The Body of the Sermon
The sermon’s theme sets the strategy and the goal for the
sermon. The sermon’s body executes the strategy for
reaching that goal. The absence of a workable strategy
leads to wandering in the wilderness without any hope of
reaching the Promised Land. A workable strategy requires
determining what points to make, the number of points and
sub-points to make, and what materials are chosen to
support them. The sermon’s introduction determines whether
the hearers will listen. The body of the sermon determines
whether they will remember anything that they hear.
How are main points of a sermon developed? The preacher
should get his purpose or theme firmly in mind, and then
brainstorm. He should think about what the text means, but
he must not stop there. What the passage means is academic
unless he goes on to discern the message of the text for
today’s world. It is a good practice to anticipate the
questions that the hearers (not the preacher) will ask
about the passage and attempt to answer them. “How does
this passage relate to my work life?” “Why should I be
interested in sheep herders?” Hearers rarely ask what the
Greek or Hebrew means, or even what Daniel Webster say
about a word. They may even care less about how many times
a word is used in the Scripture. Once all of these thoughts
have been gathered, those that relate to the text but do
not relate to the theme or purpose must be eliminated.
Those remaining should be grouped into general subject
areas. Then, that group that best addresses the theme
should be selected.
From the selected group, the points should be divided into
subject areas. The subject areas should be placed in
natural order, arranged according to the sermon’s purpose.
They should be progressive in movement, e.g., chronological
or logical. Their arrangment should be in steps, one after
another, organized according to the sermon’s purpose,
leading in the desired direction, toward the selected
destination. As far as possible, the main points should be
parallel in form. This assists the preacher in presentation
(easier to remember and helps free him from notes), and it
assists the hearers in listening. For example, if the main
points are parallel in form, the hearers will recognize
each of them. If each of the main points has an anchor
clause that is common to each and related to the theme, the
main points will serve as road-signs that lead the hearers
to the theme or goal. All of the main points should be
designed to help the hearers remember the dominate point or
theme. The preacher who expects his hearers to remember the
sermon’s details expects the impossible. If he does not
have a theme, and if the main points do not support and
drive home the theme, it is more likely that the hearers
will remember nothing.
Each main point should make only one point and it should
relate to the theme in content. The main points develop and
support the theme; the sub-points develop and support the
main points. The subpoints may illustrate (instruct the
hearers by comparing the known to the unknown), persuade
(address the hearer’s will), analyze (establish the main
point by logic), or teach (provide information). Care must
be taken with the latter or the sermon will deteriorate
into mere intellectuallism.
How many main points should the body have? Although there
are differing views, as well as reasonable exceptions for
special sermons, the general rule is usually three, and not
more than four. If there are more, the preacher must either
preach too long or develop one point adequately and give
short shrift to the rest. If the preacher has three main
points and spends fifteen minutes on the first one, it
doesn’t take a math genius to determine that, if each point
is given equal treatment, the preacher has at least thirty
minutes to go when he says, “My second point is. . . .” The
resulting groan may be inaudible, but it is none-the-less
real.
Rapid shifts in subject matter will cause hearers first to
wear out and then to tune out. The truth is that they don’t
have much choice. It is like being force fed faster than
you can chew and swallow. It doesn’t take long to choke.
There is some evidence that the problem of pace increases
with the size of the audience. The best preacher probably
cannot hold group attention longer than four minutes per
subject. This means that not over five or six points can be
made in a twenty-five to thirty minute sermon. The preacher
can present more points, but he can make no more points
because they will not soak in. Much like a fast-falling
rain, the water (points) runs off the soil (mind) before it
can penetrate.
Someone may object that if the sermon moves at a slow pace
the hearers will think that the preacher is not smart, or
that the preacher will appear more learned if he crams as
much as possible into the sermon and delivers it as rapid
fire as possible. The objection is not well-taken. First,
it belies the experience of the ages. More importantly (and
more disappointingly), it indicates that the preacher is
more interested in impressing his hearers with himself than
with the Christ.
A good test to determine proper organization may be to
request some of the hearers to take notes. Can they detect
the introduction, body, and conclusion? Can they detect the
main points and the subpoints under each? If they can’t
because of sloppy transitions, merging or camaflouging of
points, or lack of clarity, the sermon fails, and so does
the preacher. Preachers have a weighty responsibility. Why
should they think that God will not hold them accountable
if their lack of preparation hinders the proclamation of
the gospel?