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    homiletics

    Explore " homiletics" with insightful episodes like "Listeners Dare: Courage and the Act of Sermon-Listening / Will Willimon", "Is Your Preaching Pain-Full? Adopting Paul’s Theology of Homiletical Weakness | Matthew Kim", "The Challenge of Preaching in a Post-Christian World", "What makes a good sermon?" and "Episode 174 - When Prepping A Message, Remember The People Right In Front Of You" from podcasts like ""For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture", "The Pastor Theologians Podcast", "Discerning the Forms", "Good Theological Thursday" and "Coaching For Pastors - Daily Coaching, Encouragement, and Support for Pastors"" and more!

    Episodes (12)

    Listeners Dare: Courage and the Act of Sermon-Listening / Will Willimon

    Listeners Dare: Courage and the Act of Sermon-Listening / Will Willimon

    We often think of speaking up as an act of courage. And of course, there are times when it most certainly is. But what about the courage to listen? The best kind of generous listening is interesting because it seems to acknowledge and create a mutual agency. The courageous, generous listener grants the speaker an authority to have the floor and make a point or drop a bomb or tell it like it is. But that act of listening is itself an active mode of receptive agency. So the best kind of listening is a truly powerful thing because each party involved in this miracle of communication gets to be present in fullness.

    That is not something that can be done by the speaker alone. The ability to create the conditions for that mutual agency is up to the listener. But when you apply that to a religious scenario—the preaching and hearing of the gospel, things get interesting.

    Whether its from the window of St. Peter’s Basilica, or from the screams of a megaphone wielding street preacher, or the pulpit of your small, faithful community church… something profound seems to be happening when we listen to someone speak and illumine the Word of God.

    Will Willimon, who has trained many preachers and written several books on preaching and homiletics, has written a book for listeners, both acknowledging and uplifting the act of listening to sermons. Will is Professor of the Practice of Christian Ministry at Duke Divinity School and he came on the show with me to talk about his book, Listeners Dare: Hearing God in the Sermon.

    Together we discuss the act of listening and the rare achievement it seems to be; the definition and purpose of a sermon, and what that might mean for its listeners; how to cultivate the charity and courage to listen; and the inherent risk involved in genuinely and generously listening to the gospel.

    Show Notes

    • Listeners Dare: Hearing God in the Sermon
    • Preaching is a demanding skill for both preachers and their audiences.
    • Scripture itself pays attention to audiences as well as speakers.
    • Listeners come to sermons with expectations. For sermons to most benefit the audience, preachers can guide their listeners to ask the right questions of a sermon.
    • What is proclamation?
    • Like the Bible itself, sermons can take a wide array of literary forms to communicate the truth of God. Because it proclaims truth about God, the Bible itself can be seen as a sort of sermon.
    • “Christian sermons, ought to arise out of an encounter with scripture.”
    • The gospels began a new genre of literature to communicate the truth of Christ.
    • The genre or form of sermons continues to evolve and diversify today with outside influences such as TED Talks.
    • Fred Craddock and the narrative unfolding sermon
    • Verse-by-verse discovery in a sermon
    • One definition of preaching is “a biblical preacher goes to the biblical text hoping to make a discovery. Then you announce that discovery to the congregation.”
    • At times when a preacher has no audience, such as street preachers, there is still something compelling about the preacher's commitment to their message, that regardless of its reception it must be spoken.
    • Preaching requires charity and risk from listeners, so they can open themselves to the possibility of hearing and being transformed by another's message.
    • Listening requires daring because the gospel message presented by Christian preachers has the power to upend listeners' preexisting beliefs.
    • “Preaching is a confrontation with the God who came to us, who is a Jew from Nazareth, who lived briefly, died violently, and rose unexpectedly—preaching is about that.”
    • Listening, and listening to God, are skills that can be cultivated.
    • “We have a revealing, talkative, loquacious God.”
    • It is helpful for listeners of sermons to assume both the preacher and God hope to communicate with their listeners.
    • Listeners must be willing to learn from, critique, and engage with sermons.
    • “Listeners are the playground of the Holy Spirit.”
    • Preachers partner with the Holy Spirit to bring sermons to their congregation, even using difficult passages of scripture to further engage listeners.
    • John 6 and the “hard sayings” of Jesus
    • Listeners Dare! :) Will mentions a teenagers compliment to him once: “That was the most f—ed up thing I have ever heard… it was wonderful.”
    • The courage to keep listening

    About Will Willimon

    The Reverend Dr. William H. Willimon is Professor of the Practice of Christian Ministry at the Divinity School, Duke University. He served eight years as Bishop of the North Alabama Conference of The United Methodist Church, where he led the 157,000 Methodists and 792 pastors in North Alabama. For twenty years prior to the episcopacy, he was Dean of the Chapel and Professor of Christian Ministry at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. He is author of over 100 books, including Worship as Pastoral CareAccidental PreacherResident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony, and his most recent, God Turned Toward Us: The ABCs of the Christian Faith. His articles have appeared in many publications including The Christian MinistryQuarterly ReviewPloughLiturgyWorship and Christianity Today. For many years he was Editor-at-Large for The Christian Century. For more information and resources, visit his website.

