
- EXPOUND
ɪk'spaʊnd verb. Present and explain (a theory or idea) systematically and in detail. - 2. Explain the meaning of (a literary or doctrinal work).
- [Exposition
ɛk.spə'zɪʃ.(ə)n noun, expositoryɪk'spɑ.zɪ.tɔ.ri adjective, expositorɪk'spɑ.zə.dər noun.]
I regularly run into this situation: People like to compliment their favorite preachers by calling them “great expositors.” Apparently they’ve learned exposition is the very best way to preach, so when they like certain preachers, that’s what they call ’em.
And once again, this is one of those situations where I gotta quote Inigo Montoya from
’Cause I listen to these preachers for myself, and find they’re not great expositors. Or even expositors.
Oh, they can preach. They have outstanding abilities as public speakers. They know how to keep their listeners’ attention. Some of ’em have even done their homework, and teach the scriptures admirably. But expositors? Nope.
They get called “expositors” because they’ll go verse-by-verse through a bible passage. They start with verse 1, and talk about it a bit. (Or a lot.) Then verse 2. Then verse 3. And so on. They’re a series of talks, each of ’em prefaced by a verse. Because the preacher does quote every single verse in a passage, people think this is what makes a sermon expository.
Nope. What makes it expository is they expound on the verses. They have to actually analyze and explain what every verse means. Preferably in detail. And their message has to be about explaining what it means.
Whereas most of these “expository” sermons are really just preachers quoting bible, then using the bible verses to riff about the topics they wanna talk about. Whether these topics have anything to do with the verses they just quoted. Sometimes they do. Sometimes not so much.