Preacher, how do you put that sermon together?
Over at Founder’s Blog a brief discussion has started on the use of manuscripts in preaching. I almost always use a manuscript during the morning service, an outline during the evening service, and I just pray I have some sort of notes come Wednesday night.
There are pros and cons to each of these methods but most important is what comes before. I thought I’d throw online a copy of some recent notes, showing the basic order of sermon preparation.
I have a file called Sermon Builder I use for most of my sermons. I don’t always follow every step in the file but it provides a great starting point in sermon prep and helps ensure I don’t forget to do anything. The first PDF below contains my translation notes. This was not a complicated passage so the notes are fairly straightforward. The second PDF contains my sermon builder for this passage, Ephesians 5:3-6.
My normal process is:
- Translate
- Compare translations
- Notes on author, audience, context, etc. In a series through a book I usually skip most of these notes from week to week, though context notes usually gets something.
- Outline the passage. I have no set system for doing this, I’ve experimented with a few different approaches to outlining.
- Find related passages
- Ask questions of the text
- Write my own notes
- Read and gather data from commentaries
- Sermon outline. Often quite comprehensive. In the notes above, the outline is much shorter than my usual.
- Sermon manuscript
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