Here are some posts and podcasts on preaching and biblical exegesis that I noticed. (To receive Preaching Post Roundup as a weekly email, please subscribe.)
- My Prayer for Preaching from Nathaniel R. Martin (Nathaniel R. Martin) – “Exalt your name, edify your church, evangelize the sinner”
- What Is the Target of a Biblical Sermon? from William Farley (Servants of Grace) – we must not fail to preach to the conscience
- Preaching into the Pain from Chris Green (Ministry Nuts and Bolts) – as we prepare sermons, we need to be willing to sense the pain in our world and then see how it and the biblical text connect
- The Rhetoric of Puritan Preaching from Joseph Steele (Reformation 21) – many Puritans were sanctified rhetoricians using rhetoric that is spiritual, simple, and sincere
- What Makes a Sermon Difficult To Listen To from Tim Challies (Challies) – such sermons include word studies, extended commentary quotations, citations, and every possible option; they lack an obvious outline and illustrations and are delivered in a monotone
- Two Reasons We Might Lose Our Listeners from Randal Pelton (Pelton on Preaching) – we may lose our listeners when there is a lull in the emotional connection or a break in the logical flow of the sermon
- True and False Pastoral Productivity – Chad Brooks from Chad Brooks and Mike Neglia (Expositors Collective) – thoughts on preaching sermon series from the Gospels, on the difference between doing more things and doing things well, on recycling sermons, on preaching to a camera versus preaching to a live audience, on the preaching of John Wesley
- Deuteronomy 4: On the Heart of the Old Testament, “Seeing” with Our Ears, and a Healthy, Protestant Suspicion of Sensory Overload (Bible Talk, Ep. 55) and Deuteronomy 5–6: On “Fam Deevs,” Mar Duke, and the Shema (Bible Talk, Ep. 56) from Alex Duke, Sam Emadi and Jim Hamilton (9 Marks) – biblical theological insights on Deuteronomy 4-6
- Blessed: The Theology of the Book of Revelation with Tom Schreiner (Episode 4) from Nancy Guthrie and Tom Schreiner (Crossway) – Tom Schreiner’s reflections on the meaning, purpose, and theology of Revelation
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