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October 28, 2020
The following article is located at: https://www.christianitytoday.com/pastors/1990/winter/90l1074.html
CT Pastors, January 1990
WHAT MAKES INTERESTING PREACHING
How to avoid talking in someone else's sleep.
Stuart Briscoe|postedJanuary 1, 1990

Gerald Griffith, a pastor and Bible teacher in Toronto and my good friend, one day said to me, "Every week God gives me bread for his people."

I looked him straight in the eye and replied, "That's true, but you spend a lot of time in the kitchen!"

He had to agree.

Those hours "in the kitchen" are among the most important of my week. Why? Because in the kitchen I prepare what God gives me to feed his people. And they can be picky eaters.

People are distracted by all kinds of things-legitimate things, for the most part, but sometimes not. Pain fills a lot of hearts. People are unhappy at work. Or their homes are less than ideal. Or they feel great economic stress. Or they strain under the demands of a job. When troubled people come to church, their thoughts suppress the appetite for God's menu. My job as a preacher is to overwhelm the careworn with the aroma of the gospel.

So when I preach, I'm continually thinking, How am I going to hold and use the attention so tenuously lent me? I don't have ...

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