Preaching That Makes the Word Plain: Doing Theology in the Crucible of Life
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The volume is intended as a contribution to replenishing voices that already have spoken ably and eloquently. It is located in the praxis of one who preaches with weekly regularity, while at the same time teaching homiletics. It aims at absorbing and synthesizing proven methods, while relating them to a generation that lives in the tensions of faithfulness to the gospel of Jesus Christ, the decline of a Christian consensus in the culture, the rise of secularism, and competition from other religions. Added to that is the challenge of vying for space in the public sphere with countless social prophets, such as talk show hosts, radio commentators, screen writers, and entertainers with various agendas.
What one finds in the following pages is a venture of service to the newly called, the fledgling preachers, the veterans, as well as those who teach. It dares to challenge proverbs like, "It is better caught than taught," or "Those who know don't tell, and those who tell don't know." It risks a word in an attempt to speak reflectively about a task that is daunting to the novice and as near to a veteran as a second skin. It is a brazen attempt to step out of "comfortable skin" to tell another how it feels from the inside. It hazards a gesture to say how to do the work with confidence without becoming arrogant.
How do you scratch the pad or go to a blank computer screen from week to week? By what means does one glean and give a fresh word before the exhaustion of delivering the last word has abated? Web sites that supply sermons are in the public domain and can easily be discovered. The challenge for those who mount the pulpit from week to week does not relent.
The labor reflected in these pages is born of the bias that all preaching can be improved with study, reflection, and critical assistance.
William Clair Turner Jr.
William Clair Turner Jr. is Associate Professor of the Practice of Homiletics at Duke University Divinity School and Pastor of Mt. Level Missionary Baptist Church in Durham, North Carolina. He is the author of A Journey Through the Covenant: Discipleship for African American Christians and The United Holy Church of America: A Study in Black Holiness Pentecostalism.
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Preaching That Makes the Word Plain - William Clair Turner Jr.
Preaching That Makes the Word Plain
Doing Theology in the Crucible of Life
William Clair Turner Jr.
2008.Cascade_logo.jpgPREACHING THAT MAKES THE WORD PLAIN
Doing Theology in the Crucible of Life
Copyright © 2008 William Clair Turner Jr. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
Cascade Books
A Division of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
Eugene, OR 97401
www.wipfandstock.com
isbn 13: 978-1-55635-586-8
eisbn 13: 978-1-4982-7030-4
Cataloging-in-Publication data:
Turner, William Clair, 1948–
Preaching that makes the word plain : doing theology in the crucible of life / by William Clair Turner Jr.
xvi + 114 p.; 23 cm.
isbn 13: 978-1-55635-586-8
1. Preaching. I. Title.
bv4211.2 .t89 2008
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
introduction
Nearly twenty-five years ago, not long after completing my doctoral work, Dr. C. Eric Lincoln, who chaired my committee, suggested that I write a book entitled, Why I Preach.
He said there should be an introduction about preaching, followed by a collection of sermons. I could not see it then, as I had just completed the dissertation and was looking to launch a scholarly project. He saw what I could not see. Preaching is my passion. For me it is the seminal interaction between the living God through the scriptures, embodied in one who lives among the people of God.
Coming through the civil rights, black power, and Vietnam War eras forced upon me the issues of prophetic critique and ministry that is relevant to the cries of the oppressed. It is fair to say that the theological critique prompted by these movements is what permitted my continuing embrace of the Christian faith. The themes of those times reinforced the centrality of the gospel and the power of the Christian pulpit (for good and for ill). The strengths and weaknesses of the church pivot on the interrelationship between theology as a critical discipline and the dispensation of the gospel in the crucible of life. It is the dispensation that shapes the lives of persons and communities as faithful witnesses to the Son of God, or fashions imposters that bring shame to the name of Messiah Jesus.
The intervening years have been punctuated by an active schedule of preaching and teaching in the areas of theology, black church studies, homiletics, and ministry. The exercise has been one that is characterized by tension. Indeed, it fits the description Jacob gave for Issachar when he blessed his sons—namely, the blessing of being balanced by two burdens. There is the burden of preaching to the people of God, hearing their cries, and carrying them before God. Then there is the burden of teaching others how to do the work of ministry. For me there has been balancing grace to fight against the tilt toward unreflective ministry on the one hand, and teaching and research not grounded in the life of the church on the other.
