Conclusion
Preaching is a demanding discipline. The preacher is called not only to wrestle with the Scriptures so as to understand them more adequately but also to wrestle with their contemporary cultural context to determine how the gospel message is to be appropriately formed and communicated. None of this is simple, straightforward or static. Culture is continually shifting and presenting new faces to us, while our own theological perceptions are shaped and reshaped by our ongoing interaction with the Scriptures and the ever-unfolding narrative of our personal experience. It is truly mediated preaching, as it is within this dynamic, three-dimensional interaction between the preacher, their culture and the Bible, that God chooses to give life to his Word.
Notes
1. Anthropologists suggest that a healthy number is around 150 in concentric circles of closeness of 5, 10, 35 and 100. See Dunbar, 2010.
2. Daily Telegraph, 22 December 2009, ‘Lily Allen describes quitting Facebook and Twitter’.
3. Steve Tuttle, 4 February 2009, ‘You Can’t Friend Me, I Quit! On Facebook’s fifth anniversary, a not-so-fond farewell’, Newsweek; Virginia Heffernan, 26 August 2009, ‘Facebook Exodus’, New York Times.
5. http://thenightingaleinstitute.com.au/wpress/?p=1367.
6. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2009/aug/10/religion-comedy.
7. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/aug/07/tv-comedy-humour-mockery.
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Preaching in the Roman Catholic Ecclesial Context
duncan macpherson
Preaching