Shepherd's Guild — Methodology

The Decomposition Glossary

Every Guild Hall profile is built from the same controlled vocabulary — a precise taxonomy of rhetorical, theological, and structural features. This glossary defines every term you'll encounter in a preacher's analysis. Once you're fluent in the terms, see Exemplar-Based Coaching: The Nuts & Bolts to learn how the vocabulary drives our matching engine and growth-area generation.

Rhetorical Function

Every sermon is broken into functional units — segments defined by a shift in rhetorical purpose, not paragraph length. Each unit is classified by one of nine functions that describe what the preacher is doing at that moment.

TermDefinition
expositionDirect engagement with the biblical text. Exegetical work: explaining words, verb tenses, historical context, passage logic. The preacher is working the text itself.
theological_claimA doctrinal assertion derived from or supported by the exposition. Moves from "the text says this" to "therefore this is true about God, humanity, or the world."
illustrationA story, analogy, historical example, or hypothetical scenario that serves the argument. Its job is to make the claim vivid — not to be the claim itself.
applicationDirect address about what to do, believe, or become in response to the truth established. Imperative verbs. Second-person address. The sermon turning toward the congregation's actual lives.
introductionThe opening frame — sets up text, problem, question, or tension. Makes the congregation care about what's coming.
conclusionThe closing frame — summarizes argument, reiterates thesis, issues final charge, or lifts into worship.
transitionConnective tissue between major sections. Signals structural shifts. Often a single sentence.
pastoral_asideThe pastor steps outside the expositional flow to address his people personally. The voice shifts from teacher to shepherd.
prayerAn opening, closing, or mid-sermon prayer. Rhetorical register shifts from horizontal (pastor-to-people) to vertical (pastor-to-God).

Hermeneutical Method

The dominant interpretive lens a preacher uses to move from text to meaning. Most preachers combine methods, but each has a characteristic default — the approach they reach for first when the text opens.

TermDefinition
grammatical_historicalClose attention to original language, historical context, and authorial intent. The primary question: What did these words mean in their original setting?
redemptive_historicalReads the passage as a moment in the unfolding drama of redemption. Christotelic — every text points toward or is fulfilled in Christ.
canonicalInterprets the passage in light of the whole canon. Scripture interprets Scripture — other biblical texts brought to bear on this one to illuminate its meaning.
applicatoryPrimary emphasis on "what does this mean for us today." Moves quickly from text to life without extended exegetical scaffolding.
polemicMarshals the passage to refute an error or defend a contested doctrine. The text as weapon against a specific theological threat.

Tone

The emotional and relational register in which a unit is delivered. Tone is not about volume or passion — it's about the nature of the relationship the preacher is enacting with his audience at that moment.

TermDefinition
pastoralThe voice of the shepherd — warm, caring, personally engaged with the listener's struggles and spiritual condition.
propheticThe voice of confrontation — addressing sin, complacency, or spiritual danger with urgency and moral weight.
didacticThe voice of the teacher — information-dense, explanatory, structured for comprehension.
celebratoryThe voice of worship — joyful, exultant, marked by wonder at who God is and what he has done.
lamentThe voice of grief — honest about pain, loss, or tragedy without rushing to resolution or false comfort.
polemicThe voice of contention — arguing against a specific error, false idea, or theological drift.
evangelisticThe voice of invitation — addressing the unconverted and urging them toward Christ, often with appeals, urgency, and personal directness.

Doctrinal Loci

Every theological unit is tagged against one or more of sixteen doctrinal categories. The distribution of these tags across a preacher's corpus reveals their theological center of gravity — what they return to, what they neglect, and what they assume.

