Stick to the Bible, preach the unchanging Word, and watch the Spirit do His work. Here are four tips for preaching in rural churches.
By Matt Henslee and Kyle Bueermann
When you accept a call to pastor an existing church, you’re entering ministry in a church that has a history. The pulpit you stand behind each Sunday has been a launching point for the proclamation of the Word of God week in and week out.
In my current church, different people had preached close to 12,000 sermons before I got there. Now let’s be honest. Some of those were great sermons and some were not so great (and let’s be even more honest—that’s still the case).
Maybe your church has suffered through a dry spell in the pulpit for a few years and is in the spot it’s currently in because the preaching of the Word has been neglected for a season.
That stops now.
The future health and vitality of your church depends wholly on a move of the Holy Spirit. And a large part of that depends on your faithfulness to preach the Word.
Paul charged Timothy, “Preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; rebuke, correct, and encourage with great patience and teaching” (2 Timothy 4:2). The future health and vitality of your church depend wholly on a move of the Holy Spirit. A large part of that’ll depend on your faithfulness to preach the Word.
Trust us, there’ll be seasons when you don’t want to preach, and you’d rather call in sick than suffer from another sermon where it feels like you’re talking to a brick wall.
In fact, because of those dog days of preaching, you’ll be tempted to reheat an old message or focus on the felt needs of your church.
Resist this temptation.
Stake your ministry on the inerrant, infallible, and inspired Word of God.
Listen: You’re not inerrant. Your sermon is not infallible.
But you’re entering the pulpit with the Word that’s not only inerrant and infallible but inspired by God (2 Timothy 3:16-17).
Preach the Word, preacher.
Biblical preaching may not always be popular. In fact, it may even cause you to lose some folks. The point, however, is to be faithful.
Biblical preaching takes time. You may have to look for it in every nook and cranny of your schedule, but it’s absolutely necessary. After all, when Jesus said, “Feed my sheep,” it wasn’t a suggestion—it was a command.
Jesus doesn’t expect you to hit a home run each Sunday; He expects you to preach the Word. Your people don’t need you to be the next Dr. Adrian Rogers; they need (insert your name here) to preach the Word.
There are countless ways to “grow” the church you serve. You can build a full-size basketball court in the sanctuary or give away a car. You can chase after whatever the latest gimmick is.
Fads will come and go. Trends will shift by the seasons. But there’s only one “church-growth strategy” that’ll last—a church built on an everlasting foundation: the Lord and His Word.
Pastor, it’s Jesus’ job to build His Church.
If you’ll put your fruitfulness on the altar—along with your desire to grow a platform or build a name for yourself—and follow Paul’s encouragement to Timothy to “preach the Word … with great patience,” Jesus will take care of the rest.
Perhaps, it’ll be fast. Perhaps, it’ll be slow. Perhaps it’ll not even be that noticeable. Over time, however, as you continue to preach the Word, they’ll come.
Stay faithful, stay patient, and preach the Word.
Make a firm commitment to preach the Word faithfully. There’ll be times you don’t want to, but we beg you to keep your hand to the plow.
Stick to the Bible, preach the unchanging Word, and watch the Spirit do His work. As you do, here are four tips for preaching in rural churches:
1. Get up early.
In a rural church, it’s likely you may have to jump in the car at a moment’s notice to go to the hospital that’s an hour or more away.
While you’re there, your wife may even need you to go ahead and grab some milk on the way home because you’ll pass by that beacon of hope known as Walmart.
While such trips are worth it, they’ll make deep cuts into your sermon prep time. Get up early, grab your Bible, and get to work.
2. Read your passage a million times.
Okay, that may be a bit of an exaggeration, but you might be reading this as a bi-vocational pastor. If so, you may not have time to write out a 4,000-word manuscript, nor even need to.
Read your text, know your text frontward and backward, and sketch out a healthy outline.
If the week gets away from you, you’ll at least enter the pulpit and lean far more heavily on His Word and a simple, easy-to-follow outline than your ideas and pontifications. Come to think of it, that’s the point.
3. Know your context and know your people.
I (Matt) preached a revival in Kentucky during their undefeated run to the Final Four in 2015. I’d been in Texas most of my life and had what I thought was a money illustration involving football.
As people started entering the sanctuary, however, I noticed several Kentucky basketball shirts. I didn’t know much about basketball, but I knew enough to shift my illustration on the fly to connect even more with the congregation.
It was—forgive me, I’m gonna say it—a slam dunk.
If you know your context and people well, you can be a city boy and still connect with people who think a traffic jam is when their cows are coming in to feed.
4. Books are your friend and so is the internet.
Your church likely won’t provide you with a book budget, and money might be tight. When you’re able, however, grab a book on preaching and read it when you have some downtime.
Also, many seminaries have blogs like Southwestern’s Preaching Source, which offer sermon outlines and articles to help you in (and out of) the pulpit.
Matt Henslee
Matt and his wife Rebecca have four daughters. He is the lead pastor of Plymouth Park Baptist Church in Irving, Texas and coauthor of Replanting Rural Churches.
Kyle Bueermann
Kyle co-authored Replanting Rural Churches and is the pastor of First Baptist Church of Alamogordo, New Mexico, director of replanter development for the North American Mission Board, and co-host of Not Another Baptist Podcast.
Excerpted from Replanting Rural Churches by Matt Henslee and Kyle Bueermann. Used by permission.