    Production Notes

    • This podcast featured Will Willimon
    • Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa
    • Hosted by Evan Rosa
    • Production Assistance by Alexa Rollow, Macie Bridge, and Tim Bergeland
    • A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about
    • Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    Is Your Preaching Pain-Full? Adopting Paul’s Theology of Homiletical Weakness | Matthew Kim

    Is Your Preaching Pain-Full? Adopting Paul’s Theology of Homiletical Weakness | Matthew Kim

    In this plenary message from the 2023 CPT Conference, Power and the Pulpit, Matthew Kim asks us to consider whether our preaching embodies a contemporary pursuit of power or a Pauline theology of weakness. Reflecting on the examples of Jesus, Paul, and his own on personal history, Matthew Kim challenges preachers to lead the church from a posture of humble weakness that depends on the power of Christ.

    The Challenge of Preaching in a Post-Christian World

    The Challenge of Preaching in a Post-Christian World

    In this episode, Nik and Anthony tackle the challenge of preaching in today's cultural context. They question the effectiveness of "relevant" sermons and propose a simpler approach: letting the scripture passage and redemptive narrative set the tone for preaching. Join them as they explore the importance of exegeting both scripture and our cultural moment to meet the congregation's needs. 

    Links:
    https://theopolisinstitute.com/of-preaching-and-newspapers/

    https://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2016/09/whats-preaching-for

    https://theopolisinstitute.com/the-end-of-premium-mediocre-church/

    Episode 174 - When Prepping A Message, Remember The People Right In Front Of You

    Episode 174 - When Prepping A Message, Remember The People Right In Front Of You

    Sometimes we prepare the message that we like, that we know, and that we would like to hear, never considering who is going to be sitting right in front of us.

    Jeff talks about how to consider those to whom you are speaking. They are the receivers and beneficiaries of your message. Consider them deeply as you prepare your sermon.

    Enjoy this episode!

    Support the show

    For more great content and conversations for pastors, check out the over 400 episodes of the 200churches Podcast!

    The Rev. Chelsea Brooke Yarborough Part II

    The Rev. Chelsea Brooke Yarborough Part II

    This week is part II with the Rev. Chelsea Yarborough.  Chelsea is a Ph.D. candidate at Vanderbilt in Homiletics and Liturgics in the Graduate Department of Religion. If you missed last week’s conversation I would highly recommend listening to that first episode.  As one of our friend’s commented, it is completely and utterly a delicious conversation on Chelsea’s notion that "if it’s not dialogical, it’s not ethical."  This second episode echoes this ethical framework - the process of homiletics and preaching should be transformative, authentic, real and vulnerable.  Ya’ll this one is full of wisdom bombs again so you may have to listen to it twice!

    The Rev. Chelsea Brooke Yarborough Part I

    The Rev. Chelsea Brooke Yarborough Part I

    The Rev. Chelsea Brooke Yarborough is a Ph.D. candidate at Vanderbilt in Homiletics and Liturgics in the Graduate Department of Religion. She is an ordained minister, a poet, an enneagram enthusiast, and a lover of leadership development. Her motto is "live to love and love to live each day” and is excited to continue her journey of cultivating and engaging curiosity in all that she pursues. 


    Episode 297 - Every Sunday You Need A Sermon with Jeff and Jonny

    Episode 297 - Every Sunday You Need A Sermon with Jeff and Jonny

    Jonny and Jeff talk about the weekly mandate of sermon prep, how they approach it, and how they think about preaching in today's culture. This is a start of the conversation, which will likely develop into additional episodes. This is a very encouraging episode for pastors of small churches! Your messages matter!

    Episode 91: Bad Homilies & Church Music & What To Do About It w/ Kevin Kapchinski

    Episode 91: Bad Homilies & Church Music & What To Do About It w/ Kevin Kapchinski
    Ever felt crazy in Mass? Bad Music? Bad Homily? Bad lectors? We all have. We commiserate together and try to come up with a solution for how to fix it and the role we play in the whole deal. We get help from rockstar liturgical musician Kevin Kapchinski as he shares what music at Mass is supposed to be, how he picks songs to bring the Mass to life and more. We close out the show with a discussion of Jesus feeding the 5000 and what it teaches us about serving those physically and spiritually hungry. If you like the show, share it with a friend, rate and subscribe on your favorite podcasting service. Subscribe/Rate Never miss out on the craziness of each episode by subscribing to our channel here (https://www.youtube.com/c/ForteCatholic?sub_confirmation=1) Help other people find the show and live the Joy of the Gospel by sharing this video on your social media. Thanks! Follow Forte Catholic: 🎉Twitter: @taylorschroll(https://twitter.com/TaylorSchroll) & @fortecatholic(https://twitter.com/ForteCatholic) 🎉Instagram: @taylorschroll(https://www.instagram.com/taylorschroll/) 💖Twitch: Twitch.tv/fortecat Forte Catholic Podcast: 🎵 Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/forte-catholic-podcast-making-catholicism-fun-again/id1162464998?mt=2 🎵 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1ZiCiNAg9c9vaAuKdKuX2C?si=9uAB6FuDSpejZNOIve3xjQ 🎵 Fireside: https://fortecatholic.fireside.fm Donate Forte Catholic is a 501c3 non-profit organization. Support the work with a tax-deductible donation here. Thanks! https://www.fortecatholic.com/donate Music by Taylor Schroll Logos designed by James Longoria Produced by Taylor Schroll Edited by Sarah Allen & Taylor Schroll
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