In every church I
have served, there have been a couple of people who appointed themselves as
unofficial timekeepers of the pastor’s sermon. You know who you are. They would
inform me after the service how long my sermon went. I never got the feeling
that they wished the sermon had lasted longer. In fact they seem to believe
that a sermon can never be too short.
For you “sermon timers” there is good news. There is a new study by the Pew
Research Center that explores the length of sermons. They examined 49,719
sermons delivered in April and May of 2019 that were shared online by 6,431
churches. Pew described its research as “the most exhaustive attempt to date to
catalogue and analyze American religious sermons.” It exhausts me just to
imagine that many sermons!
Their findings were interesting. The median length of a
sermon is 37 minutes. Catholic homilies were the shortest – only 14 minutes. Mainline
Protestant pastors preach for 25 minutes. Evangelicals go for 39 minutes. Black
Protestant preachers clocked in the longest at 54 minutes. Personally I aim for
20 minutes. I figure that if I can’t say it in twenty minutes, an extra ten or
fifteen won’t help.
Pope Francis recommends that priests preach for no longer
than eight minutes. TED Talks, which have become an unofficial standard for
public speaking, have a limit of 18 minutes, a length based on neuroscience. TED
organizers say that 18 minutes is long enough for a speaker to flesh out an
idea, but short enough for a listener to understand all the important
information.
I have a good friend, Dwight Moody, founder of the Academy
of Preachers, who puts a limit of fifteen minutes on preachers at their annual National
Festival of Young Preachers. But when I asked him about this subject on the
phone the other day, he said the length of a sermon is not so important. What
is important is whether the preacher has something to say.
What is the best length for a sermon? Just long enough and
no longer. Long enough to get across your point, but not so long that people
forget what your point is. I have suffered through many sermons that appeared
pointless. The most famous sermon in the Bible, Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, can
be read aloud in under fifteen minutes. If that was long enough for Jesus….
As a retired pastor, I now listen to more sermons than I
preach, and consequently my perspective on preaching has changed. For me it doesn’t
matter (usually) how long a sermon lasts. I never look at my watch. (It helps
that I recently stopped wearing a watch.) What matters is how well crafted and
delivered it is. Fifteen minutes can be agony when listening to a poorly researched,
written and executed sermon. On the other hand, a half hour goes by in a flash
when I am engaged in what is being said.
For me the sermon is one of the most important parts of a worship
service. I need a good pastoral message on a weekly basis, and I am blessed to
attend a church with an excellent preacher. I also know that sermonizing
depends as much upon the listener as the preacher. I can’t just sit back and be
passive. I need to be an active participant in the process of communication.
For me that starts with carefully listening to (and usually
following along in the pew Bible) the scripture when it is read aloud. Then I
relate everything that the preacher says back to the text that is being
expounded. It means looking for how the exposition is relevant to my life. It
means being willing to travel with the preacher down the road that the preacher
is taking me – at least for these few minutes. I do not need to agree with every
twist and turn of the hermeneutical journey, but the preacher needs to make a good
case for bringing me along.
A good sermon can be an opening to the divine, a stairway to
heaven, a temporary parting of the veil so we glimpse the Holy. At its best it
is a door into our own soul and into the heart of God. If the preacher does not
know the Eternal firsthand, it becomes painfully evident very quickly. In that
case no amount of time is enough. For a preacher with a foot in Eternity, that grace
can be communicated in any amount of time. How long is a good sermon? Long
enough to usher us into the Presence of God.
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