Circular Preaching?
Posted March 12, 2011 at 1:31 pm in Guest Posts, Homiletics, Skill Development by Kent
Written by @richardlittledale – Preaching A-Z
Digital input & 360 degree preaching
Some of you may feel that you are all too familiar with circular preaching – it goes round and round like an angry bee trapped under a jam
jar, until at last it wears itself out. Thankfully, that it not what I am describing here. Rather, following on from a highly creative conversation with@kimtownsend and @watfordgap, I want to develop my ideas of digital fellowship a little further. It might run something like this:
- Tuesday – the preacher lets people know via social media what she or he is working on for the coming Sunday’s sermon. Insights on the particular topic are welcomed, and also suggestions for the music and worship.
- Thursday – as a result of all this, a sermon shape is beginning to emerge, and a related prayer request goes out, together with a request for clarification on an elusive illustration or two.
- Saturday – an outline of the sermon is posted online, accessible to those who prayed and contributed at a distance, as well as those who will hear it the following day
- Sunday – the sermon is preached, and the podcast is made available online, as outlined before.
- Monday – a blog post outlining the sermon and questions raised by it is posted by someone who heard the sermon, rather than the person who preached it.
- Wednesday – questions arising from the sermon, and from Monday’s post, are fed into the church’s homegroups for further discussion
For preachers who are prima donnas, and who enjoy the mystique surrounding the pulpit, this is all profoundly threatening – since there are stages of this process over which they may have little control. Furthermore, it disenfranchises those members of the church who have neither the facility nor the inclination to engage in social media. Not only that, but we must guard against exchanging the messy business of real fellowship for its cleaner digital alternative. In real fellowship I must sit alongside people whose views offend me and whose problems make demands on me. Through the abrasion of our different personalities the likeness of Christ is fashioned in both of us. In digital fellowship I always have the ‘off’ switch which enables me to opt out.
Consider, though, the benefits. I am a great believer in the place of the sermon as traditionally understood. God has hard-wired us so that we are captivated and moved by human speech. That said, every pedagogical expert from Twickenham to Timbuktu will tell you that we retain things better when we engage with them. When we handle theological truths rather than simply being shown them from a distant pulpit, we begin to internalise them and graft them onto our very souls. Discussion of a sermon before and after in the way described above can only be good for preacher and people, surely?
There are risks associated with the approach outlined above, and we should not embark upon it lightly. However, the benefits might just outweigh them.
What do you think?



Michael Daykin said on March 15, 2011
Interesting, we just had a conversation about something similar at our board meeting this weekend.
Harvey Burian said on March 16, 2011
Perhaps some preachers have gone part way in this “circle” by having 1) a time of questions and answers following their sermons and 2) providing notes/questions on the sermon topic for small group discussion during the week. Not many, though, of whom I am aware, have been bold enough to put their outline in the hands of the congregation prior to the message being prepared …. let alone preached!
Roger Helland said on April 2, 2011
I guess my question still comes down to this, what does it mean to “Preach the Word in season and out of season, correct, rebuke and encourage, with great patience and careful instruction” (2 Tim. 4:2). What is the Word to be preached and how do we know when it has been preached? Is the Bible ONLY the Word? How does a postmodern emphasis on truth in community fit into the above text when it comes to preaching the Word? Can you imagine Paul or Timothy practicing circular preaching? Although, it seems Paul did invite input and response from the Athenians and Agrippa! Thoughts?
Danny Draper said on May 25, 2011
Roger, preaching the Word in season and out of season really means that we must be ready to deliver the Word anytime the opportunity arises. We sometimes become confined to the pulpit and forget that we meet people everyday who are hurting and lost. The “season” may be at the grocery store, the gas station, or just someone on the street. Anyone who has been preaching for some period of time realizes that with the “preach” comes the encouragement of the Holy Spirit to correct, rebuke and encourage, with a heaping dose of love. And it takes patience on our part to carefully instruct those who are not always receptive to the Word.
Danny Draper said on May 25, 2011
Although I have been preaching for about 40 years, I am fully grafted into the social medias that are available to us. For sometime I have been posting my sermon topics, with scripture references on Face Book so my congregation will have a “heads-up” come the Sunday or midweek service. It has worked really well. The younger folks love it!