Scot McKnight over at Jesus Creed posted something on “Sermons and Plagiarism” today. I wrote about this a year ago and have been thinking recently about the enormous pressure pastors/teachers are under to present compelling, well crafted messages 52 weeks a year, especially now that I am preaching fairly regularly now in my own internship. I thought I would repost this piece and ask for any thoughts you may have about why this happens and what the Church can do to re-form/create a culture that prevents this type of thing from being the norm.

There is a seedy underworld that most church goers know nothing about. It’s a world filled with buying and selling, profits and preaching, speeches and suckers the likes of which would shock the pants of Sister Betty and Brother John!

What is this 5-alarm scandal I speak of? Watch this YouTube video of Pastor James Merritt for yourself:



A few weekends ago I stumbled upon this YouTube video posted by an SBC pastor, Steve McCoy, on his blog, Reformissionary. If you watched the video, you saw Pastor Merritt being all generous like. Because, in his own words, he loves pastors, Dr. Merritt reached into that heart of gold and pulled out a special little gift from one pastor to another: one of his sermons! If you go and signup on for his newsletter in his den of crass Christian commercialism (read: website) you can download and have your very own copy of a Father’s Day sermon manuscript, complete with PowerPoint!

After watching the video I couldn’t let such a golden opportunity slip by, so I went to his site, signed up for the newsletter and downloaded my very own sermon package. After unzipping the file, there it was: my very own Father’s Day manuscript! The thing is 9 pages long, complete with the obligatory sappy introductory story, cheesy jokes, Christian cliches, and mm deep 4-steps to being-better-at-whatever-you’re-failing-at-as-a-Christian (in this case, parenting).

But this post isn’t about ranting about the state of the content of pastoral teaching and preaching. (That will be a post for another time) No, no, instead I want to ask a basic, knuckle-head question: Who decided it was OK to sell sermon manuscripts to pastors to use on Sundays? Who decided it was OK for pastors to copy and speak another pastors Sunday morning speech? Who decided it was OK for a few mega-star, mega-speachers (speaking-preaching as Doug Pagitt says) to decide what rural, urban, international, white, black, mainline, evangelical, mega-church, and house-church churches should be learning and studying in their own contexts?

Does anyone else find this incredibly odd, sad, and downright messed-up?

If you google “pastor sermon resources” you can find sites with audio files of preachers for listening enjoyment, but there are also plenty of pastor-specific sites that exist to provide sermons for pastors to preach. One website boasts “80,000 Free Sermons, Illustrations, & Free Trial for SermonCentral Pro!” and at anotheryou’ll find sermon series, leadership tools, and much more – all watering tools for your ministry” which is basically a nice way of saying “we offer thousands of sermon transcripts, sermon series, sermon packages, sermon illustrations, and sermon PowerPoints for you to pilfer with holy abandon…for a small fee, of course.”

It’s sad that the state of the church has driving men and women to pay for another dude’s (and dudette’s) speech about what they think God is saying and how they think people should live. It’s sad that a shepherd of the Bride of Jesus has been reduced (or rather maybe has reduced himself?) to a shopkeeper peddling his wares to desperate, needy pastors.

Why is this acceptable? Why do people do this? How does this happen?

I wonder if I will ever get that desperate? I can certainly understand the pressures to perform and deliver, the critiquing glares, and all the ears to tingle week after week could certainly take its tole. I think about my own future in such a position and can honestly say I don’t know that I would never pull such a stunt. In fact, I’m sure I will, and several times at that!

As I approach another year at seminary this fall and ministry in my own local context, watching this video  causes me to pause and reflect about the awesome responsibility of pastoring. I do not mean the responsibility to deliver great, compelling prose or the need to be clever and cool on a stage. No, the responsibility of a pastor is to teach, shepherd, and equip the Body of Christ to be Jesus to the world around them. Part of that responsibility as teachers is to teach hyperlocally, to radically relate the teachings and way of Jesus to a local context, not simply overlay another pastor’s generic vision. Isn’t this type of practice grossly inauthentic? Paul talks about us being an open letter of Christ to be read by others, and as a shepherd who is charged with the task of caring for the letters and stories of others, what better way to do so than to share the story and particular narrative of the pastor’s self? How can a pastor pastor without authentically laying bare the story and letter of his or her life? That certainly does not happen with “Made In Saddleback” stamped sermons.

Again, I can sorta understand the predicament of being a pastor and do feel for those who look around at all the glitz and glamor and long for “successful” ministries. Then the likes of Pastor Merritt offer that success with purpose-driven books, snazzy sermons, and growth-guaranteeing strategies. It is sad. But what makes me even sadder is to think that there is no way in hell that it is going to stop. There is too much money to be made, too much success to be had, and too many inflated egos to prance around.

Ahh, the state of the church…
-jeremy