Stephen I. Wright

Alive to the Word


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He cites eight: entertainment, narrative, consumerism, an ethos of suspicion in public life and reluctance to commit oneself deeply, ‘virtual’ relationships, celebrity, ‘liquid modernity’ and a ‘post-Christendom’ era in which there remain remarkable signs of Christian life and influence. He proceeds to give an incisive account of the potential of this atmosphere for Christian communication of the gospel, as well as the paradoxes entailed in becoming so immersed in it that the influence is predominantly one-way, from culture to preaching.

      Here I want to take Standing’s argument a little further and summarize some ways in which preaching with its own ‘strangeness’ might already be positively influencing this strange contemporary British cultural pot-pourri, and could influence it further.

      Third, preaching can also function as a necessary and reassuring voice of wisdom in an ether awash with ‘knowledge’ which few know how to judge. Maybe the very difficulty and strangeness of preaching – sometimes – is a vital pointer beyond the immediately exciting, ever-changing yet ephemeral world of the small screen.

      Fourth, preachers can use a language which deliberately eschews some of the debased forms of speech in circulation today. For example, the ideology of consumerism spreads in a sinister way from the economic to the linguistic sphere, and language shapes perceptions in all sorts of subtle ways (one hears, for instance, about the way people ‘consume new media’). This is a sign of the central place the desires of the self, and the desire for things now, have in the psyche of today’s society. All too easily, Christians may play along with this in the way that a variety of forms of church life and practice are ‘marketed’. Indeed, some forms of preaching can be in reality an exercise in self-marketing or church-marketing, whereas a conscious resistance to using such language can help preaching to be a truly transformative event. Our words can evoke another world, a sphere of free giving, a sphere in which others are as important as ourselves, a sphere in which patience is possible because the future is known to be far more glorious than the present, a sphere in which the human-driven ‘success’ of the Church counts for nothing in comparison with the God-empowered growth of his kingdom.

      Theology

      Preaching and theology (as we might say) ‘go back a long way’ together. In the early centuries of Christianity, before the Bible and other literature were widely accessible to the general public, and long before Christian theology broke from being an area of study confined to Church circles, preaching was the main means of both doing creative theology and voicing the theological thinking that had been shaping the Church. Indeed, some of those known as the greatest theological thinkers of the early Church are also those known as some of the greatest preachers, and vice versa: Origen, Gregory Nazianzen, Augustine.