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Literary June 17, 1841

Watchman Of The South

Richmond, Virginia

What is this article about?

A set of 27 rules for preaching by an unknown author, advising on sincerity, delivery, scriptural handling, and focus on spiritual edification without affectation or excess.

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RULES FOR PREACHING.

By an unknown Author.

1. Use the mother speech and tone, without affectation or imitation of any man, that you may not seem to act a comedy, instead of preaching a sermon.
2. Clog not your memory too much, it will exceedingly hinder invention, and mar delivery.
3. Be sure you eye God his glory, the good of souls, having the day before mastered self and man-pleasing ague. This must be renewed toties quoties.
4. Let your words come no faster than the weakest hearer can digest each morsel; pause a while, and look in the child's eye, till he has swallowed his bit.
5. Look to your affections most carefully, that they be not, (1) feigned nor, (2) forcedly let loose to have their full scope; for then they will overrun your judgment, or be a temptation to vain glory.
6. Preach speaking or talking to the people: look on the people, not on roofs or walls, and look on the mortified faces in the assembly: let them know your preaching is real talking with them, whereby they may be provoked, as it were, to answer you again.
7. Take heed of over-wording any thing.
8. Be sure you have made the people understand thoroughly what is the good you exhort them to, or the evil you exhort them from, before you bring your motives and means.
9. Touch no Scripture slightly; trouble not many, but open the metaphors, and let one Scripture point out the other.
10. Let the Scripture teach you, and not you it.
11. Be sure you feed yourself with the people, else truth will do them little good, and you none at all: O taste every bit.
12. Take these five candles to find out what to say to the people: 1. Prayer for the Spirit. 2. The Scripture unbiased. 3. The thoughts and experience of good men. 4. Your own experience. 5. The condition of the people.
13. Break off anywhere, rather than run upon any of these two inconveniences: 1. Either to huddle or tumble together spiritual things: or 2. Tire the weakest of your flock.
14. Pass over that point of which you have nothing material to say.
15. Let your doctrine, and the constant stream of your preaching be about the chiefest spiritual things and let small controversies and external duties come in by the bye.
16. Beware of forms; neither be tied to any one method.
17. Be always on that subject, which is next your heart; and be not too thrifty and careful what to say next for God will provide; it will be offensive like kept manna, if reserved through distrust till the next day.
18. Be sure to extricate carefully, any goodly point you speak of, out of the notions and terms of divinity; else it will freeze inevitably in your mouth and their ears.
19. Let there not be disfiguring of faces, nor snuffing in the nose, nor hemming in the throat, nor any antic gesture, pretending devotion, made gravity; which will make you seem a loathsome Pharisee, or a distracted man broke loose from Bedlam.
20. Do not care so much whether the people receive your doctrine, as whether you and it are acceptable to the Lord.
21. Do not conceive that your zeal or earnestness can prevail with the people; but the force of spiritual reason the evidence of Scripture, and the power of the Holy Ghost.
22. Do not think the hearers can receive as you conceive, and so make your own conception the rule of dealing the bread of life, so shall you only please yourself, admired but not understood by others.
23. Let there be something in every sermon to draw poor sinners to Jesus Christ.
24. Take heed that your comparisons be not ridiculous, and yet be not shy of homely ones.
25. Study every Scripture you are to speak of beforehand lest you over burden invention or presume too much on your own parts.
26. Take care to free truth of extravagancies, of needless digressions, needless heads and enumerations.
27. Shun apologies, for they are always offensive.

What sub-type of article is it?

Essay

What themes does it cover?

Religious Moral Virtue

What keywords are associated?

Preaching Rules Sermon Delivery Spiritual Instruction Scriptural Handling Moral Guidance

What entities or persons were involved?

By An Unknown Author.

Literary Details

Title

Rules For Preaching.

Author

By An Unknown Author.

Key Lines

Use The Mother Speech And Tone, Without Affectation Or Imitation Of Any Man, That You May Not Seem To Act A Comedy, Instead Of Preaching A Sermon. Be Sure You Eye God His Glory, The Good Of Souls, Having The Day Before Mastered Self And Man Pleasing Ague. Let There Be Something In Every Sermon To Draw Poor Sinners To Jesus Christ. Do Not Care So Much Whether The People Receive Your Doctrine, As Whether You And It Are Acceptable To The Lord.

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