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8 contributions to Dear Young Preacher
WHAT CRAFT CAN NEVER REPLACE...
I read something Charles Metcalf wrote that I thought was brilliant. He said, "You will never preach better than the person you are. Preaching is not an isolated skill; it is the public overflow of your private life. As your character deepens, your preaching gains weight, texture, depth, beauty, and authority, but if your life is shallow and small, your preaching will be thin no matter how polished or impressive your delivery is. People don’t just hear your words—they feel your life, and they are trained to sense authenticity even if they can’t articulate it. If you’re disconnected, performative, or simply re-preaching something you heard this week, people know, even if they don’t know how they know. If your world is small, your preaching will be small; limited exposure to people, pain, culture, life, love, faith, and risk produces narrow preaching. You cannot want big preaching and live a small life. Your soul is all you’ve got, and in an age where people can access Scripture instantly and study it deeply on their own, your value is not just information—it’s conviction. Your authority doesn’t come from saying something new, but from living something real. Pray you are well. 🖤"- C In my coaching, we talked about people knowing if what you're preaching is real to you. Tim Keller calls it, "non-deliberate transparency". People know you ate the bread you're serving as a preacher. I told our group: we preach with confidence when we preach with conviction... and we preach from conviction when we have been personally convinced. Here are 10 things the craft of preaching cannot replace. 1. Your secret place with God. 2. Spending time with people not just preparing for them. 3. Having spiritual authority that you're submitted to. 4. Your growing relationship with God. 5. Pain & Suffering. 6. Biblical observations that have first impacted you. 7. The books you read/listen to. 8. A long obedience in the same direction. 9. The art you consume. 10. Steps of faith.
WHAT CRAFT CAN NEVER REPLACE...
1 like • 9d
So Great Pastor!
ONE-LINER OF THE WEEK
Today marks one year since my dad passed unexpectedly on Easter. It's been a whirlwind this year. The tension of grieving great loss but also experiencing great life. There has been many weekends and speaking opportunities that I flat out just didn't want to do. I've had to preach through the feeling of not wanting to preach more this year than any other year. Preaching in weakness. Preaching vulnerable. Preaching from an honest place. His grace is sufficient. There was something Nathan Finochio posted months ago that has really resonated with me. I wrote it down. Found myself telling myself this when my mind was going astray. Shared this with friends who were walking through their own loss. Here it is... "Grace means nothing you had was earned in the first place. Which means nothing taken from you is evidence of God's betrayal!" 😭🙏🏽 Love you all!
ONE-LINER OF THE WEEK
1 like • 17d
Wow so good, thank you PM, praise God for you pastor.
Drop Your Recommendations
Didn't get to ask on the call, so I'll drop here: What's 1 book you recommend reading? 1 preacher you recommend listening to? 1 Conference you recommend attending to get poured into? Would love to hear what’s impacted you to stay sharp!
1 like • 29d
So good would love to also hear people’s opinions on these too!
1st Day
What an amazing first-day session! I'm ready to PREEAACHH Y'all
1st Day
1 like • Mar 27
Yessir, so excited for this group, if anyone’s on socials drop them. Would love to be able to connect! Have a blessed week preachers!
“ONE-LINER” OF THE WEEK 🎤
I’m a big fan of one-liners. A faithful unpacking of Scripture with a right-hook one-liner is my bread & butter. I have a growing notepad of one-liners that goes back to 2011. There’s just something about them. They don’t replace good content, they amplify it. A phrase, a proverb, a sticky statement… it’s biblical. Jesus hit the Pharisees with: “Give back to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s.” BOOM. One-liner. The Apostle Paul hit them with: “For we walk by faith, not by sight.” BOOM. One-liner. Solomon with: “One who is full loathes honey from the comb, but to the hungry even what is bitter tastes sweet.” MIC DROP. This one-liner/phrase came from a message I preached this weekend entitled “PEOPLE.” The premise of the message was that in Philippians (the letter of joy), we see that Paul didn’t just have joy in Jesus. In the first 11 verses of chapter 1, he doesn’t even bring that up. The joy he highlights is his joy in the people. His love for people was so great, he expresses this internal tension: “I am torn between the two: I desire to depart and be with Christ, which is better by far; but it is more necessary for you that I remain in the body. Convinced of this, I know that I will remain, and I will continue with all of you for your progress and joy in the faith.” What?? Are you kidding? His love is that great for the people he’s done life with, impacted, shared the gospel with? He is torn between being with Jesus and staying? Here was the phrase I gave the church—our first ONE-LINER OF THE WEEK: “PEOPLE”: THE REASON PEOPLE LEAVE. “PEOPLE”: THE REASON PAUL STAYED.🤯 People are the reason many leave… but for Paul, they were the reason he stayed. SHARE THE LOVE…COMMENT A ONE-LINER/QUOTE/ OR PHRASE!! 😄
“ONE-LINER” OF THE WEEK 🎤
1 like • Mar 18
Are you seeking results or relation? - I’m not sure I heard this or something like it in a sermon!
1-8 of 8
Ryan Healy
2
12points to level up
@ryan-healy-6080
Praise Jesus!

Active 23h ago
Joined Mar 6, 2026
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