The Dragon Who Ate Himself To Death
Preaching
Shaking Wolves Out Of Cherry Trees
And 149 Other Sermon Ideas
Purpose Statement: A sermon recommending fasting.
Jesus said, "When you fast ..." implying apparently that we should. Because our health is an important concern and because many of us are overeating, occasional sermons on proper diets and exercise seem necessary. If you couple this concern with the story from Bel and the Dragon, it becomes an opportunity also to educate our church members about the Apocrypha (the fifteen extra biblical books used by the Catholics and increasingly by Protestants also). Since Jesus healed we can assume that Christians should be concerned with health. Nutrition and appropriate eating habits seem natural for the Christian regime. One must not pass up the opportunity to warn of the consequences from the other extreme: anorexia and bulimia.
You have my permission to open with my favorite scripture funny line where Daniel has killed the god Bel and the dragon (Bel and the Dragon 1:23-28). The people are incensed and complain to the king that Daniel has slaughtered their priests and killed their god, Bel, and on top of that, "Now he has killed our dragon!" (It is important to use the Good News Bible, Today's English Version.) This replaces my former favorite humorous line from scripture, also from Daniel (5:6), where King Belshazzar is so frightened that, I believe the King James Version says, "his knees smote one against the other."
In dealing with the importance of healthy repasts one could simply use the three suggestions:
a. The dragon ate hair and tar: some foods are very bad for us.
b. Daniel enticed the dragon to eat: we are surrounded by great culinary temptations.
c. It remained the dragon's choice: it is up to us.
Jesus said, "When you fast ..." implying apparently that we should. Because our health is an important concern and because many of us are overeating, occasional sermons on proper diets and exercise seem necessary. If you couple this concern with the story from Bel and the Dragon, it becomes an opportunity also to educate our church members about the Apocrypha (the fifteen extra biblical books used by the Catholics and increasingly by Protestants also). Since Jesus healed we can assume that Christians should be concerned with health. Nutrition and appropriate eating habits seem natural for the Christian regime. One must not pass up the opportunity to warn of the consequences from the other extreme: anorexia and bulimia.
You have my permission to open with my favorite scripture funny line where Daniel has killed the god Bel and the dragon (Bel and the Dragon 1:23-28). The people are incensed and complain to the king that Daniel has slaughtered their priests and killed their god, Bel, and on top of that, "Now he has killed our dragon!" (It is important to use the Good News Bible, Today's English Version.) This replaces my former favorite humorous line from scripture, also from Daniel (5:6), where King Belshazzar is so frightened that, I believe the King James Version says, "his knees smote one against the other."
In dealing with the importance of healthy repasts one could simply use the three suggestions:
a. The dragon ate hair and tar: some foods are very bad for us.
b. Daniel enticed the dragon to eat: we are surrounded by great culinary temptations.
c. It remained the dragon's choice: it is up to us.

