sermon preparation strategies


During my fourth semester of seminary, I took a course in homiletics (preaching, for those who are not fond of fancy words). In some seminaries, these courses include a component that requires students to analyze other people’s sermons. Mine did not; but I often found myself listening to other people’s preaching in order to determine what seemed engaging or helpful, what didn’t connect, etc. I had some other kinds of public speaking experience; and in some ways this was helpful. I was comfortable talking to people; but preaching is a particular kind of speaking in which I am attempting to engage with a person’s most vulnerable personal space–with or without their permission depending on the reason why they came to church. That is a story for another post…



Someone recently asked me how I went about preparing a sermon. This is a legitimate question. She wasn’t asking about how a person does this in general, though the question could have been interpreted that way. She was asking about how I, as a person who is blind (and how she as a fellow person who is blind), would access and organize the information I needed to use in sermon preparation. This is, perhaps, one of the most frustrating aspects of what I do. Sighted people work through this process using a lot of skimming and scanning. I don’t have the ability to do this; so I have to be wise in collecting, searching using keywords, and describing to someone else at times what I want. At times, when none of these strategies works and I just feel something is missing, I have to be persistent in seeking it–and sometimes “it” is some unknown thing that just nags at me until it is found. I always pray through the process; and when I get those hunches, the praying becomes a crucial thing as I work to find what I have that hunch I need.



Organizing information is a difficult thing for me at times. I have the same problem regarding research for papers. I can’t just store cards or files with tidbits or copies of things and pull them out when I need them. I’ve tried creating file folders on my computer and naming little files with tidbits. That works in some instances. Sometimes I just use a big file and insert a new page for a new tidbit. It just depends on what I am working with and how many tidbits I need to organize.

About Sarah Blake LaRose

Sarah Blake LaRose teaches Biblical Hebrew and Greek at Anderson University School of Theology and Christian Ministry in Anderson, Indiana. She is one of three blind academic scholars who received the Jacob Bolotin Award from the National Federation of the Blind in 2016 in recognition of innovative work in the field of access to biblical language texts and tools for people who are blind. In addition to her work as a professor, she provides braille transcription services specializing in ancient languages. Her research interests concern the intersection of disability, poverty, and biblical studies.

About Sarah Blake LaRose

Sarah Blake LaRose teaches Biblical Hebrew and Greek at Anderson University School of Theology and Christian Ministry in Anderson, Indiana. She is one of three blind academic scholars who received the Jacob Bolotin Award from the National Federation of the Blind in 2016 in recognition of innovative work in the field of access to biblical language texts and tools for people who are blind. In addition to her work as a professor, she provides braille transcription services specializing in ancient languages. Her research interests concern the intersection of disability, poverty, and biblical studies.

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