An administrative appointment in Black Church Affairs opened latitude in teaching not afforded while on a tenure track in theology. While under that appointment an opportunity arose to shift into homiletics and ministry. The result was that the practices of ministry became the focus for my ongoing interests in pneumatology and the critical study of the African American church. It opened the way for me to teach what I practice, and to probe the practices of ministry as content (text) for reflection.
Along with reading texts on preaching, teaching preaching, and doing the work of preaching, I have taken time to reflect on some of the preachers who had foundational impact on me. At the time I had no clue regarding how their spiritual fingerprints were being used of God to shape a malleable lump of clay. On occasions it is as though I can hear their voices in the background, carrying on a conversation over my shoulder as I do my work. It is like some sort of spiritual protoplasm, or formative DNA has been left with me like a mystical residue, leaving a sense (sensus) for how to listen to the word for the sake of having something to say to the people. It is as though I ask the question raised within myself more than forty years ago, namely, how did they go from that text to that sermon? Below is a Short Roll Call.
James Forbes came to pastor my home church (St. John’s United Holy Church of America, Richmond, Va.) while I was a teenager. Excitement filled the air and the church wherever he preached or spoke for any reason. It was nothing short of amazing what this young, brilliant, theologically trained Pentecostal preacher could do with a text, and how he could make the pulpit come to life like his predecessors. He made you want to listen to him, but even more, listen to the text. He could take the old traditions of the church, find the doctrinal and scriptural roots, and breathe new life into them. He had a gift for making the word oh-so-relevant—contemporary, fresh, and insightful. In his hands, preaching was far more than prohibitions, and hellfire, which was fairly standard for holiness-Pentecostal preaching of that day. Later I learned how the content was culled out by meticulous exegesis and refracted through the theology of Paul Tillich and Karl Barth—to name two of the more prominent theologians of the mid twentieth century. This was true of many seminary trained black preachers in the latter third of the twentieth century.
We had heard his father. A former pastor, Bishop W. M. Clements, would invite him to preach revivals and for other special occasions. Clements called him Professor Forbes, and when he came the place was buzzing with great anticipation. Forbes the elder preached in a clear and powerful way that could not be forgotten. Forbes the younger joined with other luminaries of Richmond during that era. The list includes Samuel Proctor (who imprinted a generation), Robert Taylor, Y. B. Williams, David Shannon, Paul Nichols, and others whose names need to be enshrined for posterity.
The time was the sixties. We had heard from Martin Luther King Jr. and those prophetic strains could not be dismissed from our ears. More, we had heard from Malcolm X as well.
¹
He was insightful, critical, analytical, and compelling as an orator. The only problem was that we didn’t hear enough from him about Jesus, and we could not reconcile Adam with Yacub. For me the preaching of Forbes was like a prescription. It was most appealing and critical in opening space for a teenage lad to remain in the church with a Christian option to Malcolm.
Then there was Miles Jones. He came to Richmond in the sixties as well, and he pastored in the community where we lived (Providence Park). Never could a man do so much with the word! He could take a word given in the text and examine it, cross-examine it, look into it, listen to it, and wait for it to yield treasures. The question with which I was left on a constant basis was, How in the world did he get so much out of a word we all had heard so many times?
The patience with which the work was done was astounding. There was not the moan
or the tune that was standard for older preachers and often heard from younger ones as well. The preaching was full of inspiration and packed with information. And some of the people would still shout.
A man came from Brooklyn to install Miles Jones. He was not known around town before he came. But those who heard him never forgot him. So clear was his presentation, so forceful were his words, so relevant were his applications. His was preaching that was refreshing beyond measure. It took us a while to get it, but the name of the man was Sandy Ray (The Reverend Dr.). And we understood better why Miles preached the way he did.
Philip Cousin, a young pastor in Durham, was a rising star in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, who later was elected a bishop. I attached myself to him as a college student and later as a seminarian. He was insightful, polished, full of knowledge and inspiration. His preaching was charged with contemporary relevance. He was astute to the tenor of the times, and his involvement as an activist was a mirror on the word he proclaimed. Actually, he taught me the only formal
course I ever took in preaching, and he also taught black theology at Duke University Divinity School.
