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JBTM Jeffrey G. Audirsch<br />

54<br />

1. Select a manageable text. Preaching poetic texts can be a delight for both the<br />

interpreter/preacher and the audience/congregation. In many ways, defining<br />

a guideline for “how many verses” should be preached is difficult. What is<br />

certain is that the interpreter/preacher should identify a self-contained,<br />

literary unit that “has structural integrity.” 89 Personally, I do not believe<br />

a “formula” exists for determining too little or too much material to be<br />

preached. Obviously, some biblical poems are simply too large to preach<br />

in one sermon (e.g., Ps 119). On the other hand, poetic texts like the Song<br />

of Moses (Exod 15:1–18), the Song of Deborah (Judg 5:1–31), or David’s<br />

repentance (Ps 51:1–18), though long, can be preached in one sermon. The<br />

reality is, the length of the passage to be preached should be determined<br />

by the guiding principles below; however, I believe this principle should be<br />

first given the fact that all sermons must begin with the biblical text and not<br />

the trivial “find a text to support my points/arguments” approach that is<br />

sometimes abused by interpreters/preachers.<br />

2. Consult a variety of translations and read the poetic text over-and-over. 90 By<br />

reading the poetic text multiple times, the interpreter/preacher can begin<br />

to identify the parallelisms, major themes, theological motifs, events, and<br />

figurative language in the poem.<br />

3. Identify the parallelisms within the text. Poetry by nature contains parallelisms.<br />

The interpreter/preacher should be familiar with Lowth’s forms of<br />

parallelisms: synonymous, antithetic, and synthetic. To properly interpret<br />

biblical poetry, the interpreter/preacher must remember that the poems are<br />

making “their statement with poetic means.” 91<br />

4. Identify major themes, theological motifs, or events. The ability to identify and<br />

understand the themes, theological motifs, and historical events is no small<br />

task. In fact, this is one of the most challenging aspects of studying the Old<br />

Testament. The First Testament is vast and dense covering centuries of<br />

89<br />

Duane A. Garrett, “Preaching from the Psalms and Proverbs,” in Preaching the Old Testament,<br />

edited by Scott M. Gibson (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2006), 102.<br />

90<br />

Ellen F. Davis noted, “The best way to prepare a psalm is to read it over and over aloud, until you<br />

can see how and why one line yields to the next, until its images are haunting your imagination, until<br />

its phraseology and its particular pattern of repetition-with-variation (for that is the basic pattern of<br />

Israelite poetry) become distinctive in your mind.” See Ellen F. Davis, Wondrous Depth: Preaching the<br />

Old Testament (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2005), 24.<br />

91<br />

Richard J. Clifford, Psalms 1–72, Abingdon Old Testament Commentaries (Nashville: Abingdon<br />

Press, 2002), 26. On the importance of identifying the distinctive features of biblical poetry (especially<br />

the psalms genre), see Thomas G. Long, “Preaching Psalms,” in The Oxford Handbook of the Psalms,<br />

edited by William P. Brown (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), 558–66.

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