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Edward Lyons out of Penninghame Parish - you can find him on You Tube
tootle pip
Mike
Now tagging post-apocalyptic fiction as current affairs. Latest Logos, MacOS, iOS and iPadOS
Alistair Begg is a favorite of mine
[Y]
Also Chuck Swindoll and thankful for the recordings of Martyn Lloyd-Jones. Still wish that his Romans volumes were in Logos. Vote here:
https://feedback.faithlife.com/boards/logos-book-requests/posts/lloyd-jones-romans
I am curious, who do you listen to? Who do you think are the best communicators?
Are you restricting this to the living? Would deceased preachers of whom there are recordings potentially count?
“The trouble is that everyone talks about reforming others and no one thinks about reforming himself.” St. Peter of Alcántara
Are you restricting this to the living? Would deceased preachers of whom there are recordings potentially count?
No I am not restricting them to living preachers. Many of the greatest preachers in my mind are from a prior era. As long as I can hear or watch them, that is my only criteria. I could even include read for some of the much older preachers such as Whitefield.
While I enjoy "great" preachers, I've often learned and been inspired by many no name preachers. For this reason, I encourage you to check out the available sermons of pastors close to your location.
I live in Anderson SC. I listen to a few men near my area for the reason you mentioned. they remind me that you can be a relatively unknown person but still be a great preacher... Mike Snelgrove in Forest City NC and Jeff Bartlett and Alex Campbell in Anderson SC
preachertony.com — appletech.tips — facebook.com/tonywalker23 — twitter.com/tonywalker23 — youtube.com/tonywalker23
Today I was listening to
Around the Year with the Von Trapp Family (audio)
https://ebooks.faithlife.com/product/216645/around-the-year-with-the-von-trapp-family
Maria, the mom, from the movie Sound of Music, described her family's Lenten Reading Program, starting at 02:03:00. Everyone was required to choose 3 books: one each for the mind, soul, and heart.
It made me think if this thread, and that I should make sure to be listening to sermons that fall into all three of these categories.
I, like many others, believe Charles Spurgeon to be "the prince of preachers".
"I read dead people..."
While I liked the attitude of a preacher very concerned with being a transparent vehicle for God's Word who said "the greatest complement is to be told that previous sermon really helped me but I don't recall who preached it."
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
[Y]I, like many others, believe Charles Spurgeon to be "the prince of preachers".
I believe in a Win-Win-Win God.
John Stott. His homiletics book, Between Two Worlds, is outstanding . . .
Is this available in Logos? Is it the same as Stott on the Christian Life: Between Two Worlds (Theologians on the Christian Life)
While I liked the attitude of a preacher very concerned with being a transparent vehicle for God's Word who said "the greatest complement is to be told that previous sermon really helped me but I don't recall who preached it."
Then Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger once commented how odd it was that those who talk the most about the Priesthood of all Believers write in the largest letters the name of the preacher on their church signs...
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
Dr. David Martyn Lloyd-Jones (rigorously biblical - never to be found chasing the ball in the pop-psych or issue-of-the-day or secular-motivational weeds)
Dr. S. Lewis Johnson (also rigorously biblical - never to be found chasing the ball in the pop-psych or issue-of-the-day or secular-motivational weeds; was a huge help to me personally when I became reformed in the middle of a dispy seminary Masters program)
BTW and FWIW: Good preachers are not necessarily good communicators (humanly speaking) nor are good communicators necessarily good preachers.
Instead of Artificial Intelligence, I prefer to continue to rely on Divine Intelligence instructing my Natural Dullness (Ps 32:8, John 16:13a)
David Jeremiah (We have some of his books in Logos!) https://www.davidjeremiah.org
I like the way he preaches. He is easy to listen to.
and
Adrian Rogers (Logos also has some of his books and sermons) https://www.lwf.org
The thing I really like about Adrian Rogers is that in every single sermon I have watched or listened to he always, without fail gave an invitation for the hearers to accept Christ into their life. And he is easy to listen to. I like his stories and illustrations too.
Are you restricting this to the living? Would deceased preachers of whom there are recordings potentially count?
No I am not restricting them to living preachers. Many of the greatest preachers in my mind are from a prior era. As long as I can hear or watch them, that is my only criteria.
In that case, I suggest the Emmy winner Fulton J. Sheen.
Then Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger once commented how odd it was that those who talk the most about the Priesthood of all Believers write in the largest letters the name of the preacher on their church signs...
Can you point me to where he said/wrote this? Then I could cite it....
“The trouble is that everyone talks about reforming others and no one thinks about reforming himself.” St. Peter of Alcántara
Then Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger once commented how odd it was that those who talk the most about the Priesthood of all Believers write in the largest letters the name of the preacher on their church signs...Can you point me to where he said/wrote this? Then I could cite it....
I wish I could. I did find him criticizing preachers names on church signs on pages 163-164 of Called to Communion, but I swear I read him pointing out the irony somewhere. My guess, based on what of his I have read that is NOT in my Logos library would be God is Near Us, but that is only a guess. My copy of it is packed away somewhere.
The Gospel is not ... a "new law," on the contrary, ... a "new life." - William Julius Mann
L8 Anglican, Lutheran and Orthodox Silver, Reformed Starter, Academic Essentials
L7 Lutheran Gold, Anglican Bronze
I could make a whole list of recommendations, but I'll put one, easily the greatest preacher of the 20th century, Martyn-Lloyd Jones. Download the MLJ Trust app!
"Your speech must always be with grace, as though seasoned with salt, so that you will know how you should respond to each person." - Colossians 4:6
While I liked the attitude of a preacher very concerned with being a transparent vehicle for God's Word who said "the greatest complement is to be told that previous sermon really helped me but I don't recall who preached it."
On a similar note, instead of hearing what a great preacher a person is after preaching, I like it when people say "what a great God we have"!
who said "the greatest complement is to be told that previous sermon really helped me but I don't recall who preached it."
As a worship leader who is often covering for holidays I often tell the congregation something like 'Rev'd John was quite worried about leaving me in your hands. Please reassure him; in fact next week when you shake his hand at the door look straight at him and say 'We had a really good sermon last week, you should have been here''.
tootle pip
Mike
Now tagging post-apocalyptic fiction as current affairs. Latest Logos, MacOS, iOS and iPadOS
Depends on what you're looking for:
For a podcast - I have benefited from Dr James White and the Dividing Line. 9 Marks has a good podcast geared toward the Pastor/Elder. Dr White also has one of the better Church History series I have listened to and a ton of teaching and preaching content on Monergism and the Alpha and Omega website.
For Teaching/Preaching - I just started the 230 plus sermon series M Lloyd Jones has on his trust website. To attempt to add names not listed by others thus far:
Voddie Baucham, Sam Storms, Kim Riddlebarger, Wayne Grudem, John Piper all have some excellent series ranging from Eschatology to Systematic Theology and the Book of Romans - most available for free on their sites.
I'm not an Apple guy, but some years ago a friend turned me on to Itunes U and I downloaded a lot of content from some of the seminaries - not sure if it is still in operation or not.
Logos 10 - OpenSuse Tumbleweed, Windows 11, Android 16 & Android 14