Here are some posts on preaching and exegesis that I noticed recently. (To receive Preaching Post Roundup as a weekly email, please subscribe.)
- Bryan Chapel on How NOT to Preach a Message from Faithlife Staff (LogosTalk) – avoid “be like”, “be good” and “be disciplined” messages apart from redemptive context
- How to Assemble Your Sermon from Jason K. Allen (For the Church) – draft the sermon body, the conclusion, the introduction, and add transitional phrases
- Sacred Desk or Sacred Cow: Perspective on the Pulpit (Part 1) and (Part 2) from Bob Gonzales (Sharper Iron) – “The physical pulpit is not a biblically sanctioned symbol. It’s simply a cultural circumstance of worship.”
- Preaching to Students in a Pandemic from Peter Mead (Biblical Preaching) – the message does not change, but speak from God’s heart to theirs, with targeted relevance
- Preaching as Connecting from Peter Mead (Biblical Preaching) – connecting the cross with Christ’s life, his life with his ministry now, and Christ with God
- The Preacher as Hitman and Midwife – Dr. Scott Keith from Mike Neglia and Scott Keith (Expositors Collective) – God uses the law to convict and the gospel to renew through our preaching (a Lutheran perspective)
- Finding the Pericopes in Genesis from Jason Kees (Preaching Source) – Kees is really dealing with the structure of Genesis
- Genesis 18–20: On Sordid Sins and the Glimmer of Grace, Even in Sodom and Gomorrah (Bible Talk, Episode 6) from Alex Duke, Jim Hamilton and Sam Emadi (9 Marks) – a detailed biblical theological discussion of these chapters
- “The People Quarreled with Moses”: Preaching Through the Book of Numbers from Randal Pelton (Pelton on Preaching) – Numbers 20: God keeps his promises, but our faith will be tested
- “Preaching and Preachers” Episode 187: Preaching the Book of Nehemiah with Dr. T.J. Betts from Jason Allen and T. J. Betts (Jason K. Allen) – insights for preaching through Nehemiah, emphasizing that God is glorified through the restoration of his people
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