Categories
Audio Preaching Willow Creek Community Church

Willow Creek’s 6 characteristics of good preaching

On October 11th in his sermon entitled "All In" on the church's 34th anniversary, Bill Hybels shared Willow Creek Community Church's renewed commitment to six characteristics in their weekend teaching.  He said that he had gotten together over the summer with 20 leaders from Willow to talk about weekend teaching and they came to a consensus around six characteristics.   

Hybels said

teaching at weekend services needs to be:
1. Biblically based–coming right out of the text of the Word of God.
2. High challenge–not low challenge, not a mild dose of anything.
3. Intellectually rigorous–we're not going to dumb it down for any reason or anyone.  We want to produce intelligent Christians who think with a Christian worldview who can really interact with the complexity of a really complex world.
4. Theologically stretching–not just the easy parts of the Word of God but the doctrines that force us to think deeply and to put our roots down deeply. 
5. Clear application–so that we all know what to do with the Word of God when we have to put it into practice on Mondays and Tuesdays and Wednesdays.  
6. Accessible–We want it to be accessible to people who walk in the door who don't understand the Bible because they didn't grow up with it.  It should be accessible to rookies and veterans. 

Hybels went on to note that they have tried to embrace these characteristics in their September-October series The Forgotten Way.

Notes:

Willow Creek is the third largest church in the U.S.A., 23,400 weekly attendance for 2009, according to Outreach Magazine.

Download Willow Creek sermons at iTunes or watch the video at their Media Player

Follow Willow on Twitter at http://twitter.com/WillowCreekCC

Teaching pastor Nancy Beach and Darren Whitehead (http://twitter.com/darrenwh) share the teaching duties with Hybels. 

Interesting trivia: Beach notes on her blog post Anniversary Celebration at Willow that "On the very same weekend that Willow Creek was launched, the phenomenon known as Saturday Night Live also began."

Categories
Business Leadership Media and Teaching Preaching Teaching

Better than PowerPoint–how the CEO of Thomas Nelson does presentations

Michael Hyatt, president and CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishers, tells us what software he uses to do presentations.  See his post

My Current Presentation Tools

I have not seen anyone recently give such a comprehensive and clear introduction recently to presentation technology and software.

See also other communication tips at my post:

Superb practical tips about preaching: Communications professor Lori Carrell in Rev.



Categories
Media and Teaching Preaching Teaching

Superb practical tips about preaching: Communications professor Lori Carrell in Rev.

 

I wanted to draw your attention to an outstanding series of articles by Lori Carrell, a professor of communication at the University of Wisconsin, who has done research in cooperation with the Center for Excellence in Congregational Leadership, which is owned and operated by Green Lake Conference Center/American Baptist Assembly in Wisconsin and has received funding from the Lilly Endowment.  Each article is three pages long from Rev. magazine and contains some of the best practical advice about preaching you can find anywhere.  Carrell has her Ph.D. in communication, is very familiar with how pastors think, is a Christian herself, and is a highly awarded professor.  I am impressed.  We need more of this kind of research on topics related to pastoring.    LoriCarrell

 

Check out these PDFs online. (Links fixed Nov 8, 2019. BONUS DISCOVERY: All of Lori Carrell's articles on preaching are at the CECL (Center for Excellence in Congregational Leadership website!)

 

Lori Carrell, "Sermons Most Likely to Succeed: Do sermons actually change beliefs and behavior? An ongoing study reveals hard facts," Rev. Magazine (May/June 2007), 71-73.

Lori Carrell, "Sermons Most Likely to Succeed: Do sermons actually change beliefs and behavior? An ongoing study reveals hard facts," Rev. Magazine (May/June 2007), 71-73.

This is the most dense article–sharing findings from an extensive survey of what is most effective in preaching. 

 

Lori Carrell, “The Perils of PowerPoint Preaching: Research reveals that the use of PowerPoint slides during preaching is often more of a distraction than a transformative tool,” Rev. Magazine (Mar/Apr 2008): 91-93.

Lori Carrell, “The Perils of PowerPoint Preaching: Research reveals that the use of PowerPoint slides during preaching is often more of a distraction than a transformative tool,” Rev. Magazine (Mar/Apr 2008): 91-93.

This article argues finds that much PowerPoint use is distracting. 

 

Lori Carrell,"Are You Wasting Your Sermon Prep Time?" Rev. Magazine (May/June 2008), 91-93.

Lori Carrell,"Are You Wasting Your Sermon Prep Time?" Rev. Magazine (May/June 2008), 91-93.

This article explains what pastors do in sermon prep time and follows pastors who have tried to improve their effectiveness in preparation.

 

Lori Carrell,"Reaching the Choir: Are you transforming your listeners or simply telling them what they already know?," Rev. Magazine (July/August 2008), 95-97.

Lori Carrell,"Reaching the Choir: Are you transforming your listeners or simply telling them what they already know?," Rev. Magazine (July/August 2008), 95-97.

 

This article suggests a method for moving people from what they already know to specific challenges. 

 

 

Lori Carrell,"Why Your Preaching Matters More Than You Think," Rev. Magazine (September/October 2008), 158-159.

 

Lori Carrell,"Why Your Preaching Matters More Than You Think," Rev. Magazine (September/October 2008), 158-159.

 

This article explains how greatly congregation members value preaching. 

 

See also her book:

 

Lori Carrell, The Great American Sermon Survey (Mainstay Church Resources, 1999).

I give Rev. magazine credit for having regular columns from:

  • David Kinnaman, author of UnChristian and president of The Barna Group;
  • D. Michael Lindsay, assistant professor of sociology at Rice University, and a reputable sociologist.   

Both move beyond the numbers to offer their take on what church leaders should do but they also both deal responsibly with statistics.