Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Bridge the Gap: Exegete the Text—AND the Culture
An excellent video on the process of biblical and cultural exegesis for relevant preaching from CHURCH LEADERS.COM - STEVE
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Monday, June 8, 2015
PREACHING ON HOMOSEXUALITY
An Interview with Jim Nicodem
BY PREACHING TODAY
PreachingToday.com: We all know that homosexuality is a culturally and politically charged issue, but you chose to do a 3-part series on it, why?
Jim Nicodem: In part because of what you just
said. It's a very culturally charged issue. We know that people are
facing it with friends, or hearing about it in the news. This is an
issue that's not going to go away. We want our people to be able to
think biblically about some of the important issues that we face in our
culture. And it struck me that the longer the church puts off the
conversation, the harder it's going to be to talk about it because it's
going to become a very adverse climate in which to try to present God's
truth. So now is the time to sort out what your church believes and
where you hope to go on this issue.
What was your overall goal or goals for the series?
I had two major goals. First, I wanted to teach what God's Word says
about homosexuality, and our response to people who are struggling with
sexual identity. It used to be that everybody knew that the Bible says
homosexual behavior is wrong, but now one of the greatest challenge to
this position is coming from within the circle of those who call
themselves evangelicals, people who are saying, "We've misread the Bible
on this, the Bible doesn't say homosexual behavior is wrong; you need
to read it in its context and it says something different." So we needed
to take a look at what the Bible says.
How do we have frank conversations about what God's Word says about
difficult subjects and yet still keep our front door thrown open wide?
Second, I wanted to lay the groundwork for ministry to people in the
LGBT community. We are the church that welcomes people who are exploring
the faith, no matter what their background. So we wanted to discuss how
do we love people who are struggling in this area of their life, How do
we make sure that we have the biggest welcome mat possible in front of
our church door that says no matter what the issues are that might
separate us, we want you to come and investigate a relationship with
Christ?
How was this 3-part sermon series received? What kind of feedback did
you get—positive, negative, people storming out? How did that go?
You never really know what's going on inside of people. I heard a
pastor say once they didn't call their doctrinal position of the church
"what we believe" but rather "what we teach," because he said you can't
guarantee what people choose to believe even though you teach certain
doctrines. Same with an issue like this. Do people have a biblical
understanding of the topic now that we have taught it? Time will tell.
Has there been a heart change? How do you measure heart change? How do
you measure whether people are open and loving toward those who hold a
different position or who come struggling in this area. I hope that we
have both a biblical understanding, and that there has been a love for
people in the LGBT community that has been cultivated by this.
Jim Nicodem:
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