Home Pastors Articles for Pastors Who Is the Hero of Your Sermon?

Who Is the Hero of Your Sermon?

Every sermon has a hero. Every message points to some kind of rescue from financial, relational or ethical plight.

Few would argue that someone other than Christ should be this rescuer—this hero—in every sermon. But many of us think we are pointing people toward Christ, when in fact we are not.

We may talk about Jesus a lot in our sermons, but ultimately we point our people toward something or someone else.

Let’s examine a few counterfeit heroes that prevent us from pointing to the Ultimate Hero in our sermons.

1. You can be the hero of your sermon.

I once wrote in large letters on the whiteboard in my office: YOU ARE NOT THE STANDARD. This sparked several conversations, to say the least!

Many preachers are guilty of this without knowing it. You would never tell your people “Be like me!” when you preach. But the way you use personal illustrations, particularly about your marriage, may imply you are the standard.

Or, if you are a natural exhorter who aggressively attacks sin and disobedience, you need to work on transparency to allow others to see your own struggles with sin. Otherwise, your people will feel scolded and undermined, not exhorted and encouraged. You will end up looking like the hero. If you often preach on biblical masculinity (which I agree you should), be careful to avoid lifting yourself up as the ultimate man.

You should be an example to your people, not the example. Point your people to Jesus Christ, who is the only God and Savior. Paul said, “For what we proclaim is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord” (2 Cor. 4:5). We would do well to think through how we lift up ourselves, instead of Christ.

2. They can be the heroes of the sermon.

Many sermons make the listeners the hero of the message. Rather than leaving them resting in the finished work of Christ, we exhort them to do more. We communicate that the key to a better marriage, meaningful work and financial contentment is more action and increased effort. For many, this takes the form of using Old Testament stories for moral instruction. While the stories of David, Abraham and Joseph certainly offer us moral examples, we must grapple with whether or not this was always the author’s intent.

Other preachers make missions and evangelism the thrust of nearly every message. The church is exhorted every week to summon all their resources to reach non-Christians. Still others can elevate issues such as giving, praying, Bible reading and church activity. The point is simple: Do more!