Acts 6:2 Then the twelve called the multitude of the disciples unto them, and said, It is not reason that we should leave the word of God, and serve tables. Acts 6:4 But we will give ourselves continually to prayer, and to the ministry of the word.
How much time in preparation do you think the apostles needed, after having spent three years of quality time with the Lord Jesus Christ himself.
Of course it does for two reasons. 1.) You have no idea what you are talking about. You do not understand the weight of preaching the word of God to His people week in and week out being careful to lead His people toward Him and the weight of the need to represent Him with all caution and carefulness. This is not just some task. It requires a tender carefulness that does not fit into a pragmatic time frame.
And 2.) To be willing to understand this does not fit into your personal and ignorant narrative that is completely devoid of any understanding of what it is to deliver God's message every week.
I do not put a time on it. Like Mex there have been times when a sermon takes all week. Regardless of how much knows there Bible praying and waiting on the peace of God to make sure you are in sync with Him. There is more to preparing a sermon than just knowing scripture. This is not a political speech, or some secular speech. You are endeavoring to represent God. Jesus Himself spent much time in prayer. Delivering a sermon should be done in the power and demonstration of the Spirit of God. As has been said many times when we enter the pulpit we can either show the people God, or we can show them ourselves, but we can never show them both.
I would not give two cents for a sermon or a preacher who so carelessly spends so little time in preparation. They need to repent and learn to be more careful.
It is a fearful thing to be in the hands of a living God. We better take that idea with us into the pulpit. Bailey Smith said some years ago that what this world needs is pulpits full of men who have been to the cross and have never gotten over it.
When we handle the preparation and delivery of God's word in such a careless manner that it becomes just another task that is to be completed in a pragmatic manner then we leave God out of it altogether and walk into the pulpit devoid of any true message from God regardless of how much Bible we know.
I'll be sure to tell my pastor he is ignorant and doesn't understand the 'weight of preaching', and is not cautious and tender enough in using only Tuesday as his prep day.
I have sat under shallow teaching, which is what you get when a pastor only spends a little time in preparation, and believe me, it does NOT feed the sheep!
I am thankful to God for the pastor I have now, who spends many hours a week in the word.
And just three days after that Peter preached one of the most powerful sermons recorded in history. 3,000 were saved that day. By the time you get to chapter six the church at Jerusalem is far too big for the twelve apostles to administer themselves. The church must appoint seven other men to help the apostles. One of them was Christianity's first martyr; another was a great evangelist. By this time the church, according to some records, exceeded 200,000. And Peter didn't have much understanding or power???
Jonathan Edwards spent 13 hours a day studying. John Gill probably spent as much. James Boice of the 20th century devoted his ministry time for study and sermon delivery only as a condition of accepting the pastorate of 10th Presbyterian Church. If there are other capable men in the congregation they can do vistation and other ministerial functions. Some preachers need to spend all available time for pulpit prep.,that also means little to no admintrative duties.
One size doesn't fit all. Blessed are those who labor in the Word.
If one is spending all available time studying, when is shepherding of the flock taking place?
Surely a 45 minute speech once or twice a week isn't supposed to cut it.
I had indicated that some preachers by design and cooperation of their congregation devote themselves exclusively to the ministry of the Word. Large churches with a good-sized staff of elders and deacons do the visitation and administrative duties.
I'm from a Plymouth Brethren background originally. And some of the teachings still apply. The church is a body. It should not center around one man --THE preacher. I believe in the plurality of elders (and deacons for that matter). Shepherding of the flock is not the exclusive task of one man.
I wouldn't characterize sermons as speeches. Two sermons per week are time-consuming in preparation and invaluable for the lives of the saints.