Giving the Sermon Purpose
Choosing the purpose of the sermon is one of the most
important aspects of its preparation. Failure to properly
state a purpose and develop the sermon based upon that
purpose is one of the primary causes of sermon failures.
Like the unclean spirit in Luke 12:43, the purposeless
sermon wanders through dry places without finding a home.
The purposeless sermon is like a Sunday driver who has been
described as having nowhere to go and all day to get there.
Stated differently, the preacher who doesn’t know where he
is going isn’t going to know when he arrives. A well stated
purpose helps to identify the sermon’s main lines of
development to which all other points are subordinated.
Those thoughts that do not advance the sermon’s main lines
of development are eliminated no matter how brilliant. They
are not useless, however, because they provide seed
thoughts for future sermons.
What is the purpose of the sermon? While the subject of the
sermon is a broad statement of the sermon’s concept
designed to convey to the hearer some notion of the
sermon’s topic; the purpose (sometimes also called ‘theme’)
is the preacher’s objective in the sermon. The subject may
embody a number of themes; the purpose is the specific
theme that the preacher chooses to develop. The purpose
delineates the subject’s development and limits the
subject’s discussion.
How is the purpose of the sermon determined? Since a good
purpose statement relates God’s truth to God’s people, ask
yourself questions that center on two vital themes – the
text and the hearers. First, ask what you hope to
accomplish in your hearers. What do you want to go on in
their minds as they listen to your sermon? Do you wish to
inform them? Inspire them? Persuade them? What aspect of
this subject will help your hearers? Encourage them?
Strengthen them? Second, ask yourself what is going on in
your hearers lives right now to which this subject speaks?
What temptations and trials are they facing? Third, ask
yourself about the text. Why did the writer pen these
words? What did he hope to accomplish in the minds of his
readers? No inspired writer ever rambled without purpose.
Paul wanted Timothy to know how to behave himself in the
house of God. (1 Tim. 3:15.) Jude’s original purpose was
laid aside and another chosen. (Jude 3.) John wrote to
produce faith in Jesus Christ as the Son of God. (John
20:31). Thus, while a purposeless sermon may be filled with
scripture, it does not follow the example of scripture.
The statement of the sermon’s purpose may be a phrase or a
sentence, but it must with brevity, clarity, and simplicity
state the sermon’s primary intent and direction. If the
purpose is too broadly stated (e.g., “The purpose of this
sermon is to inform the hearers about prayer.”), it imposes
no practical limitations. The result is a Great Commission
sermon that takes a text and goes everywhere preaching the
word. If the purpose is too narrowly stated (e.g., “The
purpose of this sermon is to inform the congregation of the
meaning of the Greek word translated ‘prayer.’”), it
results in either constant repetition, inability to confine
the sermon to the stated purpose, or a really short sermon.
Neither approach meets the needs of or helps the hearers.
For instance, a sermon on prayer may always be needful, but
will it be helpful to the hearers if it covers the subject
in seven-league boots? The sermon may have many well-stated
points (Prayer is powerful; Prayer is prevailing; Prayer is
practical; Prayer is promising; Prayer is pleasing; Prayer
is importunate; Prayer is potent; Prayer is planned.), but
by covering so much ground it confuses the hearers and
leaves them dazed. They learn absolutely nothing about
everything. Of course, it is easy for the preacher. He
doesn’t have to study as hard or spend as much time in
preparation. He can spend three minutes on each of eight
points and, with a brief introduction and conclusion,
occupy his thirty minutes. Such an approach indicates
either a lethargic preacher or a preacher who does not know
how to prepare a sermon and has never taken the time to
learn. The former, after appropriate admonition, needs to
be terminated. The latter needs to be trained.
It may take several efforts to develop a brief purpose
statement. You may wrestle with the text, the subject, and
the hearers needs before you settle on exactly what your
purpose is, but once you know your goal it will be much
easier to reach.
The preacher in the pulpit should be there with a purpose.
As Henry Ward Beecher suggested, a sermon is not a Chinese
firecracker that is fired off for the sake of the noise it
makes. It is a hunter’s gun, and at every discharge the
preacher should look to see his game fall. To attain this
goal, however, the preacher must know what he is hunting
and take deadly aim.