Clear Preaching cover art

Clear Preaching

Clear Preaching

By: Dr Jonathan McClintock
Listen for free

You worked hard on that sermon. Did they actually hear it?


Clear Preaching is the podcast for preachers who are serious about closing the gap between what they meant to say and what their congregation actually heard. Hosted by Dr. Jonathan McClintock — preacher, pastor, sixteen-year homiletics instructor, and developer of the four-domain Clear Preaching Framework — each episode delivers practical, framework-driven teaching on the discipline of preaching with clarity.


Through solo teaching episodes, conversations with preachers and scholars, and real sermon analysis, Clear Preaching helps you develop clarity at every stage of the preaching process — from the moment you open the text in your study to the moment you close your Bible in the pulpit.


Whether you are stepping into the pulpit for the first time or have been preaching for decades — if you believe the message you carry is worth delivering as clearly as possible, this podcast is for you.

© 2026 Clear Preaching
Christianity Spirituality
Episodes
  • Ep 17: The Preacher and the Church
    Jul 8 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    We've spent a lot of time on this podcast talking about the preacher and the text, and the preacher and the Spirit. This episode is about the preacher and the people — because preaching was never meant to happen in isolation.

    Here's the truth that anchors everything: the preacher is not a solo practitioner. He or she is a member of the body — placed within it, accountable to it, and called to serve it.

    That might sound obvious. But it changes how you think about clarity. Because if preaching is something you do for a body you belong to, then clarity stops being a communication technique and becomes something else entirely. It becomes a form of love for the people you've been entrusted to serve.

    What this episode covers:

    The preacher as shepherd — The Hebrew word for shepherd in Jeremiah 3:15 — ra'ah — means to tend, to pasture, to feed. The role isn't primarily administrative. It's nutritive. And you feed your people well when the Word is proclaimed clearly. An unclear sermon is a meal your congregation can't actually eat. The food might be nutritious — but if it never makes it off the plate and into them, they leave the table hungry.

    The stakes of that are set in Acts 20:28: the flock you feed was purchased with the blood of Christ. There is no more sobering ground a preacher can stand on.

    The preacher as mentor — Feeding the flock isn't the only responsibility. The pastor is also called to raise up the preachers coming behind. Paul gave it to Timothy in four generations of a single sentence: What you have heard from me... entrust to faithful men, who will be able to teach others also (2 Timothy 2:2). It doesn't stop with you.

    And Jesus gave us the pattern: instruct, observe, go and do, further instruction. Somewhere near you, there's a developing preacher who needs someone to learn from, someone to watch, a chance to practice, and someone to help process it afterward. That someone is you.

    The full picture — This episode closes a three-part arc on the theology of preaching. Three foundations, one conclusion: clarity in preaching is not a preference, and it's not just a technique. It is a necessity — demanded by the nature of what's being proclaimed, required by the scope of who's being reached, and owed to the people you've been called to serve.

    That last word is the one to land on. Owed. Clarity is something you owe your people. Not because you're a performer who needs to impress them — but because you're a shepherd who's called to feed them.

    You belong to your people. Your clarity is how you feed them. Your faithfulness is how you love them. And the preachers you train are how you serve a church that will outlast your own ministry. None of it was ever meant to be carried alone.

    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • Ep 16: What Gives Preaching Its Authority?
    Jun 30 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    📋 Take the free Clear Preaching Self-Assessment — 24 questions, 5 minutes. Find out which area of clarity (Thought, Structure, Language, or Delivery) is costing you the most: https://clearpreaching.com/assessment


    🎓 Join the Clear Preaching Academy: https://clearpreaching.com/join-the-academy

    Before we ask how to preach, or even why we preach, there's a prior question most preachers never stop to answer: what gives preaching its weight in the first place?

    It's not the preacher's gifting. Not his training. Not his platform. The power of preaching to convict, convert, comfort, and call a person to repentance comes from one place — the authority of the Word being preached. And that leads to the thesis of this episode: a message of supreme authority demands supreme clarity. The preacher who muddles the Word hasn't just failed at communication. He's failed at stewardship.

    In this episode, Jonathan McClintock builds the case from Scripture itself — the God-breathed Word of 2 Timothy 3, the Spirit-carried prophets of 2 Peter 1, and the most vivid picture of authority in all of Scripture: Jesus in the wilderness, answering every temptation with "it is written."

    You'll work through:

    • Why "God-breathed" (theopneustos) changes everything about how you handle the text
    • What it means that the Living Word relied on the written Word to defeat the enemy
    • How the authority of Scripture is actively at work through the Spirit every time it's preached
    • The freeing truth that you don't have to manufacture conviction — and the sobering truth that obscurity puts obstacles in front of the Spirit's work
    • One question to ask of your main idea before this Sunday

    This is part of a series drawn from Course 3 of the Clear Preaching Academy — a full theology of preaching.

    The authority was never yours to generate. Your job is to get out of its way — and preach it clearly enough that nothing obscures the breath of God.

    Show More Show Less
    17 mins
  • Ep 15: The Spirit and the Preacher
    Jun 23 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    📋 Take the free Clear Preaching Self-Assessment:

    https://clearpreaching.com/assessment


    🎓 Join the Clear Preaching Academy:

    https://clearpreaching.com/join-the-academy


    There are two truths about preaching that sound like they're in tension — and learning to hold both is one of the most freeing things that can happen to a preacher.

    The first: you bring yourself fully to the pulpit. Your personality, your story, your voice — God wants all of it. The second: you depend on God entirely. Your gifting, on its own, can't do what a sermon is supposed to do.

    In this episode, Jonathan McClintock walks through what the preacher brings to the task and what he can never accomplish without the Spirit. Drawing on Phillips Brooks, Paul's confession of weakness in 1 Corinthians 2, and the vision of maturity in Ephesians 4, this is a conversation about the internal life of the preacher — the part of preaching that no framework or technique can touch.

    You'll work through:

    • Why your personality is a gift to steward, not a problem to manage
    • What it means to prepare like it depends on you and preach like it depends on God
    • The two aims every sermon is reaching for: persuasion and maturity
    • Why clarity is directly tied to persuasion — and why an unclear sermon adds an obstacle of your own making
    • One honest question to ask about this Sunday's sermon

    This is the first in a three-part series drawn from Course 3 of the Clear Preaching Academy — a full theology of preaching.

    Whether you've been preaching for two years or twenty, this episode will free you to bring your whole self to the pulpit — and re-anchor you in the One who makes preaching more than speech.

    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet