Application of the Sermon II
A sermon without application is not only shadow boxing, it
is swinging wildly at no target at all. To use another
sports analogy, home runs are hit when the batter keeps his
eye on the ball. The preacher spends 25- 30 minutes
building up to the application. If the application is
neglected, the value of the major part of the sermon is
lost. Of what value are facts and explanations if there is
no purpose or application? Facts and explanations require
knowledge; application requires spiritual perception to
find in facts and explanations balm for the soul’s
struggles. Failure to meaningfully apply the text leaves “a
great gulf fixed” between the pulpit and the pew. But if
sermon application is so important, why is it so rare?
Good application is rare because it is difficult. Proper
application requires the preacher not only to be a student
of scripture, but a student of human nature as well. He
must not only know the word, he must also know his world.
He must not only be concerned with what the text means, but
how the text will help his hearers in their daily
struggles. It is relatively easy to examine the text; it is
difficult to examine the needs, physical and social
pressures, loneliness, conflicts, and guilt of the hearers
and apply the word of God to them. It is even more
difficult to know the hearers’ hidden needs, needs of which
the hearers are not even aware, and bring them into
awareness. In short, it is more difficult to preach than it
is to lecture.
Good application is rare because preachers assume their
hearers can and will make the application. While most
hearers are concerned about their own needs, they lack
either the ability or the inclination to relate the word of
God to those needs. A discussion of meat sacrificed to
idols (1 Cor. 8:1-13) leaves them uninterested and
uninspired. Like the Ethiopian eunuch, they need someone to
guide them, taking the principles that Paul espouses and
applying them to modern America in the same fashion that
Paul used them to impact Corinth. The problem is not that
our society no longer sacrifices meat to idols; it is that
without application the principles that Paul formulated die
with the first century issue that gave them birth. Without
application, the hearers may nod in agreement, but more
likely they will nod off in apathy.
Good application is rare because it requires creativity and
courage. Creativity is required to envision the battles
fought daily in the lives of God’s people. Courage is
required to apply God’s word to those struggles on a
personal level. Because application concentrates on the
transformation God requires of his people, hearers,
unwilling to directly attack the message, often attack the
messenger. Therefore, the messenger is tempted either to
mince words or avoid the application. Unlike Nathan, he is
unwilling to point the finger of application at his hearers
and declare, “Thou art the man.” (2 Sam. 12:7.) While
application must always be made with love, it needs to be
right between the eyes!
Good application is rare because preachers fear being too
simple. Application is neither ethereal nor esoteric. It is
practical and pragmatic. How can a preacher impress the
audience with his knowledge when he deals on such levels?
Will his hearers not think that he is dull of mind and slow
of wit? Jesus did not worry about such concerns. He spoke
simply and plainly. He spent little time sawing sawdust. To
the contrary, he ripped into real problems of real people;
he generated a response. Men may not marvel at the
eruditeness of those who follow his example, but they may
say, as they did of him, “Never man spake like this.” (John
7:46.)