“We should never leave the pulpit without calling for a verdict.”
Olford, Anointed Expository Preaching, p. 77
“We should never leave the pulpit without calling for a verdict.”
Olford, Anointed Expository Preaching, p. 77
“Before standing the pulpit you must decide what the sermon is to achieve.”
Olford, Anointed Expository Preaching, p. 76
Sermon Video Introduction: In the first half of this chapter, Paul has recounted for the Thessalonians the kind of character that he and his co-workers displayed when they labored there in Thessalonica. ...
“The Westminster Directory (1645) states that “the true idea of [expository] preaching is that the preacher should become a mouthpiece for his text, opening it up and applying it as a word from God to his hearers, . . . in order that the text may speak . . . and be heard, making each point from his text in such a manner that [his audience] may discern [the voice of God]”
Olford, Anointed Expository Preaching, p. 69
“We must distinguish between imposition and exposition: eisegesis and exegesis. With the text before us, we must ask: What does the Scripture say? What does the Scripture mean? And only then, What does the Scripture say to me and my congregation?”
Olford, Anointed Expository Preaching, pp. 64-65
Introduction: When we get to the second chapter of this epistle, the apostle Paul reminds them of how it was that the gospel was first brought to them. We know that Paul was only there for three ...
“A good deal of counseling should be done from the pulpit.”
Olford, Anointed Expository Preaching, p. 59
“The fact is, there is hardly any other occupation on earth more demanding on the total personality than anointed preaching.”
Olford, Anointed Expository Preaching, p. 56
“A great danger in the ministry is to become stale, stunted, or stilted in our mental life.”
Olford, Anointed Expository Preaching, p. 54
Sermon Video Introduction: Philosophers call one branch of their discipline epistemology. This is the branch of philosophy that seeks to answer the question of how we know what we know. And then, ...