those bands tend to play the same formulaic “hits” produced by the big players in the Worship-Industrial complex.  

    Listen to more, not less. Appreciate the new and study the old. There may be lots of musical ideas, but there are a limited number of notes. When I learn a new tune on the Piano I don’t ask if it’s a hymn, pop-hit, or classic ‘70s rock. I pluck around, find the key, and either judge it to be good or bad. Good tunes transcend genre because they express timeless ideas. 

    Yes, we are bound by the limitations of time and place. We are a part of our culture. We are found here and called by God to minister when and where we are at. Music, art, and literature allow us to rise above that particularity to see these beautiful lives God has given us in a universal scope. These broader experiences will improve your preaching.


Thursday, September 19, 2024

Concepts 9.19.2024

 

    What is on your mind? How does your brain work?  How does your thinker think? What frameworks do you use to address the world around you? When you read a text from scripture what is your analytical perspective? Beyond that, how do you assimilate, evaluate, and appreciate any kind of information that comes to you? In an information saturated age, we need to have predetermined categories and concepts that we use to manage the flow and organize it for the proclamation of the Gospel. 
    You may be wondering exactly what I’m getting at. Let me explain further. Whenever you read a text whether novel, email, or poem you approach the text from some conceptual perspective. This is true of scripture as well. Regardless of the form—narrative, parable, psalm, or saga we all come at the text from some cultural, intellectual, social, and personal perspective. Much of it is based on our personality, intellectual makeup, and education. 
    There are those among us who will always read and understand a text from the perspective of the characters addressed. They primarily see and hear from within the text. Others (I don’t know why) always examine a text forensically from the perspective of author or narrator. Still others, taking a “step or two back” ask the profound question “what’s going on here?”, considering the text from a neutral perspective. And of course, history buffs will always look through the lens of historical cause and effect. 
    We humans are meaning making machines and we don’t always make meaning in precisely the same way. As preachers, teachers, writers, and researchers it is important for us to consider and analyze these conceptual perspectives so that we might gain a well-rounded empathetic understanding of the text in its context, and our congregation in its context.  You may approach the text analytically, even scientifically. Your listeners are not you and your congregation will bring a variety of conceptual understandings to the preaching moment. ignoring other concepts, considerations, and voices which your listeners bring to the preaching event shows a kind of contempt, or at least disregard for how others think. Good communication does not begin in contempt. Communication ceases when you disregard the audience, or when they feel like you are speaking but not listening.
    As is so often the case our hermeneutical task is not to reinvent the wheel but to thoroughly understand how it works. We need to consider applying the text from several angles—and this after we have fully understood what the author intended to write based upon form, genre, vocabulary, syntax and rhetorical effect. We don’t ever want to collapse into a post-modern, deconstructed, reader-centered hermeneutic. We do, however want to be aware of what some in the past called the uses of the text. What the Great Tradition (at least the Protestant side) calls uses, we now commonly call applications. A central task of weekly hermeneutics is developing a conceptual approach to application that is sensitive to the culture of our congregation. To not do so is to risk turning the Word-focused part of worship into a mere academic exercise. 
    Having posed the question let me propose some answers, or better yet let’s call them approaches. To begin with you must know your congregation, their background, education, and interests. Many of us preach to a congregation that is bright, educated, and informed. Explain unfamiliar terns and make comparisons. Make connections between what people know and what they do not. Your people will grow accustomed to being challenged to think during the preaching event, and the result will be greater maturity. 
    Next, you need to understand the community in which your congregation is located. What makes this place different? How has this place determined the intellectual and social horizon for people who live here. An example. Our school district is Grayville Community School District 1. Which is to say, the first school district organized in the state of Illinois. People are rightly proud of that fact and that contributes to the self-image of our town. 
    A third step is a conceptual understanding of the broader social and cultural mindset of where you serve. Yes, this town has unique features, but it also shares similarities with surrounding communities embedded in our cultural matrix. 
    People come from somewhere. We are a product of places. Congregation, community, and culture will give your preaching cultural resonance. Now, this can be tricky. We don’t want to preach from our context but to it. But even to address the very congregation before you, you need to be a part of the broader community. 
    This requires paying attention! Particularly in the twenty-first century, when it can be difficult to even find truly local sources of information. Newspapers have died and because local radio stations are a part of syndicates, they tend to only barely local. There are sources of information available. Even social media when used rightly will give you an understanding of these people who come to hear God’s Word proclaimed every week. And when they come, if you’ve done your homework and lived authentically in your community, Your message will be able to bring them closer to God and more deeply informed about their faith. If all you do is skim the text and skim the community the only concepts you will master are boredom and irrelevance.