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‘Hey, preachers — work on shortening your sermons. I’ve learned that if you can’t say it in an hour-and-a-half, you can’t say it at all.”

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 10/09/2016 (3366 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

‘Hey, preachers — work on shortening your sermons. I’ve learned that if you can’t say it in an hour-and-a-half, you can’t say it at all.”

That satirical comment, posted on Facebook recently by a preacher friend, started an interesting discussion between preachers and congregants about the ideal length of a sermon.

As it turned out, congregants and preachers who posted replies differed on the optimum length for a sermon. People in the pew thought they should be shorter, no more than 10 to 15 minutes, while preachers argued for 25 minutes or more.

Said one pew-sitter: “I always agreed with the sentiment that the mind cannot understand what the backside cannot withstand.”

“About 15 minutes, after that most preachers are just listening to their own voices,” said another.

“Thirty minutes and the mind wanders,” added a third.

Preachers had a different take. One noted that preaching 20 to 25 minutes is normal for him, but there are weeks when he goes 30. Another said he regularly preaches for 25. Praise was given to a third preacher who can go for 55 minutes.

The exchange reminded me of a statement issued by the Vatican in 2010 encouraging Roman Catholic priests to keep their homilies to eight minutes.

Why only that long? Nikola Eterovic, the secretary general of the Synod of Bishops, said that’s as long as people can pay attention these days.

His advice was welcomed by Father Andrew Headon, vice-rector of the Venerable English College in Rome, which trains men for the priesthood.

“There is a saying among clergy,” he said in an article in the Guardian. “If you haven’t struck oil in seven minutes, stop boring.”

All of this made me wonder what some of my preacher friends feel about sermon length.

“Every congregation is a micro-culture,” says Michael Wilson of Charleswood United Church, suggesting it is difficult to come up with an ideal sermon length for every church.

Most preachers, he said, have an hour of total service time. “If there are a variety of other things in the service that day, then the sermon ought to be shorter in order to stay within the congregation’s expectation of length of service.”

Wilson, whose sermons run from 12 to 20 minutes, adds that preachers “need to be self-aware concerning their capacity to retain attention while carrying out their responsibility to teach, move and delight.”

Rather than impose a time limit, he says, “it would be best for preachers to hear what their congregations want from them.”

For Jamie Howison of St. Benedict’s Table in Winnipeg, in the Anglican tradition “the sermon is part of the proclamation of the word,” which includes the reading of scripture, the recitation of the creed, prayers of the people, confession and absolution, and the sharing of the peace.

An overly long sermon, he says “detracts from the flow of the movement toward the sharing of communion, so my sermons are generally in the 12- to 15-minute range.”

As for the suggestion sermons be no longer than eight minutes, Howison fears “risks erring in the other direction, namely to devalue the place of the sermon and to underestimate the congregation’s ability to hear and absorb sermons of substance.”

Jeff Loach, pastor of St. Paul’s Presbyterian Church in Nobleton, Ont., also feels eight minutes is too short.

“My preaching goes as long as it needs to, which varies from 15 to 35 minutes,” he says. “The length of the message needs to reflect what the Holy Spirit wants to say through the preacher about the text at hand.”

Marvin Dyck is pastor of Winnipeg’s Crossroads Community Church. He notes some of the largest and fastest-growing churches in the city feature sermons that run from 30 to 50 minutes. He doesn’t go that long — 30 minutes is his maximum — but he agrees that preachers today have to “plan for short attention spans.”

So what’s the ideal length for a sermon? I don’t have an answer, although I lean towards shorter being better. All I know is that whatever the length, preaching isn’t an easy task in these days of shorter attention spans. I’m glad I don’t have to do it.

jdl562000@yahoo.com

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John Longhurst

John Longhurst
Faith reporter

John Longhurst has been writing for Winnipeg's faith pages since 2003. He also writes for Religion News Service in the U.S., and blogs about the media, marketing and communications at Making the News.

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