Apologetics Index: Information about cults, sects, movements, doctrines, apologetics and counter-cult ministry.  Also: daily religion news, articles on Christian life and ministry, editorials, daily cartoon.
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Daily Cartoon: Church of The Covered Dish

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Do You Know...?

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Inspiration

Six Principles of Effective Communication

Accomplishing any task with excellence is always a function of mastering the basics. Many preachers, however, never master six fundamental principles of good communication:

Establish a warm atmosphere. The atmosphere you create with your words and gestures determines the effectiveness of your sermon. Avoid beginning with a negative tone, self-centered anecdotes, or anything which betrays insecurity on your part. These focus the audience's attention on your needs, not theirs. Your nonverbal signals are also important because they communicate your general demeanor. Smiling at people demonstrates openness and invites them to listen.

Actively engage people's interest. Many pastors use techniques to engage congregations that they believe are effective, but actually disconnect them from listeners. Over-dramatization, excessive emotion, and yelling focus listeners upon your performance instead of content. A conversational approach works better.

Be believable. Evaluate everything you say from the pulpit with this question: Is it believable? If you can't believe yourself when you say something, your audience won't believe it either. When your audience doesn't believe you, your credibility--and their motivation to keep listening -- evaporates. Speaking with authority is dependent upon speaking truth. Often, speakers get into trouble when they extrapolate a principle into a situation they don't understand. If you're speaking about how a certain principle would work in a business setting, but know nothing about business, it will show.

Speak with your own voice. Listeners will disengage from a speaker who uses big words to impress his audience or who appears to choose words for the sake of sounding good. If your listener is conscious of your voice, it is a distraction. Choose your words the same way you choose your clothes; appropriate for the context, but not distracting. Your voice should contain fire, conviction, and accurately reflect what's happening in your mind.
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The early Church was not an organization merely, not a movement, but a walking incarnation of spiritual energy. The Church began in power, moved in power and moved just as long as she had power. When she no longer had power she dug in for safety and sought to conserve her gains. But her blessing were like the manna: when they tried to keep it overnight it bred worms and stank. So we have had monasticism, scholasticism, institutionalism; and they have all been indicative of one thing: the absence of spiritual power. In Church history every return to New Testament power has marked a new advance somewhere, and every dimunition of power has seen the rise of some new mechanism for conservation and defense. If this analysis is correct, then we are today in a state of very low spiritual energy.
A.W. Tozer, "Paths to Power"
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Copyright Thom Tapp

Use gestures well. The effective use of gestures reinforces what a pastor says. As with the voice, gestures should represent what is happening in the mind. Gesturing also includes looking at people as you talk. Your eyes are almost as important as your voice. Make sure your eyes sweep across and make contact with people in every part of the audience, not just those in front of you.

Remember that your knowledge is limited. You may be tempted to appear to know more than you do. Always keep in mind that someone in your audience may know more than you do about your topic. Honestly communicate what you know.
Current Thoughts and Trends, November 97
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The Believers Around The Corner    Offbeat News

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Apologetics Index (apologeticsindex.org, countercult.com, cultfaq.org) provides 25,000+ pages of research resources on religious cults, sects, new religious movements, alternative religions, apologetics-, anticult-, and countercult organizations, doctrines, religious practices and world views. These resources reflect a variety of theological and/or sociological perspectives.

The site provides information that helps equip Christians to logically present and defend the Christian faith, and that aids non-Christians in their comparison of various religious claims. Issues addressed range from spiritual and cultic abuse to contemporary theological and/or sociological concerns.

Apologetics Index also includes ex-cult support resources - including a directory of cult experts (CultExperts.org), up-to-date religion and cult news (Religon News Blog: ReligionNewsBlog.com), articles on Christian life and ministry, and a variety of other features.
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