- Home
- Speakers
- Dick Brogden
- Inadequate Consensus
Dick Brogden

Dick Brogden (birth year unknown–present). Born and raised in Kenya to Assemblies of God missionary parents, Dick Brogden is a missionary, preacher, and author dedicated to church planting among Muslims. After attending boarding school in Kenya, he pursued theological studies, earning a Ph.D. from the Assemblies of God Theological Seminary. Since 1992, he and his wife, Jennifer, have ministered in Mauritania, Kenya, Sudan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia (since 2019), focusing on unreached Arab-Muslim communities. They co-founded the Live Dead movement, emphasizing sacrificial mission work to establish churches, and Brogden has led initiatives like Aslan Associates in Sudan and iLearn in Egypt for business development training. A global speaker, he preaches on discipleship, spiritual warfare, and the Gospel’s call, influencing missionaries through conferences and podcasts like VOM Radio. His books, including Live Dead Joy (2016), This Gospel (2012), Missionary God, Missionary Bible (2020), and The Live Dead Journal (2016), blend devotional insights with mission strategies. Based in Saudi Arabia with Jennifer and their two sons, Luke and Zack, he continues to equip church planters. Brogden said, “Small repeated steps of obedience produce immunity to large steps of temptation.”
Download
Topic
Sermon Summary
Dick Brogden emphasizes the crucial importance of consulting the Lord in all decisions, regardless of human effort, involvement, advice, or consensus. Using the example of David's failure to consult God before bringing the ark home, resulting in tragedy, he highlights the necessity of seeking God's guidance in every aspect of life. David's quick learning from his mistakes, seeking God's counsel in times of victory and crisis, and understanding the limitations of human reasoning compared to God's wisdom are key points in the sermon. The message underscores the significance of continuous prayer and seeking God's will repeatedly to avoid deadly mistakes and ensure alignment with God's ways.
Inadequate Consensus
It does not matter how much effort you put into good things. It does not matter how many people are involved. It does not matter how much professional advice you solicit. It does not matter how much consensus you build. If you do not repeatedly consult the Lord about the proper order, He will break out against you (1 Chron. 15:13). David consulted his junior and senior leaders, he consulted the priests and Levites, and he takes a plebiscite and is assured of the popular support of the people–but David did not consult the Lord. As a result Uzzah dies and incredible national mobilization, planning, celebration, and extravagance comes to nothing–in fact, it abruptly ends. God does not give a flip about disappointing the celebrations of man–even when it is a party man throws for God. God’s parties must be celebrated in God’s ways–otherwise He doesn’t come. Sandwiched between the two attempts to bring the ark home (the one ending in failure and the one ending in joy) is a breakthrough victory over the Philistines. The remarkable thing about David is his alacrity in learning. Immediately after not consulting the Lord on a domestic decision he is faced with a national emergency. He consults the Lord on what to do and a great victory is won (1 Chron. 14:11). More remarkable yet is David’s insistence to consult the Lord again and not to assume that God’s methods are formulaic and can be prayerlessly repeated. God councils an indirect attack connected to the sound of marching in mulberry trees. Man is incapable of thinking like God. Our natural reasoning minds are so limited when contrasted to God’s wisdom. Prayer (the constant consulting of God) is the only means to protect us from our own faulty assumptions. Turning to God for counsel (His orders, His way) is just as important on the heels of victory as it is in times of duress. Phillip Henry (father of renowned Bible commentary author Matthew Henry) states it well. Two of his children were deathly sick and he was wrestling in prayer for their healing. He wrote: If the Lord will be pleased to grant me my request this time concerning my children I will not say as the beggars at our door used to do, “I’ll never ask anything of him again.” But on the contrary, He shall hear oftener from me than ever; and I will love God the better, and love prayer the better, as long as I live. God loves to be consulted (prayed to) over and over again. As soon as we stop consulting God, we start making deadly mistakes. God’s insistence on prayer is for our own good. He knows the harm we inflict on ourselves when we stop consulting Him. To gather all the wisdom of godly friends and neglect the opinion of God is a catastrophic consensus of doom. Only one opinion really matters and we must solicit the divine will over and over again–lest we die.
- Bio
- Summary
- Transcript
- Download

Dick Brogden (birth year unknown–present). Born and raised in Kenya to Assemblies of God missionary parents, Dick Brogden is a missionary, preacher, and author dedicated to church planting among Muslims. After attending boarding school in Kenya, he pursued theological studies, earning a Ph.D. from the Assemblies of God Theological Seminary. Since 1992, he and his wife, Jennifer, have ministered in Mauritania, Kenya, Sudan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia (since 2019), focusing on unreached Arab-Muslim communities. They co-founded the Live Dead movement, emphasizing sacrificial mission work to establish churches, and Brogden has led initiatives like Aslan Associates in Sudan and iLearn in Egypt for business development training. A global speaker, he preaches on discipleship, spiritual warfare, and the Gospel’s call, influencing missionaries through conferences and podcasts like VOM Radio. His books, including Live Dead Joy (2016), This Gospel (2012), Missionary God, Missionary Bible (2020), and The Live Dead Journal (2016), blend devotional insights with mission strategies. Based in Saudi Arabia with Jennifer and their two sons, Luke and Zack, he continues to equip church planters. Brogden said, “Small repeated steps of obedience produce immunity to large steps of temptation.”