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Thesis

Download a copy of my thesis on Theocentric Preaching for free in PDF.

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  • Church Planter: The Man, the Message, the Mission
    Church Planter: The Man, the Message, the Mission
    by Darrin Patrick

Theocentric Preaching

Theocentric (God-centered) preaching is based on the belief that we are part of God's story. It's the opposite of anthropocentric (human-centered) preaching that focuses on us as the main characters of our smaller stories.

Entries in Seminar/Thesis (7)

Saturday
Apr252009

Pastors, Preach God!

I had the privilege of giving a paper called "Pastors, Preach God!" to the Toronto Pastors Fellowship last week. A PDF of the paper is available for download. You can also listen to the talk online.

Thursday
May032007

Thesis available for download

My thesis on theocentric preaching has finally passed proofreading by the D.Min. office and is now available for download.

I hope to eventually shape this material into a book, since the thesis format is structured for a specific purpose. Although the thesis is done, in some ways it's just a beginning.

Thursday
Mar222007

Short seminar on theocentric preaching

I've been asked to speak to a local group of pastors today on theocentric preaching. I'll only have about an hour, so it's forced me to narrow what I want to say.My notes for the seminar are available for download (in PDF - requires the free Adobe Reader):

I'm looking forward to today's presentation. Should be fun.

Tuesday
Mar132007

Defending my thesis

This blog began last year as I was writing my D.Min. thesis for Gordon-Conwell on the subject of theocentric preaching. This Friday, I'm in Boston to defend the thesis. I'm looking forward to the experience, although I suspect I'll be a little nervous going into the meeting.I probably won't be posting the rest of the week. Hope to be back next week.
Wednesday
Sep202006

Yesterday's seminar

I listened to a podcast this week that said when you do version 1.0 of something, your goal should be just to survive. "Just get through it the first time. You can try that stuff you read about in magazines later."

Yesterday I rolled out version 1.0 of a seminar on theocentric preaching, and I think it's safe to say we all survived. We had fun and I think we might have thought through some important issues. I couldn't have picked better people to attend and to interact with the topic.

The best part of the seminar was the interaction. Most of the interaction seemed to be about two issues. First, what does it mean to be theocentric when God and Scripture seem to focus on humanity? Second, what does theocentric preaching look like in practice? All kinds of other issues surfaced too, such as how to interpret and apply Scripture accurately (hermeneutics, especially relating to modern methods which may be too neat and reductionistic), and the hot button issue of exemplary preaching (preaching biblical characters as models to emulate).

People felt free to push back, which I appreciated. I found some areas where my thinking is still fuzzy, and I realized that I need a lot more concrete examples. Still, I was pleased that some of my findings seemed to strike a chord, and it was clear that we were talking about issues that everyone felt a need to discuss.

Although I tried not to do this, I still make a rookie mistake: I had way too much content for the amount of time. I think if I did it over I would send out a brief paper with introductory material, and then teach the session inductively. Learning is much more effective when you learn yourself rather than when someone else tells you what they've learned. We ran out of time for the hands-on part; I really had more there than we could accomplish in four or five hours.

I was glad when it ended, because I was exhausted. Today, though, I wish we could go at it again, because I loved thinking things through with a group of people. There's a lot to be said for learning in community.

Now I have to summarize the feedback, add it to my thesis, and send it in. Good to be coming to the end, but I hope that the type of learning experience I had yesterday will continue in some form.