Episodes

  • Ep 15: The Spirit and the Preacher
    Jun 23 2026

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    There are two truths about preaching that sound like they're in tension — and learning to hold both is one of the most freeing things that can happen to a preacher.

    The first: you bring yourself fully to the pulpit. Your personality, your story, your voice — God wants all of it. The second: you depend on God entirely. Your gifting, on its own, can't do what a sermon is supposed to do.

    In this episode, Jonathan McClintock walks through what the preacher brings to the task and what he can never accomplish without the Spirit. Drawing on Phillips Brooks, Paul's confession of weakness in 1 Corinthians 2, and the vision of maturity in Ephesians 4, this is a conversation about the internal life of the preacher — the part of preaching that no framework or technique can touch.

    You'll work through:

    • Why your personality is a gift to steward, not a problem to manage
    • What it means to prepare like it depends on you and preach like it depends on God
    • The two aims every sermon is reaching for: persuasion and maturity
    • Why clarity is directly tied to persuasion — and why an unclear sermon adds an obstacle of your own making
    • One honest question to ask about this Sunday's sermon

    This is the first in a three-part series drawn from Course 3 of the Clear Preaching Academy — a full theology of preaching.

    Whether you've been preaching for two years or twenty, this episode will free you to bring your whole self to the pulpit — and re-anchor you in the One who makes preaching more than speech.

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    14 mins
  • Ep 14: Illustration Blindspots - The People in Our Congregations We Are Ignoring
    Jun 16 2026

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    Half of churchgoers say their pastor doesn't understand their family situation. That's not a theology problem or a character problem — it's an illustration problem. And most pastors have no idea they have it.

    In this episode, Jonathan McClintock unpacks one of the most common and least-discussed weaknesses in preaching: the illustration blindspot. Most preachers draw from the life they've lived — their marriage, their stage of life, their background, their references — and over time that quietly tells large portions of the room that the sermon wasn't built with them in mind.

    Using Paul's sermon at the Areopagus in Acts 17 as the model, this episode makes the case for widening your well without watering down your message. Paul quoted secular Greek poets to build a bridge to people who didn't even know the true God — then walked them straight across that bridge to repentance and resurrection. That's the pattern: widen the entry point, don't water down the truth.

    You'll learn:

    • What an illustration blindspot is — and why it's invisible to the preacher
    • The four categories where blindspots show up most often
    • A simple audit of your last four sermons that reveals your patterns
    • Three principles from Paul's example at Mars Hill
    • One concrete thing to do in your sermon prep this week

    If you've ever wondered whether your preaching is reaching everyone in the room — or just the people whose lives look like yours — this episode is for you.

    The Clear Preaching Academy is open now. Learn more at ClearPreaching.com.

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    11 mins
  • Ep 13: The Pre-Loaded Congregation - The Spiritual Formation Challenge
    Jun 10 2026

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    Every preacher has a clarity gap. Find yours. Take the free Clear Preaching Self-Assessment at clearpreaching.com/assessment

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    You spent twenty hours in the text. You wrestled with the passage. You wrote and rewrote your Take-Home Truth until it was honest and precise.

    And somewhere in your congregation, three people already pulled up a summary of that passage on their phone this week. One asked ChatGPT what it means. Another got a six-point outline from an AI devotional app before you ever opened your mouth.

    That's the room you're preaching into now.

    In this episode, Jonathan McClintock addresses something most preaching podcasts haven't touched yet — not AI sermon tools, but what happens to your preaching when your congregation is already being formed by AI before you open your Bible on Sunday. This is a preaching preparation question and a discipleship formation question at the same time.

    Drawing from 2026 Barna State of the Church data, Jonathan walks through what the formation gap actually looks like, what it changes about how you prepare, and why it makes clarity more important than ever — not less.

