Sunday, October 30, 2011

20 Pentecost, Year A

Proper 26 -- Joshua 3:7-17; Psalm 107:1–7, 33-37; I Thessalonians 2:9-13; Matthew 23:1-12

A homily by Fr. Gene Tucker, given at Trinity Church, Mt. Vernon, Illinois on Sunday, October 30, 2011.

“THE BUSINESS OF PREACHING: A PERSONAL REFLECTION”
(Homily texts:  I Thessalonians 2: 9 – 13 & Matthew 23: 1 - 12)

            This past week, the thought occurred to me that it might be a good change of pace for me to reflect with you on the business of preaching.  Since I’ve been preaching for about ten years now (beginning when I was in seminary), the art and the craft of preaching has been a major concern of mine, since it has to do with the priestly ministry of teaching.

            So what will follow here arises out of my own journey as a preacher.  My prayer would be that what is shared here will give you a glimpse into the goals that seem important to me as a preacher, and into the mechanics of going about reaching those goals.

            Before launching into those aspects of the preacher’s art and craft, I might make an observation, and it is this:  Preaching remains a major concern for God’s people.  Sometimes, in the world in which we live, that amazes me, especially because people often make comments about “having to listen to a sermon.” Whenever I hear such comments, it strikes me that the speaker doesn’t intend for the comment to be taken positively.  Perhaps those comments are mostly meant to be a joke, or perhaps they arise from the experience of having had to bear with a bad preacher or with bad sermons (they are out there, to be sure!).

            So preaching is important, and it remains so.  God’s people put a lot of stock into the hearing of good, concise and helpful sermons.  As a preacher, I’m thankful for that very positive sign of health among God’s people.

            Let’s turn our attention, then, to the business of preaching.[1]

Helpful tools

            There are some practical aspects to preaching which enhance the chances of success.  Among them are these:

            Humor:  A congregation needs to know that the preacher is a real, live human being.  Humor is one of the ways in which a preacher can demonstrate such a reality.  In addition, humor can allow us to remember a divine truth (in much the same way that setting something to music will do, also).

            Length of sermon:  In seminary, we used to talk quite a bit about the length of a sermon/homily.  Concerns that peoples’ attention spans are shortening in the age in which we live as a direct consequence of the design and pacing of television and videos figured prominently in our discussions.  The truth is that people today can sit still for shorter periods of time than was common years ago, and their ability to listen, comprehend and absorb teaching/preaching is also cast in shorter allocations of time than was true in the past.  One seminarian remarked that a sermon/homily ought not to be more than seven minutes long.  I’m not sure that’s true, exactly, but the truth remains that our sermons need to be shorter today than they would have been in times gone by.  A humorous, but true, encounter I had with a parishioner will illustrate the point quite well:  Shortly after my wife and I arrived in the Diocese of Springfield, I was preaching one day at the Church of the Redeemer in Cairo (located at the very southern tip of the State of Illinois).  A wonderful parishioner named Russell Ogg greeted me after the service.  (Russell was a World War II Marine, a holder of the Purple Heart, and as a consequence of his military service and his own natural inclinations was a plain-spoken man.)  He held up his cane, pointing it directly at me, and said, “I will sit and listen to a 20 minute sermon.  I will not listen to a 21 minute sermon, I’ll get up and walk out.”  A little while later, his wife, Louise, came up to me and said, “He means it. I’ve seen him get up and walk out before.”  I was a little shaken by Russell’s comment, and said to my wife, “Dear, I think maybe it’s time that you begin timing my sermons.  If it gets to be anything longer than 15 minutes, maybe we ought to devise some signal – like having you pull on your earlobe or something – to warn me that I’m getting toward the time to end it.”  (We never did implement that system, though oftentimes I will ask my wife about the length of a sermon, its clarity, and her reaction overall…her feedback is invaluable in assisting me to be an effective preacher.  We all – as preachers – need that sort of feedback.)

            Finding one’s voice:  Every preacher needs to find the ways in which they can preach best.  At times, this will involve some of the mechanics of preaching (issues such as:  shall I read the text, shall I use an outline, shall I use just a few notes, or is it best for me to preach without notes, outline, or text?).  It will take time to get used to the ways in which a preacher’s own mind, temperament and gifts will dictate how a sermon or homily will unfold.  It is usually a trial-and-error process, one in which the congregation often acts as a guinea pig (pity the listeners who are on the receiving end of a new preacher’s sermon…what an important ministry!).

