A: When
I was in Bible College, I was taught to classify sermons
into three kinds: topical, textual, and expository. The topical
sermon is built on a theme and both major and minor points
are manmade. The textual sermon is usually built from a verse
or small passage and, although the major points are taken from
the text, the minor points are manmade. The expository message
is taken from a larger passage and both the major and the minor
points are taken from the text.
Since that time, I have read and heard
on numerous occasions of the importance of preaching expository
messages because they are much more scriptural than the other two
kinds. There are many books on this subject, though I do not have
one to recommend at this time. A topical message is especially
suspect because all of its points are manmade. However,
after over forty years of hearing sermons and over thirty years
of preaching them, I have come to a different conclusion. It is
true that topical messages are often an excuse for lack of study
and surface preaching. Yet, I have heard expository messages that
so skim the surface that they might as well be topical. We get
cute, alliterated outlines with inane illustrations making vapid
declarations. The enemy is not the topical message and the solution
is not the expository message. The key is to make all messages,
whether topical, textual, or expository, truly biblical. Sermons
are biblical when their focus, purpose, and content are solidly
based on the teaching and preaching of the Bible text. Turning
exclusively to expository messages is trying to trick yourself
into preaching biblical messages. Perhaps it works in many cases.
But it tends to cut out important approaches to biblical truth.
The Bible often deals with topics from various texts. Perhaps many
have used topical messages to avoid Bible study and preaching in
any depth, but topical messages can be very biblical if they expound
what the Bible says about a given topic. My
opinion, for what little it is worth, is that messages need to
be biblical, not necessarily expository. In this sense, all true
preaching is expository, but it does not have to be an expository
message. Its arrangement can also be textual or topical. Perhaps
it would be best to put each message to the following test:
- Did
your preparation of
the message begin and
develop from your prayerful
study of the Bible?
- Is
the theme of the message
based on a clear understanding
of and the clear teaching
of scripture?
- Does
the message continually
refer back to the Bible
as the basis for what
is being said?
- Does
the message illuminate
scripture for the hearers?
Are they being drawn
into a better understanding
of its meaning and
the way it should be
applied to their lives?
- Are
the hearers being taken
back to the Bible for
the answers raised
by the message?
Biblical preaching requires the preacher
to study and understand the Bible for himself. It requires the
preacher to drain the sap, partake of it for himself, apply its
principles to his life, and give it to others. The word of God
is the tree, the sap is the truth of God animated by the Spirit
of God, the bucket is the congregation, but the preacher is nothing
more than the pipe hammered into the tree that brings the sap out
into the bucket. If he is not in the word; if he does not allow
the word to flow through him; if he is not passing the sap on;
then he is not preaching Bible messages.
Till He
comes,
Pastor David Reagan