About This Book
A series of five lectures provides practical guidance for preachers on selecting and shaping illustrations—parables, similes, anecdotes, and scientific analogies—to illuminate doctrine, sustain attention, and balance pleasure with substance. It explains why imagery clarifies abstract truth, outlines seven chief uses of anecdotes, warns against obscurity or excess, and suggests everyday and scholarly sources for apt material, including natural science and astronomy. Emphasis falls on proportion, appropriateness to the audience, and methods for finding, adapting, and integrating illustrative material into exposition without substituting ornament for solid teaching.
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