            Do your own work!:  I have known preachers who get sermons off the internet (yes, they’re out there!).  I have also known preachers who receive sermon outlines or summaries of lectionary texts.  Alas, my sense is that using such tools short-circuits the prayerful, in-depth encounter with a text that the preacher must engage in.  Of course, some prominent preachers across the Christian community have gotten in trouble for preaching sermons that were written by someone else without ascribing the sermon to its rightful author.  Failure to do the patient, searching work that is indispensible in the life of a preacher essentially cheats the congregation, for it fails to allow the congregation to enter into the text and into the preacher’s engagement of it.

Goals which are kept in mind

            No human enterprise will be successful, it seems to me, unless there is/are a goal/goals which are kept firmly in mind.  Here are my goals as I write and deliver sermons:

            Bringing God’s truth alive:  God’s truth is timeless, applicable in every age and in every circumstance.  A goal that I keep firmly in mind is that I hope to make the truth of God as we know it in Christ Jesus known in what is said.

            Enhancing biblical literacy:  We live in an age in which many people do not know much (if anything) about the Bible.  My, how things have changed in that regard during my lifetime!  Time was that most people you might meet on the street would have some basic knowledge of some of the fundamental Christian truths and events in Jesus’ earthly life.  Now, that common knowledge base is gone, entirely gone.  In its place, we have people who might confuse Easter with Ground Hog Day (to cite one example that Bishop Martins recently gave).  So one of my major goals as a preacher is to make the congregation into a group of biblical scholars.  Connected to that goal is another one:  To implant within each person’s heart a longing to know more about the Bible, and about the truths of God that its sacred pages contain.

            Offering a challenge:  One of the preacher’s tasks, it has been said, is to “afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted.”  Balancing these two can be difficult, and I will admit to you that I sometimes struggle to wonder if I offer too much of one or the other, comfort or challenge.  Of course, the Bible itself challenges us, challenges our very assumptions about ourselves and our relationships with the Lord.  But it also offers much comfort, for its pages are filled with descriptions of God’s saving power, God’s abiding presence and God’s compassion and care for us.

Approaches to crafting a sermon

            For each preacher, the approach to a sermon text or topic will vary with the particular skills and aptitudes of the preacher.  Here is the approach I generally use (which may vary with differences in the text at hand):

            Meet the text(s):  An initial reading of the text is most important.  Generally, I do that when I draft the lectionary insert for the following Sunday, early in the week.  (I often will take a full day to allow the previous Sunday’s text and sermon recede a little into the recesses of my mind, to “clear the deck” for the new text and topic.)  I read and reread the text, over and over again.

            Pray, pray, pray: Then, the text and my meeting of it are bathed in prayer.  Oftentimes, the prayer is quite short and to-the-point:  “Lord, what do you want me to say about this text?”

            Approaches to the text begin to take shape:  One or more ideas which will introduce the text come to mind.  (The images and ideas which arose in connection with our gospel text for today from Matthew were so numerous that I had to simply pick one…see the section entitled “Forms”, below.)

            Taking the listener into account:   No sermon or homily exists in a vacuum.  Our Lord’s preaching and teaching was often quite practical, and was tailored to specific problems or needs of His listeners.  Likewise, a sermon needs to keep the intended listeners in mind.  Questions which arise in connection with this concern include:  1.  What’s going on with the congregation presently?  Is there a particular challenge or problem present?  2.  What is the particular makeup of the congregation in terms of its age, spiritual wisdom and maturity, and biblical knowledge?  (I will admit that this area of preaching continues to gain in importance for me personally as I mature as a preacher.)

            Consider the context of the passage:  An important question to answer is this one:  What is the overall context or setting of the text as we have it today?  Oftentimes, knowing the answer to that question will make important differences in the meaning or the application of the text.  Especially important is the matter of looking at verses which are omitted from the lectionary (no system of reading the Bible is perfect!).   Sometimes, omitted verses don’t affect the meaning of the passage, but sometimes, omitted verses seem to be a way to avoid dealing with the “tough stuff” that the Bible often presents to us.  My seminary training wisely told us to look closely at a passage if the lectionary omits verses or seems to chop up the passage.  “Put those verses back in, if it makes sense to do so,” was the sage advice received during my seminary study.

            Use of commentaries:  One of the blessed kernals of truth which was provided during my seminary study is this one:  Don’t consult a commentary on the passage you are going to preach about early on in your consideration of the text.  Wait for awhile, and allow your own study, combined with prayer (see above), to allow God to form within you what God might want you to say about the text.  Yes, commentaries can shed important and indispensible light on a passage as the knowledge and insights of persons who’ve devoted their entire lives to a deep immersion in the pages of the Bible is shared in commentaries.  Using commentaries allows a deeper understanding of the cultural settings of biblical accounts to be incorporated into the sermon.  It also allows the nuances of biblical languages (Hebrew and Greek) to be discovered.  But these resources are only meant to be supportive of the preacher’s own study and preparation, not a substitute or a shortcut for study and prayer.

