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1 comments | Sunday, December 10, 2006


From my youngest years, I always knew that a sermon had a point, and most preachers give at least a hint of their point toward the beginning of the talk... but this morning was different. This morning, I discovered the point of the sermon in the last 30 seconds, and it seemed to have little to do with the topic of the lesson.

Let me go back a step and explain the morning's lesson:

First, there was a slide of Mary and Joseph in profile with Mary on a donkey. Of course, they were on their way to Bethlehem. The preacher spent a few minutes guessing as to why Mary went and giving his own opinions.

Then, we went on to the slide "Your Knowledge of the Nativity." All good and well I suppose, but then he spent the next 20 minutes going over five questions that Christians often get wrong.

1. Were there three wise men? Many would say "Yes," but we really don't know.

2-4. Three more questions that had to do with the birth of Jesus but not with any real questions of faith or anything on which I would hang my salvation. I was really stunned by number 5, though.

5. Did the angels sing to the shepherds? My answer: Why does this really matter? The real answer: Apparently they said to the shepherds.

Maybe I'm just ranting, maybe I'm just being hard to please, but really why was this whole lesson important. Sure, I don't remember every detail perfectly, but in this instance did it really matter? I felt like I was in a Lads to Leaders Bible Bowl recalling fairly useless facts.

Now, my faith and salvation may somehow hang in the balance based on whether or not the angels sang or said to the shepherds, but I've spent all day racking my brain and I still can't figure out how that would happen.

All this to say that when it comes down to it, I'd rather spend an hour talking about something that matters or helping someone rather than being quoted a few minute details that I wouldn't even quiz my kids on in English class.

Oh, and the final point of the lesson, you ask? Sometimes we get our information about Jesus from the world.

I agree that this is a problem and concern, but I wish we'd spent more time talking about that and real world examples than a few facts that might be misconstrued by the world or most likely, aren't all that important in the first place.

1 Comments:

Blogger MSS said...

It's always frustrating when churches seem to get bogged down in the details and forget the big picture. There are so many times where people are debating some issue and all I can think is, "does this really matter?"
I agree that we certainly need to be careful that our belief isn't based on what the world says, but why waste an opportunity to praise God and say something truly meaningful on a sermon full of unimportant facts.

December 11, 2006 1:48 PM

 

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