Stephen I. Wright

Alive to the Word


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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_0f59c4ea-87ce-50ca-99f6-837ca6c5427e">17] See for instance the quantity of references to them in Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion.

      part 2

      Introduction

      Some might still feel, however, that preaching is such an irreducibly theological event that to postpone a properly theological consideration of it till Part 3 is to give in to reductionism. Are we not allowing our basic understanding to be dictated by ‘secular’ categories? I offer three responses to such a fear.

      Second, I make no claim that these categories from the human sciences, or my application of them, offers us a ‘neutral’ analysis. There can be no such thing. Therefore, although I do not make theology an explicit part of the framework in this part, I am very happy to acknowledge that a theological perspective undergirds the way I seek to understand everything – preaching included. In practice that means I have chosen frameworks of analysis that seem to me to accord with such a theological perspective and usefully fill it out. Most importantly, I adopt a fundamentally positive view of the potential of human communication, grounded in the belief in a God who communes with his children and enables their mutual communion to be real and not sham.

      Third, the truth of God’s incarnation in Christ suggests that to ignore the human dimensions of our knowledge, our practices and our discipleship would be profoundly un-theological. If, as we continue to claim, God still speaks, somehow, through human beings, our aim should be to seek to understand with all our (God-given!) human powers what that claim entails and what are its practical consequences for us. History is littered with the wreckage caused by those who have been so confident in the possession of divine inspiration that they have (unwittingly) wrought abuse of some kind on their many hearers. Such speakers (if Christian) have often, I suspect, not grasped this implication of the incarnation: that far from neglecting the human, we are called to embrace it and enable it to be God-filled. For preaching, this means that it would be sub-Christian to neglect the human capacities, conditioning and categories of thought which enable us to make the most of who we are and what we might be. When all that has been attended to, the question of whom, how, when and where he will inspire is for God’s free choice alone. The danger for us is precisely that we will be so sure of God’s inspiration that we seek to act as God instead of being ourselves. This, to me, is amply sufficient to justify bringing all the relevant tools of human knowledge, skill, creativity and hard work to the task of preaching itself, and of understanding what it is we are about.

      Central to reflection on the nature of preaching must be an awareness of the dynamics of human communication, and the various theories considered in Chapters 3 and 4 all bear in some way upon this phenomenon. Preaching’s place in Christian tradition and contemporary Church life gives it a unique character among communicative events – a uniqueness greatly enhanced by the divine dimensions claimed for it in Christian theology. But to overlook what it shares in common with other acts of communication would be a grave mistake.