    What changes when your congregation arrives pre-loaded:

    • Objections are already formed — In a pre-loaded congregation, the resistance may already be seated before you begin. Anticipating that is a newer preparation skill most preachers haven't developed.
    • Authority is established differently — The informational gap between preacher and congregation no longer exists in the same way. What you carry now — pastoral relationship, embodied presence, spiritual accountability — is a more essential authority. But it has to be claimed consciously.

    And then the argument at the heart of this episode: a sermon is not a theological summary. It is embodied, pastoral, Spirit-led proclamation aimed at specific people in a specific moment. A scattered sermon has less to offer than AI already provided. But a clear, structured, single-idea sermon delivered by someone who knows the room — that's irreplaceable.

    The congregation doesn't need a preacher who out-informs AI. They need a Spirit-led preacher to discern the heart and deliver the Truth.

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    17 mins
  • Ep 12: How Do I Decide What to Preach?
    Jun 2 2026

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    Every week, preachers sit down to prepare a sermon. And every week, many of them start in the wrong place.

    They open a commentary before they've asked the most important question: Who is actually sitting in front of me on Sunday?

    In this episode, Dr Jonathan McClintock walks through a framework drawn from Calvin Miller's insight that the Sunday service is a gathering of troubles — a room full of people moving through private fog, reaching for God-words that might stop the hemorrhaging of their souls. The question isn't just what to preach. It's whether you've done the work to know who you're preaching to.

    Three questions every preacher needs to answer before choosing a text:

    1. Who is my audience? No public speaker faces the emotional breadth a pastor faces every single Sunday. Every hearer brings needs. The impact of your sermon depends on how well you've diagnosed the room. You're armed with a Bible full of band-aids — but diagnosis has to come before treatment.

    2. What am I feeling in prayer? The Spirit's prompt in a preacher's quiet is worth more than an hour in the commentary stack. Before you sit down to study, sit down to pray. Ask three questions: Is this text for me? Is it for my congregation? Or is it for both of us?

    3. What am I presently reading? If you are not reading, you have no business preaching. You cannot continually give out what you have not put in. And when you do read — let the Bible drive. Don't look for a passage to support your great thought. Let your great thought support the Bible.

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    22 mins
  • Ep 11: What Actually Is Clarity in Preaching: And Why Is Everyone Suddenly Talking About It?
    May 26 2026

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    "Clarity" has become the word everyone in preaching circles is using right now. Coaching programs. Seminary institutes. Training cohorts. It's everywhere.

    But when everyone uses the same word, the word starts to lose its meaning.

    In this episode, Jonathan McClintock cuts through the noise and defines what preaching clarity actually is — and what it isn't. Not simplicity. Not brevity. Not polish. Something deeper, more structural, and more important than any of those things.

    You'll learn:

    • Why most definitions of clarity are too shallow to be useful
    • The three-part framework behind genuinely clear preaching (Text's Idea → Abiding Truth → Take-Home Truth)
    • The Tuesday Test — the one question that tells you whether your sermon actually landed
    • Why clarity matters more right now than it did ten years ago
    • One concrete thing to do before you finish your sermon prep this week

    Whether you've been preaching for two years or twenty, this episode will give you language for something you've probably been feeling for a while — and a framework to start fixing it.

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    20 mins
  • Ep. 10: Illustration and Application
    May 19 2026

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    Every preacher has a clarity gap. Find yours. Take the free Clear Preaching Self-Assessment at clearpreaching.com/assessment

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    Most preachers know they need illustrations. Fewer know what makes an illustration actually work.

    The problem isn't that preachers don't tell stories — it's that they tell stories that entertain without landing. The illustration ends, the congregation moves on, and the truth it was supposed to drive home never quite arrives.

    In Episode 10 of the Clear Preaching Podcast, Jonathan McClintock breaks down the three elements every illustration needs to move from abstract to concrete and relevant — so it doesn't just help people see the truth, but understand it and act on it.