In him was a distillation of African Methodism. This theological tradition was populated with names I had never heard. Names like Richard Allen, Daniel Payne, Henry Turner, Reverdy Ransom. Cousin represented the tradition of preaching that was bursting forth under the nomenclature of black theology. Indeed, from the outset black theology was the essence of reading the scriptures through the interpretive lens of the African American pulpit.
The fingerprints of the black church that are all over the seminal statements coming from the National Committee of Negro Churchmen (later National Committee of Black Churchmen) were antecedently on him. This theology had roots that went deep into the soil and soul of the black independent church movement of the 1900s. It was tethered to the activism that birthed the church’s investment in abolition, emancipation, and the twentieth-century struggle for social justice. This preaching oozed with the passions (yea, the harmonies) of liberty, and was wedded to the strong and unapologetic call for conversion. Later I learned that this synthesis was at the very root of the faith into which I was born and from which I drew natal nurture.
A. W. Lawson influenced me as the quintessential churchman, whom I watched preach for the nurture, building, development, and molding of a congregation and a connectional church (the United Holy Church of America). I spent five years under his tutelage following the completion of my MDiv at Duke. A man full of wisdom, he exegeted within the tension of the worlds converging inside him. But more, he had a keen sense for where the church was being carried by the Spirit. A bishop in the United Holy Church of America with uncommon prescience, his intention was to join the power of the pulpit to a theology of the Spirit that moved it beyond the constrictions of fundamentalism and experiential dogmatism.
Bishop Lawson possessed uncommon theological sense for reading out what was given in the text to the destination embodied in living, breathing Christian communities. He was able to make doctrine come to life in a manner that was neither shallow nor denominationally limited. He stood in a tradition of great but lesser known preachers like H. L. Fisher, J. D. Diggs, G. J. Branch, E. B. Nichols, and J. W. Houston.
²
While being the theologian
of the United Holy Church, he was also the teacher and mentor for a vast number of young preachers in Durham and from various church traditions in eastern North Carolina. The influence remains strong within churches that were influenced by these pastors who still credit him for their initial studies, and the grounding he supplied in the practical wisdom (phronesis) that gives guidance and stability to the church.
It was from serving as his assistant that I was introduced to the wonderful discipline of lectio continua. We would select a book from which to preach and listen to what the writer had to say for a sustained period. Normally we preached from the Old Testament in the fall (an extended Advent), the gospels from the first of the year (Epiphany and Lent), and from an epistle following Easter (Easter, Pentecost, and Ordinary Time). It is from this seminal, life-giving, mutual interpenetration between the word and the life of God’s people that good preaching emerges. This is the humus of pulpit theology that must remain as the anchor of the church, and the vital interlocutor for all other discourses that claim to do any reasoning about God.
When I went to the administrative track I felt free to teach what was in my heart. I never stopped preaching regularly for any significant period of time. First I taught an elective course in preaching. It was fun, and it seemed to go well. Eventually I taught the required course, to fill some gaps in coverage. That turned into an even more exciting venture as well.
Nearly twenty-five years later I have come back to the point suggested by the sage C. Eric Lincoln. Along the way there have been numerous points in the pilgrimage that have proved essential for the task. Without these stations I could scarcely give an account that would be clear to me or intelligible to anyone else. It is only in the crucible of preaching with regularity, and teaching in the fields listed above, that enough mist has lifted to understand and talk about this challenging work. And there is every hope to understand it even better bye and bye.
The distant background for my reflection on preaching (which informs my teaching) is the emergence of the black theology project in the second half of the twentieth century. There one can see the beginning stages of theology as an academic project rooted in the life of the church. It is a stage at which the church lifts the voices
of those who do its reflective work and keeps them in a dialogue of mutual accountability. To be sure, this is not a moment without parallel in the long history of the church. But it is a moment deserving special notice in the American church.
This moment is one in which the church demanded to be heard—not just the church whose structures overlapped with those of the state, not only the church whose priests were approved by the king, but the church of former slaves, sharecroppers, and wage earners. Official theological tomes were rejected where they did not heed the God of the oppressed, follow the Lord who preached good news to the poor, and walk in the Spirit who gives liberty. The norm that emerged was the tension that required that if the voice of the academy deserves to be heard, it must see the interests of suffering humanity and hear from those who proclaim good news to the poor at every point.