Found this interview with Tim Keller on Christianity Today’s blog. There are some gems of wisdom in it:
One Minute One-on-One
Preaching Today: Could you tell us a bit about your planning process for preaching?
Tim Keller:
Every June I flesh out all of my sermon topics, titles, and texts for
the coming year, and then I send them off to my music director and
other associate preachers. During vacation and study time in the
summer, I read books on the themes I’ll be treating in the sermons
during the coming year. At the end of the summer, my reading leads me
to revise the list of topics and texts, and then we are good to go!Tell us about your weekly preparation process.
Ten days before the Sunday I will preach a given sermon, I spend three
hours doing basic exegesis and outlining. The Friday morning before I
preach the sermon, I spend five hours writing a first draft of the
sermon. On Saturday morning I spend four hours writing a second draft.
That Saturday night I spend another two to three hours writing a third
draft. With each draft I shorten and streamline the message. I then get
up very early on Sunday morning and spend two hours reading it through
several times, essentially memorizing all the basic points and
sub-points.I pastor a large church and have a large staff, so I give special prominence to preparing the sermon. I give it 15–18
hours a week. I would not advise younger ministers to spend that much
time on sermon preparation, however. The main way to become a good
preacher is to preach a lot and to spend tons of time in people work.
That’s how you become something more than a Bible commentator; you
become a flesh–and–blood preacher. When I was without a large staff, I
spent 6–8 hours in sermon preparation.Which tools do you find most helpful in the preparation process?
I use BibleWorks software and lots of commentaries.
What advice can you offer to other preachers?
Preaching should be biblical, clear for the mind, practical for the
will, vivid for the heart, warm, forceful, and Christocentric. You
should always preach Christ and the gospel from every text!How do you generate sermon ideas?
It’s a great mistake to pit pastoral care and leadership against
preaching preparation. Many of my preaching ideas come to me as I am
talking to, exhorting, counseling, evangelizing, and shepherding
people. It is only through working with people that you become the
preacher you need to be—someone who knows sin, how the heart works,
what people’s struggles are, and so on. To some degree, pastoral care
and leadership are sermon preparation! They prepare the preacher and
not just the sermon.Finally, what devotional material do you use for your personal growth?
I use a version of M’Cheyne’s reading calendar, reading the Bible in
its entirety every year. I also follow the traditional daily office,
and I read and pray all the Psalms every month. I use older versions of
the Book of Common Prayer for many of my prayers.
Comments 1
This really spoke to me in light of the recent events in my life. He really hits the nail on the head with this description. His view is very Christocentric. When you look at the life of Christ in the gospels, you see much of what Tim described.
Posted 30 Oct 2007 at 4:58 pm ¶Trackbacks & Pingbacks 2
[...] Found this interview with Tim Keller on Christianity Today’s blog. There are some gems of wisdom in it: One Minute One-on-One An Interview with Timothy Keller Preaching Today: Could you tell us a bit about your planning process for preaching? Tim Keller: Every June I flesh out all of my sermon topics, titles, source: Interview with Tim Keller, Pilgrim in Progress [...]
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