Using Illustrations to Preach with Power - Softcover

Chapell, Bryan

 
9781581342642: Using Illustrations to Preach with Power

Inhaltsangabe

Illustrations capture our attention and further our understanding in a way that no other sermonic tool can. This former pastor and current seminary president demonstrates why illustrations should be used in biblical preaching and then goes on to share how to find and integrate them effectively. Throughout his work Bryan Chapell makes it clear that illustrations are integral to effective preaching, not because they entertain, but because they expand and deepen the applications the mind and heart can make.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Bryan Chapell is a bestselling author of many books, including Christ-Centered Preaching and Holiness by Grace. He is pastor emeritus of the historic Grace Presbyterian Church in Peoria, Illinois; president emeritus of Covenant Theological Seminary; and president of Unlimited Grace Media (unlimitedgrace.com), which broadcasts daily messages of gospel hope in many nations.

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Using Illustrations to Preach with Power

By Bryan Chapell

Good News Publishers

Copyright © 2001 Bryan Chapell
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-58134-264-2

Contents

Introduction: Wizened or Wise?, 11,
Part One Background and Theory: Deciding About Illustrations,
1 The Art and the Argument, 19,
2 The Path of Scripture, 37,
3 Insights from Learning and Communication Theories, 49,
4 The Genius of Life-Situation Illustrations, 65,
Part Two The Method: Making Illustrations,
Introduction to Part Two: Snapshots from Life, 85,
5 Framing the Picture, 89,
6 Filling the Frame, 107,
Part Three The Practice: Working with Illustrations,
7 The Character of Illustrations, 131,
8 Cautions for Effective Illustrations, 139,
9 Finding and Filing Illustrations, 167,
Conclusion: Tell Me a Story, 175,
Appendix: The Limits of Narrative, 177,
Bibliography, 193,
General Index, 205,
Illustrations Index, 207,
Scripture Index, 208,


CHAPTER 1

The Art and the Argument


crisis in Preaching

Widespread dissatisfaction with preaching cuts across our churches. The disenchantment began to boil to the surface almost a generation ago. Young and old alike complained of preaching that was lost in abstraction, buried in jargon, and frozen in formula words incapable of firing the courage or of forging the answers needed for an age of unprecedented change. Thoughts too lofty to touch the realities of life precipitated criticism, the like of which American preachers had not endured since battles over slavery eroded public reverence for pulpit robes. Preachers cried for answers. Experts studied, surveyed, and assessed.

Clyde Reid offered the perspective of religious professionals:

(1) Preachers tend to use complex, archaic language which the average person does not understand; (2) most sermons today are dull, boring, and uninteresting; (3) most preaching today is irrelevant; (4) preaching today is not courageous preaching; (5) preaching does not communicate; (6) preaching does not lead to change in persons; (7) preaching has been overemphasized.


Reuel Howe spoke to laypeople and catalogued similar complaints:

(1) sermons often contain too many complex ideas; (2) sermons have too much analysis and too little answer; (3) sermons are too formal and too impersonal; (4) sermons use too much theological jargon; (5) sermons are too propositional, not enough illustrations; (6) too many sermons simply reach a dead end and give no guidance to commitment and action.


The crisis continues. These seminal surveys and many subsequent studies have triggered an explosion of works advocating novel approaches to preaching. Baby and bathwater often seem flung out the back door together in this rush to develop new forms. Time will tell whether the new approaches have enduring value. What is obvious now is that few seem satisfied. The willingness of so many to experiment with so important a spiritual task highlights how desperate many consider their situation. Both pulpit and pew echo the concern that too many sermons have no direct connection with everyday life.

This book contends that preachers who properly develop and use life-situation illustrations in expository messages already possess a powerful corrective for the crisis in contemporary preaching. Such illustrations live where people live. They communicate meaning by common experience and, thus, do not allow biblical truths to fly over heads or reside in the surreal world of doctrinal jargon and abstract principle. Through this vehicle, true communication takes place and sermons themselves are filled with vibrant life.


Definitions

Preachers searching for illustrative materials soon find a variety of options available to use in their messages. The array of alternatives can itself create important questions about the types of illustrative content that best suit a sermon. The following hierarchy ranks such material by its complexity and relative emphasis on "lived-body" (i.e., descriptive) details:

An Illustrative Hierarchy

Novella
Allegory
Parable
Illustration
Allusion
Example
Analogy
Figure of Speech


The illustrative materials listed lower than "Illustration" on this hierarchy are characterized by their brevity. Figures, analogies, and examples can add rich expression to a sermon, but they do not involve listeners to the same degree as do true illustrations. A quote from an ancient saint or a statistic from a contemporary newspaper may add interest to a sermon, but neither carries the listener into a tangible understanding of a message as effectively as a full illustration. On the other hand, the categories of illustrative material higher than "Illustration" usually have greater length than is appropriate for sermons or reflect a particular literary genre conforming to conventions not typical of most sermons. The aspect of the hierarchy most ideally suited to relevant preaching — preaching that communicates the powerful and living Word of God most effectively to its audience — is illustration.

A brief definition of true illustrations is as follows: Illustrations are "life-situation" stories within sermons whose details (whether explicitly told or imaginatively elicited) allow listeners to identify with an experience that elaborates, develops, and explains scriptural principles. Through the details of the story, the listener is able imaginatively to enter an experience in which a sermonic truth can be observed. The preacher tells the what, when, where, and why of an occurrence to give listeners personal access to the occasion. He encourages each listener to see, feel, taste, or smell features of an event as though he or she were bodily present in the unfolding account. Then, along with these sensory details, the preacher also suggests the emotions, thoughts, or reactions that would typify the experience of one living the account.

These life and body descriptions create the "lived-body" details that distinguish true illustration from mere allusion or example. In both allusion and example the speaker refers to an account, whereas in an illustration the preacher invites the listener into the experience. The lived-body details flesh out the illustration in such a way that the listener can vicariously enter the narrative world of the illustration. It is true that listeners can supply details out of their own imaginations to experience a concept to which the preacher refers in an example or an allusion. The categories cannot be strictly drawn. The point is that in examples and allusions the listener primarily supplies the lived-body details, whereas in true illustrations the preacher supplies them.

Illustrations, therefore, lead listeners into events. In an example, the preacher says, "I have observed ..." In an allusion, the preacher says, "This reminds me of ..." With an illustration, the preacher says, "I'll take you there." In essence, when the preacher illustrates, he says, "You will know what I mean by comparing this to a memory from your life," or "Live through this new experience with me so you will know." This means that illustrations, however briefly expressed, reflect life-stories. Whether the account is new to the listener or conjured from memory, the preacher verbally re-creates a slice of life that defines a sermon's ideas.


historical overview

It would be incorrect to suggest that ours is the first generation to discover the value of using illustrations in...

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9780310584612: Using Illustrations to Preach With Power

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ISBN 10:  0310584612 ISBN 13:  9780310584612
Verlag: Zondervan, 1993
Softcover