Alive to the Word. Stephen I. Wright

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Alive to the Word - Stephen I. Wright

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Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world (Gal. 6.14). Thanks be to Him.

      Lord, how can man preach thy eternall word?

      He is a brittle crazie glasse:

      Yet in thy temple thou dost him afford

      This glorious and transcendent place,

      To be a window, through thy grace.

      But when thou dost anneal in glasse thy storie,

      Making thy life to shine within

      The holy Preachers; then the light and glorie

      More rev’rend grows, & more doth win:

      Which else shows watrish, bleak, & thin.

      Doctrine and life, colours and light, in one

      When they combine and mingle, bring

      A strong regard and aw: but speech alone

      Doth vanish like a flaring thing,

      And in the eare, not conscience ring.

      George Herbert, ‘The Windows’

      Introduction

      My aim in this book is to develop a theological understanding of the Christian ministry of preaching, with a view to encouraging a mature and reflective approach to this historic and contemporary practice of the Church.

      The book follows a process of ‘practical theology’. In one sense, of course, all theology should be ‘practical’. Yet ‘practical theology’ has become a distinct and important discipline in its own right, which consciously and explicitly reflects on the practices of the Church, or indeed phenomena of the world, seeking to understand them in the light of God’s revelation in Christ, and to allow that understanding to inform proposals for more adequate forms of practice. My hope is that the book will be helpful on two levels: first, for the Church as a whole as it continues the debate about what forms of preaching are most adequate to its mission today; but second, for individual churches and preachers who wish to review their own preaching ministry. Pointers as to how the general discussion might be brought to earth in a specific and local review of preaching, or indeed of particular sermons, are included at the end of each chapter.

      It will become clear that in each stage I can only outline a sample of the questions that are naturally raised by the discussion. As an additional feature at the end of each chapter, I will suggest some possible lines of research on that topic. Research in the area of preaching continues to be much sparser in Britain than it is in North America, and there are many avenues which could be pursued.

      Let me highlight three features of the book which are entailed in this attempt to provide a ‘practical theology of preaching’.

      Second, this aims to be a theological book, not a merely pragmatic one. It recognizes that the fundamental meaning of our life, out of which all our practices and behaviour emerge, is a meaning shaped by God our Creator and Redeemer. All we do is to be understood theologically, and our lives are a perpetual ebb and flow between God-inspired action and God-directed reflection. Above all, surely, this must be so when we consider the very activities through which we seek most visibly and specifically to pay attention to what God has said and is saying. Without understanding the event of preaching theologically, our ‘wisdom’ descends to mere ‘communication skills’ or even advertising techniques, and we have no way in which to grapple with either the meaning or the practical implications of an activity through which we hope and pray that God himself will speak.

      This does not mean that the insights of ‘the world’ concerning communication are to be rejected or ignored. On the contrary, they are taken very seriously, since the world is created by God and despite its fallenness,

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