preaching

Is This the Future of Preaching?

video teaching

Click on image to go to Video Teaching

I learned about this new website from www.churchcrunch.com.

It looks like it is offering free video sermons from some of the best preachers in North America to any church anywhere.

Cool!  . . . and at the same time . . .

“Wait. What does this mean for the future of preaching?”

Any one can already listen to the most popular preachers on the radio, TV, the Internet etc.  But, now churches will be able to fill their pulpits with these sermons.   Many churches are already doing similar things when they open satellite campuses where all the different locations are watching and listening to the same preacher via video or satellite.  So, this is really not all THAT new.

Yet, it DOES accentuate a problem in the local church setting.  Chances are that you church does not have one of the best preachers in America.  Most preachers are not amazing preachers.  Some are bad, some are good.  But few can compare to the popular ones.

Since we can hear the best sermons online or on radio, we probably are not going to church on Sunday to hear a good sermon, are we?  Are you?  We can stay home and hear amazing sermons, can’t we?

MY QUESTIONS . . .

Let me ask:

1) Why DO you go to church (if you do)?

2) And, would you mind (or prefer) if your church used video sermons from some of the best preachers in the country?

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The Death of the Sermon

video sermonI came across this timely and thought-provoking article about the effects of “the video sermon”.  Here is a couple excerpts:

“We’re talking about the death of preaching in evangelicalism by all but a small handful of Celebrity Communicators who have little knowledge about those they teach from such far distances.”

“Now, the preaching gift of one person has the ability not simply to reach the back row, but the next town, state, continent. And we’re not just talking about Spurgeon publishing his sermons or Schuller putting his on TV or Driscoll putting his on iTunes…

NOW we’re talking about not just influencing local preachers by making the “best” communicators’ sermons available… we’re talking about replacing those local teaching elders.

Talk about pushing something to an extreme.”

Read the full article here at Next-Wave Ezine.

Other posts here on preaching and sermons:

The Ineffectivess of Preaching

A Sermon You Might Never Hear in Church

Rethinking the Sermon



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