HOW DO YOU HEAR A SERMON?
Dennis Gulledge
What is preaching and what good does a sermon
do? The first question can be answered by definition. The second
depends. The word, preach means primarily “to deliver a sermon.”
This is what women are not permitted to do in mixed assemblies of men and
women: note the word “teach,” Greek, didasko, “to deliver didactic discourses”
[Thayer] (1 Tim. 2:12). The word, sermon comes from a Latin term
meaning, “a stab, or a thrust,” as in the heart or mind of the listener
(Acts 2:37). This is the purpose of a sermon. It is not a discourse
intended to satisfy “itching ears” (2 Tim. 4:3).
There are three outstanding elements in preaching:
the preacher, the message and the hearer. Christianity requires these
three things: a sower, good seed or the pure gospel, and an honest (good)
hearer.
What Goes Into A Sermon?
Lots of study, research, reading, memorizing,
organization and prayer. None of these ingredients guarantee a perfect
product. A preacher can only do his best and that is a human variable.
The average sermon contains 5,000 words. Most preachers deliver ninety
sermons in one place each year. This totals about 450,000 words per
year. A full-length novel has about 50,000 words. A preacher,
therefore, produces the equivalent of nine novels a year. This should help
answer the question, “What does the preacher do?”
How Do Some Hear A Sermon?
There are those who never get offended at any
pointed truth (even from those preachers who still offer pointed truths).
They hear what is said, but never make a personal application. They
are sure that others need it, and they certainly know how to apply it to
their neighbors, but it hardly occurs to them to look inward.
There are others who feel that some sermons
are a planned, personal attack on them. They may strike back at the perceived
affront, but not at the preacher personally; always to others, in a close
circle of friends, or against his wife and/or children.
There are some that simply refuse to hear
and learn. They are glad to let the preacher have his say on what
is for them an already decided issue. Nothing that he says (or the
Bible says) is going to change their mind.
The wrong kind of hearer is inattentive, immature,
inactive, indifferent and has “itching ears” (Mt. 13:15; Acts 7:57; 2 Tim.
4:3-4; Jas. 1:22-25).
How Should You Hear a Sermon?
Listen to have your eyes opened, heart pricked
and senses awakened (Mt. 13:15-16). Take the point(s) of the sermon
and work to improve yourself in that regard. The preacher should
do the same for himself. The right kind of hearer is sincere, serious,
swift, steadfast and submissive (Mt. 5:6; Mk. 4:24; Jas. 1:19). A
good listener is half of a good sermon!