            Biblical languages:  I once knew a preacher who was fluent in biblical Greek.  He was one of those people who could pick up a New Testament and translate it into English at sight.  He could also tell you the verb tenses, and much of the nuances of meaning that words in the text carry.  I envy people like that, for it isn’t a gift that I have.  That said, however, a preacher’s skill will be sharpened if some knowledge of Hebrew and Greek is in the training and background of the preacher’s life.  Fortunately, today there are many and varied resources to assist the preacher in understanding what the original languages of the Bible convey in terms of thought patterns, meanings, and so forth.  Alas, for the example I cited at the beginning of this paragraph, that talented person never used Greek in sermons.  I always thought that the listeners were deprived, somehow, of the vast body of deep knowledge that that particular preacher possessed.  Such abilities are blessings to be shared with others, to the upbuilding of the Body of Christ, and using them does not tend to elevate the preacher above the listener, unless there are issues of arrogance which are present in the preacher’s conduct otherwise.

            Turning the crystal:  A wonderful image which has to do with the business of preaching is captured in the phrase “turning the crystal”.  Turning the crystal involves looking at a biblical text from more than one angle, in much the same way that a piece of fine cut glass will reflect the light that passes through it in various ways.  Varying the approach to a text allows the listener to glean insights from more than one angle, particularly because it is probably true that each listener hears his/her own sermon, and the meaning grasped can be quite different from the one intended by the preacher.

            Choosing a formal structure:  The formal structure of a sermon or homily is often dictated by the shape of the biblical text itself.

                        In former times, the traditional structure of a sermon was known as the “Three Point Sermon”.  Its structure was:

                                    Introduce the topic

                                    Make three points about the topic/text

                                    Remind the listeners of what you’ve just said

                        That system probably isn’t used a whole lot these days.  Instead, a large number of schemes have arisen to take its place.

                        The structure I most often use is called Hook-Book-Look-Took.  These terms need some explaining, so here’s what they each mean:

            Hook:  Some memorable, brief introduction to the subject which is intended to get (and hold) the listener’s attention.

          Book:  An in-depth look at the biblical text before the preacher and the congregation, including the context of the passage, meanings of key words, the cultural setting of the original hearers or writers, etc.

            Look:  We take a look at our own situation(s), applying lessons from the text to our own situation today.

            Took:  Applications we can take away from the text for our lives today.

Perhaps this method is a variation on the traditional three-point sermon.  It does share some similarities, I think.

Now, how would Hook-Book-Took-Look be applied to our gospel text from Matthew, and our epistle reading from I Thessalonians?  Briefly, here’s what come to my mind:

            Hook:   One day recently, I was driving into the bright morning sunlight.  As the sun’s rays hit the windshield of the car, just about all I could see was the dirt on the outside of the windshield and the film inside.  When I was driving away from the sun’s brightness, my windshield looked clean.  However, turning the other way was quite another matter.  The Pharisees in today’s gospel reading were much the same as my dirty windshield:  seen in their own light, they looked pretty good, but seen in the light of God, they became the focus of attention.  God’s light showed that their behavior simply called attention to themselves, and blocked out the ability to see God.

            Book:  The picture we have of the Pharisees isn’t a pretty one.  They come off as self-seeking, self-serving legalists whose demeanor is hateful, arrogant and negative.  (The spirit of the Pharisees is alive and well in the faith community today!).  The Pharisees’ behavior is one reason that Jesus lamented the state of faith among God’s people.  The corruption of the leaders of Jesus’ time can be seen most clearly in their plotting to get rid of Him.

            Look:  Bad leadership is always troublesome for any group of human beings.  But bad, corrupt leadership of the people of God is particularly destructive, for such leadership allows Satan’s designs, which are to undermine God’s truth and to destroy the effectiveness of the gospel, to flourish.  This is one reason why St. Paul takes so much time in writing to the Thessalonians to recount to them how transparent their leadership was when he and his ministry team where present in Thessalonica.

            Took:  Every person in leadership within the Body of Christ ought to be subject to an ongoing evaluation of their behavior, their attitudes, and their faithfulness to the faith once received by the saints.  In every case where leaders are self-serving or arrogant, the dangers which arise in response to such leadership should alert God’s people to the threat such behavior poses.

            Well, there you have it.  I hope this window into my own approach to preaching has been enlightening and helpful.  After all, the preacher’s goal ought to be that God will be encountered and seen in the sermon.  If that goal is accomplished, then the preacher and his creation, the sermon, will recede into the background in importance.

 


[1]   The entire field of preaching is known as homiletics.  To aid in the formation of preachers, many, many manuals and textbooks exist which are used in the training of preachers today.