How to Make this Material Yours

(Tips on Using Sermons and Lessons from The Preacher's Study)

While you could use the messages on this site word for word, delivering another's sermon verbatim without wrestling with it to make it your own might be like presenting someone else's biography as though it were about you. The following suggestions are offered to help you make each message your own.

1. Read and study the manuscript carefully to be sure you agree with the contents. Be sure it is sound Biblically and that it deals with issues your hearers need.

2. Internalize the message (this takes some time - perhaps several days if they are available). Spend time in meditation and prayer over the subject and related Bible passages. Be sure that it will speak to your needs and/or the needs of your hearers. Keep your hearers before your mind at all times, thinking of how it will impact them. If it doesn't impact you, don't preach it. A cleaver sermon without personal application is empty. Ask yourself, "Why should I preach this message? How will it benefit my hearers?"

3. Rework the material. This doesn't mean you cannot use the basic structure of the message and the major thoughts and illustrations, or even the phraseology, but it is best to put it into your own words and ways of expression. If you do not take this step, it may be obvious to your listeners that there is something wrong. As you rework the manuscript you will think of additional things to add that are unique to your ways of expression.

4. You may choose simply to read the messages privately for your own edification, letting the concepts "soak" in your mind and heart over some weeks, so that the material flows naturally into your own sermon preparation. This will boost your creativity.

5. Use illustrations with integrity. Don't speak of another's experience as your own. While you are not required to acknowledge the source of this material in your verbal presentations, don't attribute illustrations to yourself if they are not your own.

6. Finally, don't let this or any other resource take the place of your own study of the Word of God and preparation of your own sermons and lessons. One of the great benefits of preaching is the discipline of being in God's Word on a regular basis. Let this material augment your own work, not replace it. A man of God should grow in grace and knowledge over the years. Depending solely on others' work will stunt that growth.

The Preacher's Study
Copyright © 1999. All rights reserved.
Revised: 06/24/06

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