Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Preach360™

123 members • Free

3 contributions to Preach360™
Winning and Learning
Looking back at Sunday, what is one "win" you’re celebrating, and one "lesson learned" that will help you next time? Remember, sharing a "win" is boasting in Jesus, not self. And lessons learned are opportunities to review, evaluate, and make half-time adjustments. Posting here is a means of encouragement for what's possible and hope when we start the week feeling like a failure. For both, it's a means to tether our true identity to Jesus!
3 likes • 27d
I preached John 6:16-21, one of our adult Sunday School classes was, by God's providence and unplanned by us, in Exodus 4 (they are walking through the book of Exodus) both the lesson and the sermon covered the Great I Am from different angles. Pretty amazing for those who got to experience that! The PPGR didn't come easily for this passage, so I felt like the sermon could have had more clarity, but I was working on the framework longer than I had planned and ended up tight on time. Learn and move forward! I ended up with P: God calls us into hard things (sacrifice and suffering) P: Hard things (sacrifice and suffering) are...hard G: Jesus gives us confidence to face the hard things (ultimate sacrifice and suffering) R: Walk through the hard things with confidence because Jesus is with us
2 likes • 27d
@Adam Tisdale Agreed on the framework - I only preach a handful of Sundays each year, but the impact of the PPGR framework on my lesson plans, and maybe just as importantly, for my devotional life, are immeasurable.
Is the progression of the text inspired
I read a post the other day that stated something like: As exegetical preachers, we believe that the progression of the text, the verbs, their placement, etc. are all part of the inspired word, and therefore the sermon should reflect that progression. Thoughts?
How to Fix Shallow Sermon Application 🛠️
As a pastor for over three decades, I can relate to the struggle. The sermon application struggle. We're good at explaining the text. But application is hard because it requires a different homiletical muscle. So we default to shallow, surface-level application. Here's the difference. Shallow application says: "This passage teaches us to love our enemies, so this week, be nice to that difficult coworker." Deep application asks: "What does it reveal about my heart that I've labeled this person my enemy? What am I protecting? How does the gospel dismantle my need to be right, to be vindicated, to be superior?" A shallow application says, "Jesus calls us to generosity, so start by giving 5% more this week." Deep application probes: "Where have I made money my functional savior? What am I afraid will happen if I loosen my grip? How does my spending reveal what I truly believe about God's provision? What would it look like to live like a beloved, adopted child vs an orphan with my finances?" Shallow application says, "We should forgive because God forgave us. So forgive your spouse." Deep application wrestles: "Why does my identity still depend on holding this grudge? What payoff am I getting from my bitterness? How have I made myself the victim and them the villain? What would it cost me to release my right to revenge... and why does that feel like death?" The difference isn't just depth. It's direction. Shallow application points outward to behavior modification. Deep application points inward toward heart exposure, then upward to gospel rescue. Surface-level application gives us the illusion of control. We can measure it. Track it. Check it off. Attend church every week. Read three chapters daily. Pray for ten minutes. Volunteer once a quarter. Give a percentage. Post a Bible verse. Surface application feels doable in our own strength. Deep application is terrifying because it requires total surrender. It means admitting we can't fix ourselves or bear fruit apart from Jesus.
0 likes • Feb 12
When you get a chance, could you help show how the positive application/fruit side can be done with the same kind of depth? Or, I might just be missing how to apply that from your article. Thanks!!
1 like • Feb 12
This is really good - thank you McKay
1-3 of 3
Andrew Gerber
2
13points to level up
@andrew-gerber-8118
Husband, father of 5, associate pastor, primarily teaching through counseling, small group, bible study, and youth settings, preach occasionally.

Active 8d ago
Joined Feb 9, 2026
Powered by