Adopted from: www.churchleaders.com
To illustrate is to shed light on a
subject. Illustrations are like windows in a house: They let the light in, but
they can also let in voyeurs, seeking to eye the forbidden.
Voyeurism is not just the vice of
those who want to see what they should not see. It is also the vice of those
who want to show what they should not show.
There is no place for voyeurism in
the pulpit. Sermon illustrations should be like letting sunlight into a window,
not like putting a spotlight on a stage.
Here are 10 guidelines for avoiding
indecent exposure in the pulpit.
1.
Thou shalt not embarrass thy neighbor.
When I got married, Crystal gave me
blanket permission to use anything I thought was appropriate or helpful. She
had one qualification: “Don’t embarrass me.”
I strive to keep this one
commandment. So should you. Don’t say anything that will embarrass your family
and friends. Don’t criticize, settle scores or take shots from the pulpit.
Affirm, don’t embarrass.
2.
Think twice.
Many inappropriate things are said
in preaching spontaneously. We just don’t think about it before we say it. This
is why you should write out your messages. And as much as you can, stick to the
script.
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If you stray from what you prepared,
and it includes a personal reference you have not thought through, think twice.
3.
Do not boast.
You should not use illustrations
about what you drive, where you live, what designers you wear, how much money
you have, who you know or anything else that conveys you have it going on.
Don’t use the pulpit to brag about
material things!
4.
Ask permission.
A simple way to stay out trouble is
to ask permission before you mention someone from the pulpit.
Get permission first, and you won’t
have to get forgiveness later.
5.
Do not use illustrations from counseling sessions.
Church members do not confide in
pastors (or other members) because they fear their private business will
broadcast. “Please don’t talk about me from the pulpit,” they plead.
Your people should trust their
discussions with you are confidential. You undermine this confidence when you
use counseling conversations as pulpit material.
6.
Spare us the details.
Once or twice a year, I permit
unplanned testimonies in worship. But I remind volunteers they cannot tell it
all.
It just seems the more details they
try to give, the more the testimony goes astray. The same thing happens in
preaching. The most details about a situation, conversation or experience you
give, chances are you will over-speak. The devil is in the details.
So only say what is necessary to get
your point across.
7.
Don’t play the hero.
Avoid illustrations in which you are
the star. You don’t want people to think more highly of you than they ought. A
surefire way to produce misguided hero-worship is to tell stories that feature
you as the hero—the one who prayed or forgave or sacrificed or exhibited
patience or led someone to Christ. Be the villain.
Let Jesus be the hero.
8.
Good for the soul, bad for the reputation.
If there is something you need to
confess, tell it to the Lord—not to your congregation! Beware, in the attempt
to prove you are human, you can suggest you are not spiritually qualified to
preach.
Even if it is something buried in
the past of your pre-Christian days, still be careful. You want to invite
prodigals home, not make the far country seem desirable.
9.
Make sure you are over it before you talk about it.
When we have gone through hurts and
pains and sorrows, we want to share the lessons we have learned with our
people. Let those lessons sit a while. Make sure you pass the class first.
Don’t vomit your hurt feelings, open
wounds or unhealed offenses on your congregation.
10.
Remember it’s not about you.
The best way to avoid indecent
exposure in the pulpit is to stay focused on the fact that the message is not
about you. Your people should learn more about Christ from your sermons than
they learn about you. “For what we proclaim is not ourselves,” said the Apostle
Paul, “but Jesus Christ as Lord, with ourselves as your servants for Christ’s
sake” (2 Cor. 4:5).
Adopted From: http://www.churchleaders.com
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