Make That Sermon Sing: The Melody of Your Message, Part 3

Posted by Joel Southerland
We’ve been preaching that you need a predictable melody in your sermons in parts 1 and 2

But there are also times you really need to break it.

I’m a child of the 80′s – when Ronald Reagan and Rock ‘N Roll were king!  I have repented since, but I grew up listening to Aerosmith, Def Leppard, and other bands with cool fonts.

I remember once that a new station was launching in our area and to kick off the debut, it was going to play one song all day, 24 hours straight.  What song in the early 1980′s would they possibly choose to play all day and all night?  Of course, “I Love Rock ‘N Roll” by Joan Jett and the Blackhearts.  I thought, Wow! Twenty-four hours of a great song!

I tuned in early that morning and every chance I had I listened all through the day… “I love rock ‘n roll ♪ so put another dime in the juke box, baby ♫ I love rock roll ♪ so come and take the time to dance with me…” ♫ (YELL!)

Great song, great music, one problem… it got old.  By that afternoon I needed something different.

Sometimes we pastor – and our listeners – need a change up in our melody.  Even if the preaching has been connecting, do something to give them a little break from the norm.  It’s good for them and good for you.

Here are a few ideas:

1. Alternate your outlining style. Alliterate then don’t. Use six points one night instead of three.

2. Have a guest speaker. Use a young preacher in the church.  Use a denominational or parachurch speaker.  Often, a guest speaker’s change of rhythm (except the young preacher-boy protege who copies you) will cause folks to respond to things you have been preaching all along. You’re not necessarily looking for a better message but a different rhythm.

3. Preach a topical sermon. There I said it.  Do it (then get forgiveness and move on).

4. Use a “prop.” Do something crazy.  I used a remote control car one time on speaking of the power of the Holy Spirit and I ran it all over the church.  People still talk about it and it broke my preaching rhythm in a good way.

5. Do a character sketch monologue. Instead of preaching a predictable Christmas sermon, write out the Christmas story from the perspective of Zacharias telling the story after-the-fact.  Do the costume and everything.  Go all out.  Your people will love it and it will give them some fresh perspective.  (If you’ve never don this before, it will feel awkward at first, but I’ll bet your people will ask you to do more of them in the future.)

There are many other things to do – but just do them when you feel as if you are in a rut or your people are needing a little variety. Then, when you go back to your singing the next Sunday, it will be beautiful music.

Action Steps:

  • Write 3 positive things you that you do stylistically that contribute to your own melody.  This will force you to think about your own “melody” in a way that you probably haven’t before.
  • Write 3 ideas that you could do over the next quarter to “change up your tune” a bit.

Let us know your answers to the above!

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