A Way with Words. Adam T. Trambley. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Adam T. Trambley
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Журналы
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781640652552
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      As we journey in the wilderness of the twenty-first century, the scriptures invite us to imagine anew the ways we are called to participate in God’s mission. When we bring those stories alive through our preaching, as Adam shows us how to do, our churches can be transformed for the sake of the gospel, and the story of God’s saving deeds in history becomes ours.

      The Rt. Rev. Sean W. Rowe

      Bishop of Northwestern Pennsylvania and Western New York

      Consecration of Samuel Seabury 2019

      IN SEMINARY, we were taught that the congregation should clearly know the main point we were trying to make. After every sermon preached in class, our professor went to the board and asked, “What did you hear?” Sometimes what the preacher thought the sermon said matched what was heard, but usually, especially at the beginning of the semester, the gap between intent and impact was pretty large.

      Exercises like this are essential in helping new preachers learn the art of getting their message across. Even the most experienced preachers can sometimes be amazed by what parishioners tell them about their sermons in the receiving line after service. We all need to be proficient in the art of sermon preparation and delivery. Faithful exegesis and competent rhetorical techniques matter greatly to preachers and their listeners.

      Unfortunately, the basic homiletical skills I encountered in seminary or read about in preaching books were not adequate to deal with the reality I faced in my parishes. Sitting in the pews were people who had been in church much of their lives and had a clear sense of what they thought their faith and their congregational life should be. Any “point” I made in a single sermon, however clearly expounded, wasn’t going to alter those expectations. The congregation might learn something new, and some of them might even embark on my important suggestion of the week, but the rubber band of their faith life snapped back quickly. Even more troubling to me, their current understanding of their faith and their congregational life was not leading to a thriving, growing church.

      In this context, preaching became vitally important. Where else could I share a message of the reign of God that might move people? Yet, the overarching goal of my preaching had to develop. Instead of choosing one main point each Sunday and working to deliver it effectively, I began to look for a way to think about my preaching that would help me accomplish the larger adaptive task before me. A breakthrough came when I began to think of myself as preaching one continuous sermon over a course of eighteen months, rather than a series of different sermons week after week.

      This book is designed to help a preacher think about preaching a sermon that lasts between one and three years. While the topics covered could be applied in almost any preaching context, some situations can most benefit from these concepts. First, I assume that you and your congregation connect frequently. You are the primary preacher and a large portion of the congregation is there more weeks than not. Second, I also assume that your connections are not just in the pulpit, but that you are the primary pastoral caregiver and the leader of the church board. Third, I assume that your congregation needs to make some significant changes to grow and thrive. These changes could be helping a sleepy congregation start evangelizing, directing the congregation to meet a new neighborhood challenge, or convincing a growing congregation to focus on developing the structures needed for the next stages of development. In the rapidly changing environment we live in, every congregation needs to make some significant changes to be who God is calling them to be in the next phase of their life.

      However you read this book, I hope that you will have a new perspective on how to approach preaching from a long-term perspective, while being challenged to preach with greater prayer, passion, personality, and physicality. God’s call to us as preachers and as leaders of congregations is too important to take one sermon at a time or to give anything less than our full selves.

       The Long-TermSermon

       Teaching a New Language

       You were taught to put away your former way of life . . .and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and toclothe yourselves with the new self, created according tothe likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.

      —Ephesians 4:22–24

      PAUL’S WORDS EXPRESS the challenge for pastors. We strive to teach God’s people to put away their former understandings and practices in favor of new life created in the righteousness and holiness of God. Then, when we look out at the congregation as we prepare to preach, we don’t see what we hoped. Most every Sunday morning we have offered the congregation what (we think) they needed to know in three rhetorically balanced and clearly expressed points. Heads nodded, notes were taken, and, perhaps, even an occasional “Amen” was muttered. Yet the evidence of our words taking root, much less bearing fruit, can be lacking in the parish’s life and ministry. Paul dealt with that situation by writing a six-chapter letter, but that approach is unlikely to be as successful in our contemporary congregational lives. We need another way to think about what we are trying to accomplish in our preaching, and how we evaluate our success.

      Our goals and evaluation are more difficult in congregations that have been around for a while. A congregation with dozens of new Christians showing up each month might look at baptisms or new members with some satisfaction. Most of us preach in a different context, however. The majority of churches, especially in the United States, are smaller and have a slower trickle of new members. While the eventual goal of preaching may be to get our wider community to come into personal relationship with Jesus Christ, our more immediate work with the people of God needs to have intermediate goals. The preaching task in these situations is to help the faithful in our community to make the needed changes in their individual and parish lives so they can live out the Great Commission and the Great Commandment.

      The world outside of the red church doors is not the same world most of our current church members were brought up in. We all know that. Changes in travel and communication, changes in extended family relationships and commitments, and changes in work and school activity schedules have all turned the traditional role of the local church upside down. Add to these practical changes the spiritual challenges of generations who are unfamiliar with the basic Christian narrative and an increase in a variety of non-Christian spiritualities, and the preacher has an enormous task to help even the most dedicated congregation respond effectively to the world around them.

      Regardless of the big societal changes around us, we know that important, smaller-scale changes also need to happen regularly in a congregation’s life. After years of focusing on an outreach program, we may need to do more evangelism. When the largest Sunday school class in recent years graduates, the teachers may need a break to go to a Bible study class themselves. We may need, for painfully obvious reasons, to drop everything and work on conflict resolution and rebuilding loving relationships. The changes and transitions that seem most straightforward to us still require time and patience to lead a congregation through them.

      I remember getting frustrated by what seemed to me to be the glacially slow pace of the congregation coming to understand the need for an obvious change. Then I realized my time and the congregation’s time did not progress at the same pace. I was focusing on the parish’s life, conservatively, forty to fifty hours each week. For a particularly important issue like the one I was dealing with, some part of my brain was probably concerned about it almost every waking moment. (I know that isn’t healthy, but most of us have been there about some issue or another.) Unfortunately, from my perspective, no one else in the parish was quite that consumed. My core leaders spent maybe five to ten hours a week focusing