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Your purpose in this speech will be, therefore, to be absolutely factual, to know whereof you speak. "They say" is probably the most common authority quoted. In this speech you must gather source material and summarize to find the crux of the question at hand, to learn to quote substantial authority to back up the statements you make. Make the facts live. Dont just give a dry, statistic-filled speech showing off your knowledge to the third figure after the decimal. The truth can be not only plain but vital and living. First, be sure you find the truth. Second, arrange the facts so they have real meaning. Third, give the facts character and make them interesting. Dont guess, wonder or think or suggest, dream or ponder but know. Be positive.
This is your opportunity to research a subject you would like to know more about and add to your store of knowledge as well as edify your fellow club members. If you use statistics, beware of using too many, making your subject cold and your audience colder. Research and digest a great number of facts, but when you give them to your audience, be sure that they are few and telling. Dig up some little-known facts from a genuine authority on some common subject of interest. Or put well-known facts together in a unique way and support your point with a quote from a well-known authority. God has given us the spirit of a sound mind. Use this sound mind in gathering your material, and appeal to the sound mind and reasoning of your audience. Make this the most logical speech you have ever given and fill it with proof, proof, proof. Back your audience into a corner and by your well-organized body of evidence show plainly and factually that there is but one conclusion to draw. "Of making many books there is no end, and much study is wearisome to the flesh," Solomon observes in Ecclesiastes 12:12. But books do hold an inexhaustible supply of information, and what you are to learn from this speech is how to extract accurate information from them. Dig out the facts about your subject and present them with startling clarity and logic to your listeners. Libraries are warehouses full of facts. Daily newspapers and magazine articles flood you with facts. But use quality authoritative sources. Remember, everything that is in print is not necessarily accurate.
Once you have made these facts so much a part of you that you dont hesitate in your delivery, you are ready to begin. Stand and speak boldly to your audience, realizing you have vital information that is going to help them. Dont apologize for your subject or your source of information. Just be sincere, straightforward and factual. Show beyond a shadow of a doubt why your main point is a point of truth. Even though you may need more notes with this type of speech, remember to keep them at a minimum so that you will always have audience contact for if you gain all the facts but lose your audience, where will your speech be? Remember humility.
Be sure your evaluation is based on the facts and principles of basic speech. Look for an organized, thoughtful presentation of the truth.
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| Purpose |
In this speech you are to present your facts in such a way that by the conclusion of the speech your audience is ready to do what you suggest. Appeal to them and show that just listening is not enough. Drive them to the effort of accomplishment.
Have in mind the response you want from your audience and lead them to it with increased fervor, so that when you reach your climax they will want with all their heart to do what you request.
The purposes of your past speeches will serve you well in this speech. The purpose, clarity and color with which you put the facts together will determine the action you will incite.
If necessary to gain your purpose, plead in earnestness with your audience. Use true sentiment and real pathos. Dont fear proper emotion. If tears come to your eyes and youre not just putting on a show, let those tears flow.
| Preparation |
An exhortative appeal would perhaps be the best subject to choose for this speech. Show that something is not right, show why it is not right and solicit your audiences effort to correct the situation in an earnest appeal. Give your audience something positive and concrete and simple to perform. Show them in one, two, three manner what is required of them.
Be sure to make this a positive request. Stress the fact throughout your talk that what you are asking of them can be accomplished. Show the reward that will come from their taking action as you request. As a basic principle, however, it is unwise to request your audience to perform something you are not already performing yourself, lest they reply, "Practice what you preach."
Do not appeal to the vanity of your audience by showing them that what you desire is popular, but rather appeal to their desire to develop Christian character by doing what is right, good and upbuilding. And show them how doing what is right will produce its pleasant fruit in the long run.
Spend a good deal of your time for the preparation of this speech on your knees, in prayer. Remember that there is a responsibility that rests on your shoulders every time you ask someone else to do something. Ask God to guide and direct and help you to edify and help your fellow members in the true Christian spirit of love. It would be good to go over your speech on your knees even after you have the notes written down. Stir your audience to positive personal growth.
| Delivery |
The fewer notes you use in this speech, the better, because your audience must be convinced that you are convinced. Let this speech flow out of your innermost being as a river of living water. Be sure that the great part of this speech is in your heart and the notes that you have are only to prompt the words from your heart.
Dont give your audience a "chewing out." Dont be angry at them. Dont accuse, impugn or slander. Just plead with them earnestly to accomplish an action that would benefit them. Stress the positive. Dont be fearful, but be keyed up, straining at the bit to reach the audience with your dynamic message. Try more than ever for mind-to-mind, heart-to-heart audience contact.
| To the Evaluator |
Explain your reaction to the speech as colorfully and as clearly as you can, and with all brotherly love. Stir this man to action to correct his main weaknesses.
A Complete Speech| Purpose |
The aim is to have all of the purpose, clarity, color and facts that were points and particular aims of the previous speeches. This "complete speech" will stir to action and give you and those who hear you a sense of accomplishment at its conclusion. This will be a sort of graduation speech, a commencement, because from here on out you will be giving complete speeches.
| Preparation |
Spend real effort on this speech. Review all the evaluations you have received the strong and the weak points. Determine to round off those rough edges: nervous gestures that may by now have become habits of speech, embarrassing hesitations where you lose your train of thought and the "and-uhs" that crop up as fillers.