CategoryWhat It Covers
Theology ProperThe doctrine of God himself — his existence, nature, attributes, and works (creation, providence, decree).
ChristologyThe doctrine of Christ — his divine and human natures, his three offices (Prophet, Priest, King), and his saving work.
PneumatologyThe doctrine of the Holy Spirit — his person, role in salvation, gifts, indwelling, and sanctifying work.
SoteriologyThe doctrine of salvation — justification, redemption, reconciliation, adoption, election, perseverance, and the ordo salutis.
HamartiologyThe doctrine of sin — its origin, nature, extent, and consequences. Includes original sin, total depravity, and the fall.
AnthropologyThe doctrine of humanity — the image of God, the nature of the soul, human dignity, gender, embodiment, and creatureliness.
EcclesiologyThe doctrine of the church — its nature, marks, mission, ordinances, governance, membership, and discipline.
EschatologyThe doctrine of last things — death, resurrection, judgment, heaven, hell, Christ's return, and the new creation.
BibliologyThe doctrine of Scripture — inspiration, authority, inerrancy, sufficiency, clarity, and the canon.
SanctificationThe ongoing process of becoming more like Christ — growth in holiness, the means of grace, mortification, and the battle against sin.
Providence / SovereigntyGod's active governance of all things — history, nations, circumstances, suffering, and individual lives.
Covenant TheologyGod's relationship with his people through covenants — continuity and discontinuity between Old and New Testaments.
Ethics / Moral TheologyHow Christians should live — moral reasoning, natural law, ethical principles, and specific behavioral instruction.
Doxology / WorshipThe theology and practice of worship — why we worship, how we worship, and when the sermon itself becomes doxology.
Spiritual WarfareThe reality and dynamics of spiritual conflict — Satan, demonic opposition, and the believer's armor and resistance.
Pastoral TheologyThe theology of care — ministry to people in suffering, doubt, and grief. Also covers the pastoral calling, its nature, and its weight.

Biblical-Theological Moves

A biblical-theological move is the moment a preacher reaches across the canon to connect two texts, two eras, or two moments in redemptive history. These moves reveal how a preacher reads the whole Bible — and what canonical patterns they find themselves drawn to.

Move TypeDefinition
typologyAn OT person, event, or institution presented as a divinely intended prefiguration of an NT reality. The type points forward; the antitype fulfills and surpasses it.
fulfillmentA direct prophecy-to-fulfillment connection — an explicit OT promise shown where and how it landed in history.
progressive_revelationThe same doctrine shown to develop and deepen across the canon — what was dimly understood in Moses becoming clear in Paul.
narrative_arcConnecting the passage to the larger story of Scripture — creation, fall, redemption, consummation. Situating this text within the whole drama.
intertextual_echoShared language, imagery, or themes between two passages suggesting one author drew on the other — the canon whispering to itself.
contrastTwo canonical moments placed side by side to show how they differ — the contrast illuminating what makes each distinctive, often showing the superiority of the new covenant.
thematic_threadA recurring theme traced across multiple books or eras — showing the through-line that runs from Genesis to Revelation.

Three-Tier Citation Architecture

Every citation in a sermon is classified into one of three tiers depending on its source and function. The distribution across tiers reveals a preacher's relationship to Scripture, the broader canon, and human intellectual tradition.

Tier 1
Primary Text Citations
Verses from the passage being exposited — the sermon's source material, not quoted in support of an argument, but as the argument itself.
Tier 2
Cross-References
Scripture from outside the primary passage, brought in for support, contrast, illumination, or typological connection. Reveals hermeneutical instincts.
Tier 3
Human Quotations
Words from human authors only — theologians, hymn writers, secular authors, church fathers. Tracked with verbatim text, attribution, and function.
Cross-Reference FunctionDefinition
authorityBrought in as proof — another passage settling the question or lending decisive canonical weight.
contrastShows the difference between two realities — the passage juxtaposed to illuminate what makes this text distinctive.
echoA softer connection — shared imagery or vocabulary, the canon whispering to itself without an explicit link.
fulfillmentShows a promise-fulfillment relationship — OT prophecy finding its realization in an NT event or person.
parallelStructural or thematic parallel — similar situations or patterns illuminating each other without explicit fulfillment logic.
correctiveGuards against misreading the primary text — "you might think X, but this passage clarifies Y."
Quotation FunctionDefinition
authorityCited because the author carries weight — a trusted theologian, church father, or confessional document.
illustrationServes as an illustration — a vivid, memorable way of saying what the pastor is already arguing.
provocationCited to shock, challenge, or disrupt complacency — from ally or opponent.
devotionalCited for affective power — to move the heart, not just the mind. Hymns, poetry, prayers.
opponentComes from someone the pastor disagrees with — cited in order to be refuted or corrected.