    The three elements:

    • Key Phrasing — The language of your Take-Home Truth must thread through the illustration itself. Your congregation needs to hear the connection, not assume it. Bryan Chapell calls this "raining down" the key phrasing through every movement of the message — and that includes the story you're telling.
    • Concrete Language — Too many preachers stay too high on the ladder of abstraction. "God is faithful" is true. It's also too high to land. The preacher's job is to bring that truth down to the bottom rung — a specific person, a specific moment, a specific word from God. Like Abraham at 99, Sarah barren, and God saying "this time next year."
    • Relevant Application — The best illustrations help the listener see themselves in the story. Not a generic listener. The single mom in row three. The person carrying secret doubt. The one who's been burned. A brief direct bridge after the illustration — "if that's where you are this morning, this is for you" — is what turns a story into a sermon moment.

    An illustration that doesn't land the truth is just a story. All three elements, every illustration.

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    19 mins
  • Ep 9: Don't Let AI Preach
    May 12 2026

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    Every preacher has a clarity gap. Find yours. Take the free Clear Preaching Self-Assessment at clearpreaching.com/assessment

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    AI can write your sermon in 90 seconds. It cannot tell you if your sermon has a point.

    Most pastors are using AI tools in some form now — and there's nothing wrong with that. The problem is what happens when a preacher lets AI do the heavy lifting. When the tool that was supposed to assist the process quietly starts replacing it.

    In this episode, Jonathan McClintock draws a clear line between what AI can help with and what it cannot touch — and makes the case that there are three places in sermon preparation where no tool can replace the preacher.

    The three places AI cannot replace you:

    • In the text — The slow work of sitting with a passage is not inefficiency. It is formation. The text does its work on the preacher before the preacher does their work on the text. If you skip that, you will stand in the pulpit with information you did not earn.
    • In the thinking — AI gives you content. It will not give you conviction. It generates ideas. It will not tell you which one is true. Determining the central claim of a sermon — the honest, precise Take-Home Truth — is the work of a preacher. A machine cannot do it.
    • In knowing your people — AI doesn't know who sat in the third row last Sunday carrying a grief they haven't told anyone about. It doesn't know your community, your congregation, or what the text needs to say to them specifically this week. You do.

    And then there's the line no tool can cross: when it comes to learning Scripture, applying Scripture, and listening to the prompting of the Holy Spirit — AI cannot do that.

    Use AI. Just don't let it preach for you.

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    13 mins
  • Ep 8: Simpler Than You Think: Simplifying Sermon Preparation
    May 6 2026

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    Every preacher has a clarity gap. Find yours. Take the free Clear Preaching Self-Assessment at clearpreaching.com/assessment

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    Sermon prep doesn't have to feel like chaos every week.

    Most preachers sit down to prepare without a clear, repeatable process — and it shows. They read, study, collect ideas, stare at a blank page, start over, and patch something together by Saturday night hoping it holds. That's not a character problem. It's a framework problem.

    In this episode, Jonathan McClintock makes the case that the Clear Preaching Framework doesn't just help you preach better — it simplifies the process of getting there. Not simpler as in less work. Simpler as in less chaos, less second-guessing, and more confidence that what you're preparing will actually land.

    And here's the conviction underneath it all: simple doesn't mean shallow. Focused doesn't mean thin. The most complicated sermons are often the least memorable. The preacher who says one thing clearly — one biblical, focused, landed idea — gives the congregation something they can actually carry out the door.

    Jonathan walks through all four domains of the Clear Preaching Framework and shows exactly what each one removes from the prep process — not just what it produces.

    What you'll walk away with:

    • A framework that gives you a clear, repeatable process from text to pulpit
    • An understanding of why complexity and depth are not the same thing
    • What each of the four domains eliminates from your weekly prep chaos
    • One diagnostic question to ask before you finalize every sermon

    Your congregation doesn't need a more complicated sermon. They need a clearer one.

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    17 mins