Post #126 Poets, Prophets, and Preachers: Day 3, Session 1
Day 3 Session 1
Rob Bell, "Fumbling around with your radar"
Ways to prepare for the sermon.
Rob talks about radar, buckets, chunks, and marinade.
"The worst thing for a pastor is to sit down on Saturday to a blank screen."
How do we get started and not have a blank screen?
There is "having to say something" and "having something to say."
What would it be like if every time you got up to teach you really were excited about having something to say?!
What if it had the chance to interact with the Spirit for a month, 6 months, or a year?
Radar
All around us, everywhere, all the time, everybody....vs. 9:00am office hours.
Genesis 28 When Jacob awoke...God was in this place and I am just now aware of it.
God was already there, we just showed up
We must be tuned into the presence of God and his work in creation. It must be on our radar.
We prepare for the sermon in two ways: through life and through the text.
Through life: when we see, hear, or otherwise experience something that might show God, we must write it, clip it, take a picture, save it, ask for it, get it, tear it out, store it, mark it, and remember it....with NO edit button.
Through the text: when we read the text, we should memorize, inhale, look at key words, focus on location, culture, concepts, stories, time, pictures, actions, and connections. Understand Greek and Hebrew texts. Understand what else has happened in this location. Understand the specific time in human history.
If you run into dead-ends, at least you have 7-10 minutes of material about what the passage DOESN'T mean!
-If you could not use any biblical or religious language...
how would I describe the text or illustrative material...to a child, to an alien from space, without using any words, with only drawings or pictures, with only actors?
-What is the thing behind the thing? What is the mystery behind the mystery? What is the truth behind the truth?
Is there a way to act, perform, show, do, ignore, circle around the idea or hand it out?
Those things on our radar end up in buckets (a collection of loosely connected material).
-one bucket per idea/fragment/insight/sentence
-review buckets once a week
-no pressure, no time frame
-revisit regularly
-be intentional and pay attention
-look for material for series
-some buckets grow
-if isn't hot, drop it
-there is a difference between accumulation and arranging
Once you have buckets that start to mean something, they become chunks: pieces of a message, an illustration, story, picture, or thought that you plan to actually utilize in a message.
Once you have several chunks, you allow those chunks to marinade for as long as possible. They marinade in the Spirit. They soak up the flavor of God and they enhance each other's flavors.
"The worst thing for a pastor is to sit down on Saturday to a blank screen."
Labels: Christianity, Mars Hill, Narrative Theology, Rob Bell, theology
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