Watch for details. Dont let little grammatical errors mar an otherwise effective delivery. Look carefully at your clothing: See that everything is straight, in place and properly buttoned before you get up to speak. Be meticulous.
See to it that your notes are inconspicuous but complete. Watch organization carefully. Have each point neatly fitted to the next and securely joined to the whole. Dont let your punch line come too soon or too late.
Choose a title carefully. Be sure it expresses the feeling and meaning of what you intend. A thoughtfully selected title can be the capstone of success. The more succinct the title, the better. This conditions the mind of your audience to your subject.
Select your best type of speaking style. Put your best foot forward. Humor may be your best tool. Or maybe the use of an analogy to make your point. Just friendly conversation, expanded, may be your style. Perhaps a "How-to" speech is your forte. Use your best to do your best. Capitalize on your good points.
Ask your toastmaster for additional time, perhaps eight or 10 minutes, if you feel you need it for this speech. Knowing you have a little longer to bring out your topic may loosen you up a little and take away some of the tension brought on by a shorter time.
In giving this polished, smooth, well-rounded speech, beware that you do not become so sophisticated and suave in your delivery that you give the air of a well-greased con man. Avoid being so letter-perfect that you lack sincerity.
Spend time in prayer, asking Gods guidance and help in this speech. No one is as complete and thorough as your Creator, and He can help you develop this same attribute in your character.
When you believe you are ready to deliver your speech, read over this lesson again. Double-check, review and be circumspect in every point.
| Delivery |
During the intermission make a last-minute check of your notes and clothing, choose a seat convenient to the speakers stand, relax and forget about the whole thing until you are introduced. Then draw on all you have learned so far in club to give it all you have to give!
| To the Evaluator |
Be thorough and complete, but dont just pick on the speaker so you will sound like you are an astute evaluator. Remember that each point you bring out must edify and build be helpful and profitable to the speaker and to the audience. If the speaker has not mastered certain main points, suggest that the appropriate speech lesson be reviewed, and the "complete speech" given again until those points are mastered.
Intensity
| Purpose |
This society conditions us to suppress inner feelings and convictions. If you are the kind of person who tends to hide your emotions, then this is the lesson where you can learn how to express those feelings in balance and effective focus. You will present a subject about which you have powerful, sincere, persuasive ideas. You will explode with irrepressible power and energy, using solid reasoning and proof to make your point.
But remember that this speech is not just a show or an act on your part. You cant "work up" anger or sorrow or shock or hatred about a subject. You must really feel it, or your insincerity will show and your credibility will be destroyed.
So you must choose a subject that, against your every attempt to forget it or ignore it, constantly weighs on your mind and in this world you ought to see plenty of such subjects from which to choose.
| Preparation |
The subject you choose will be of primary importance. Your ideas must be clear and tightly focused, and you must feel so strongly about the subject that you cannot help but do what Isaiah 58:1 says: "Cry aloud, spare not; lift up your voice like a trumpet."
For example, you may decide to speak on the evil of drug abuse. But dont just speak against drugs in general. Choose one facet of drug abuse that especially stirs your feelings maybe "Drug Pushers in Schools." Be specific and basic. Get hold of the real issue and dont let go of it. Bare it to the audience and make them see how corrupt and evil it is with all the feeling in your innermost being. Remember, of course, to deal with actions and circumstances, not people and personalities.
Or you may decide to let your feelings show about some subject that overwhelms you with sorrow the plight of children in underdeveloped countries would be an example. Ezekiel 9:4 tells us that God places a special mark on those who "sigh and cry over all the abominations that are done" in this world. Start out strongly and build to a crescendo about why the situation is contrary to Gods instructions, why the situation must be changed. Dont be afraid to let go but be sure at all times that you are using controlled power.
Perhaps you feel strongly about some positive action that must be taken for instance, "We Must Protect Our Natural Resources." Come to close quarters with your subject and convince the audience that there is no other logical way to think about your subject than the course of action you are presenting. Use forceful language and a serious tone of voice, along with positive proof.
| Delivery |
Forget about yourself when you get up to speak. Hone in on your subject and transfer to your audience the intense feelings inside you.
Use colorful, real-life illustrations as examples. One carefully chosen instance from a persons life can be more effective than a whole list of cold statistics. Make sure you present the absolute truth dont just make up an example or take one out of context to make your point. Then nail the subject down with as many facts and statistics as you need to show the nature of the issue or problem.
If you read something during your speech and a clipping from a newspaper or magazine can be effective make the selection short and powerful. Beware of relying too much on written material. You must get your point across, most of all, by your energetic, well-prepared presentation, based on the inner feelings of your heart and mind. And you will want to make the most of eye contact you cant do that if you read too much.
Voice control will be important, too. Speak firmly and, if necessary, loudly. Dont be sarcastic. Dont plead. Dont whine. Dont poke fun at tragic situations. Instead, speak with determination, control and obvious compassion and concern. Use your voice as a persuasive tool just as much as you use research material, speech organization and logical analysis.
| To the Evaluator |
Stress the positive ways in which this speaker used power. Analyze the effect of the speech on the audience. Look for proof and controlled power, sincerity and deep, personal feelings. Concentrate intensely and show the speaker how to improve.
Copyright 1989 Worldwide Church of God

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