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Leadership Formation

How to Preach the Same Gospel to People Who Are Nothing Alike

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Walk into almost any established congregation in America and look at the range of people sitting in the pews. There is the retired teacher who has been attending for forty years. There is the millennial couple who came for the first time six weeks ago with no church background. There is the college student somewhere between faith and genuine doubt who has not decided whether this Sunday will be their last. There is the single mother who is exhausted and needs something more than information. The preacher stands before all of them with one message to give. The gospel is singular. The audience is not. And the tension between those two realities is the central homiletical challenge of every Sunday.

Preaching to diverse congregations has always been demanding, but the complexity has increased significantly in recent decades. The cultural range in a typical congregation has widened. The gap between churched and unchurched backgrounds is larger than it has ever been. And the attention span in which congregants live has changed the way people receive and process communication. A sermon that lands powerfully for a fifty-five-year-old elder who grew up in the tradition may be functionally inaccessible to the thirty-year-old who came for the first time.

Preaching to the Text, Not the Type

One of the most reliable approaches to diverse-congregation preaching is a thorough, text-centered method that allows Scripture itself to make its claims before the preacher shapes them for the audience. When the sermon begins with honest, careful attention to what the text is actually saying — in its original context, with its original force — it has a chance to do what sermons optimized for specific audiences often cannot: surprise everyone. The person who came expecting confirmation gets disrupted by what the text actually says. The person who came expecting to be dismissed by religious language encounters something that speaks to their actual condition. Trust the text.

"The gospel is singular. The audience is not. And navigating that tension is the central homiletical challenge of every Sunday."

The Non-Negotiable of Genuine Humanity

Perhaps the single most universally connecting element in any sermon, regardless of the theological formation or cultural background of the congregation, is the preacher's genuine humanity. The sermon that includes a moment of honest vulnerability — not manufactured emotion, but real acknowledgment that the preacher is wrestling with the same human realities as the congregation — tends to build the kind of trust that makes the rest of the message receivable.

People from wildly different backgrounds and stages of faith share one thing: they are human beings who are struggling, hoping, wondering, and trying to make sense of their lives. Preach to that. Let the gospel address that. The gospel, after all, is not ultimately for any particular demographic. It is for people. And every room you preach in is full of them. The sermon that begins in honest, specific, human reality — that starts in Monday morning before it moves toward Sunday — tends to reach the full range of the congregation more effectively than the sermon that begins in theological abstraction and tries to work its way toward application at the end.

SECTION 3 — THE CHURCH IN ITS COMMUNITY

Neighborhood, mental health, poverty, arts, digital age, last institution, and table culture.

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