I typically introduce my sermons in a traditional manner. I read the text first. I give the title of the sermon.
Then I formally introduce the message. Others give the introduction before they read the text and state their title. Whichever way you begin your message, a strong introduction is essential, necessary, and beneficial.
Here are nine ways to get your sermon off to a good start.
1. Introduce
something.
Many homileticians
encourage preachers to write the introduction last. I am not legalistic about
things like this. I think you should write as it comes to you. Yet there is
wisdom in not beginning with your introduction. Write out a complete sermon
skeleton first. Establish the point, structure, and objectives of the message.
Know what you are introducing before you write your introduction. Then be sure
your introduction to the message actually introduces the message.
2. Place the text
in its context.
A text without a context is
a pretext. So be sure to help listeners understand how your text fits into the
progression of thought. Don’t drag them through a survey of the entire book.
But help them to see how the text fits into the theme of the section. Explain
the historical background and literary context. Avoid the temptation to blitz
the congregation with exegetical data. But use the introduction to show how
your text correlates with the larger theme of the related scriptures.
3. State the point
of the message.
There is an increasing
popular style of preaching that holds the point of the message until the
conclusion. But preachers should view this as a novelty that should not be
regularly employed. If you are striving for faithful exposition, find the point
of the text. Craft that point into a clear, direct, present tense statement.
And state it in the introduction. Let the congregation know where you are going
up front, even if you don’t tell them how you are going to get there.
4. Give an
accurate forecast.
Some preachers transition
from the introduction by summarizing the body of the message. This is a good
practice, even though it can also be good to build suspense by revealing ideas
as you go. Either way, the introduction should be an accurate forecast of where
the sermon is headed. Don’t misrepresent the message. Don’t contradict
yourself. And don’t oversell what you will deliver. It if is not on the shelves
do not put it on the showcase.
5. Write it
out.
It is best to write out a
complete sermon manuscript, whether you use it in the pulpit or not. But if you
do not write out anything else, write your introduction. Word-for-word.
Untangle your thoughts by writing them out. Strive for clarity. Know where you
are going. Find the clearest way to the point and body of the message. Map out
your way through the opening moments of the sermon. Establish that the
sermon is moving toward a purposeful destination with a clear and compelling
introduction.
6. No dumping
allowed.
If you take your study
seriously, you will inevitably have more material than you can preach in one
sermon. What should you do with that additional material? Save it for another
message. Do not stick it in the introduction. The introduction is not the place
to dump information you cannot find a place for anywhere else.You want your introduction to be clean and tight and strong. Don’t undermine it by stuffing it with too much material. The body of the message should be filled with good meat. The introduction should be fat-free. So be sure everything in the introduction has a real purpose. Know why every sentence is there. Ruthlessly edit out whatever does not fit.
7. Know your
audience.
Effective preaching
requires that you exegete your audience, as well as your text. Identify to whom
you will be preaching. Then craft your introduction for your listeners. This is
easier if you preach to the same congregation each week. If you are consistent,
your congregation will give you the benefit of the doubt. But don’t take them
for granted.Keep them on their toes by engaging them in the introduction. If you are preaching in an unfamiliar setting, it is all the more important to make a connection. Appeal to commonalities. And avoid unnecessary offense. Let the text offend, not your introduction.
8. Practice
variety.
Don’t start every sermon
the same way. Be creative. Use different doors to get into the house. Tell a
story. Raise a question. State a problem. Use a strong quote. Describe the
background of the text. Do an object lesson. Try multimedia. Mix it up.
Practice diversity. Change the way you come at them, especially if you preach
to the same congregation each week. Practicing variety in the introduction is a
simple but effective way to stay fresh in the pulpit.
9. Keep it
brief.
This is key advice for
preachers who strive to do exposition. You want to spend the bulk of your time
explaining and applying the text. So get to the point quickly. Don’t ramble. Don’t
waste words. Don’t loiter on the front porch. You can give a wrong signal by
taking your time to tell a story, build suspense, or make an application,
leaving limited time to deal with the text.Don’t cruise through the introduction and then rush through the body of the message. We are prone to say, “I wish I had more time to deal with this.” Give yourself more time by keeping your introduction brief.
What advice would you give on sermon introductions?
H.B. Charles, Jr. is the Pastor-Teacher at the Shiloh Metropolitan Baptist Church of
Jacksonville , Florida , where he has served since the fall
of 2008. He is primarily responsible for preaching-teaching, vision casting,
and leadership development – along with all the other tasks that are a part of
pastoral ministry.
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