Preacher Profile

Kim Dong-hyun's Preaching Style — Sequential Exposition of Matthew and Illustrations That Land in Daily Life

Pastor Kim Dong-hyun’s preaching at Daejeon Disciples Church (Korean Methodist Church) works through Matthew across many months, one passage forward each week. Everyday and historical illustrations are layered onto that structure, and at key moments the congregation is drawn into repeating a short sentence aloud together.

Matthew’s Long Road — The Rhythm of Sequential Exposition

Tracking sermon transcripts from April through June 2026 reveals a sustained sequential exposition of Matthew: chapters fifteen through seventeen, passage by passage, over multiple months. The sequence runs from the dispute over handwashing with the Pharisees (chapter 15) through the Canaanite woman’s faith (15), the sign of Jonah and the leaven of the Pharisees (16), Peter’s confession at Caesarea Philippi (16), the prediction of the passion (16), the Transfiguration (17), and the healing of the demon-possessed boy (17). Each Sunday moves one unit forward.

Special Sundays interrupt the sequence without breaking it. Children’s Sunday in May drew a sermon on Deuteronomy 6 and the Shema; Parents’ Day brought Proverbs 23; a Sunday dedicated to family drew from 1 Corinthians 13. In each case, the Matthew series resumed the following week. The effect is a calendar that holds together: the church year provides seasonal punctuation, and the sequential series provides the ongoing sustained arc.

The Craft of Illustration — From the Ordinary to the Text

Kim Dong-hyun’s illustrations travel short distances. Children coming home for a visit and getting spending money from their parents; a sabbatical year spent at YWAM’s campus in Jeju, looking back at his ministry and realizing “God has been patient with me for a very long time”; the anxiety of waiting for grandchildren who haven’t arrived yet — these domestic particulars anchor the sermon in recognizable life before the biblical interpretation begins.

Historical illustrations work the same way. Abraham Lincoln’s response at his first joint address to Congress — calmly identifying his shoemaker father before adding, “if your shoes need mending, bring them to me” — becomes the emotional spine of a Parents’ Day sermon on honoring one’s father and mother. Viktor Frankl discovering a handwritten Shema inside the collar of a prison uniform in Auschwitz, under moonlight, after a day of forced labor — that detail gives Deuteronomy 6 the weight of a promise that has survived the worst the twentieth century could deliver.

In each case, the illustration does not merely decorate a point already made. It carries the argument. The story arrives first; the doctrinal or ethical claim lands afterward, grounded in something the congregation has already felt.

Repetition That Fixes a Sentence in Memory

At several points in a sermon, Kim calls out “repeat after me” and the congregation echoes a phrase aloud together: “Become a rock, become a pillar,” “Endure even this,” “Let’s become more like Jesus.” He compresses the sermon’s central claim into one or two short sentences, then has the congregation speak them rather than simply hear them — a delivery technique aimed at closing the gap between knowing a message in the mind and confessing it with the mouth.

Original Language and Historical Background

The original languages appear briefly, precisely, and without academic scaffolding. When Kim reaches Matthew 16:23 — Jesus telling Peter, “Get behind me, Satan” — he pauses to note the Greek: hupiso mou (ὀπίσω μου). That same phrase, he points out, is the word Jesus used when he first called the disciples: “Come, follow me.” What sounds like a dismissal — “get behind me” — turns out to be the very verb of following. Peter is not being cast out; he is being called back into line behind Jesus, where disciples belong. The whole interpretation pivots on one word.

The Hebrew word shema (שְׁמַע, “hear, listen”) carries a similar weight in the Deuteronomy 6 sermon. Kim explains it as Israel’s national charter — the equivalent, he suggests, of the national pledge Korean schoolchildren once memorized under the Park Chung-hee government — and then the Frankl illustration arrives to show what that charter meant to a Jewish man in a Nazi concentration camp. By the time the exegesis is done, “Shema” is not a technical term; it is a word with a history of survival attached to it.

He also notes contextual geography in a way that grounds the text physically. Caesarea Philippi, where Peter makes his confession, is identified as a city with a Roman emperor’s temple and a temple to Pan — a place where Caesar is literally called Lord. Jesus asking “Who do you say I am?” at that exact location is no accident. The answer “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” is being spoken in a city built to honor someone else’s claim to ultimate lordship.


Reference sermons

The following YouTube sermons provided the textual basis for this profile.


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