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.)
- Preaching Like Our Heroes from Philip Crouse Jr. (Center for Preaching and Pastoral Leadership) – we can learn from our preaching heroes, but we don’t need to imitate them
- I’ll Never Preach Like Spurgeon and That’s Okay from Alistair Chalmers (Chalmer’s Blog) – we don’t have to preach like Spurgeon, as long as our goal is to glorify Christ
- Pastors Are Teachers First: A Paragraph That Reformed My Ministry from Jonathan Parnell (Desiring God) – Richard Baxter reminds us that pastors are primarily teachers; they teach for the salvation of souls, but can’t produce the harvest
- On Being Simple and Straightforward from Stephen Kneale (Building Jerusalem) – we shouldn’t “dumb down” our preaching and teaching, but should explain things in a clear and comprehensible way
- Pray for Your Preaching, Pray for Your Listeners from Jeffrey Arthurs (Preaching Points) – Arthurs uses the acronym APCAT (a modified version of John Piper’s acronym) to help us pray during our sermon preparation
- Sermon Review: What It Is, Why You Need It and How to Do It from Ben Stapley (Lifeway Research) – how to go about having a panel review your sermon before you preach it
- Episode 40: Preaching a Funeral of a Nonbeliever from Hershael York (Pastor Well – Southern Equip) – suggestions for what to say at the funeral of a nonbeliever and how to proclaim the gospel in that setting
- Why Our Cultural Moment Needs Verse By Verse Expositional Preaching with Ed Stetzer from Ed Stetzer and Mike Neglia (Expositors Collective) – expository preaching is valuable because it takes the text seriously, provides an example for God’s people, and aligns with the cultural moment in which we live
- How to Understand and Apply the Old TestamentāStep 11: Systematic Theology from Jason DeRouchieā(For the Church) – how to study and use systematic theology in interpreting the Old Testament
- Everything I Need to Know about Revelation I Learned in the First Eight Verses from Tommy Keene (Sign and Shadow) – a great deal can be learned about Revelation by doing a careful study of its opening verses
- Thoughts on Studying Revelation from David Prince (For the Church) – Revelation helps clarify Jesus and his kingdom, has a practical purpose, is the Bible’s story, and is Christ-intoxicated
- Understanding the Book of Revelation Isn’t Your Biggest Challenge from Nancy Guthrie (Crossway) – “most challenging is Revelation’s very clear message, which is a call to bold allegiance to Jesus Christ, and a call to refuse to compromise with the world”
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