Stephen I. Wright

Alive to the Word


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Such a model implies, essentially, a mind-to-mind procedure that excludes the subtle but highly important elements of personal interchange that take place within and beneath the outward signs of words (or other signals).

      Thus in a sermon and in any particular section of it, the preacher is not only ‘delivering content’ (even if they think that is all they are doing). They are also disclosing something about themselves, something about their relationship to the hearers, and something about how they wish the hearers to respond.

      The unity and force of the act of communication will depend considerably on the consistency between these elements. For instance, let us suppose the preacher is explaining 1 John 4.7: ‘Beloved, let us love one another; for love is of God, and the one who loves is born of God and knows God.’ The ‘content’ of the explanation may be well encoded, in a language that the hearers will easily understand. But the hearers will also be ‘hearing’ what the preacher’s manner and the wider context of their words is disclosing about him or her. Is this preacher a loving person? If so, the content of the explanation will be reinforced; if not, the communicative event will seem flawed – love is being spoken about, but not demonstrated. Further, they will also be ‘hearing’ something about the preacher’s relationship to them: does this preacher love us? If he or she loves others but not the hearers themselves, the content of the message will not be much supported. Finally, they will also be ‘hearing’ an implied appeal. The preacher may simply be explaining the text, but the hearers will surely detect whether or not the preacher really means them to take the text’s injunction as applying to them. The preacher may or may not go on to make that application explicit, but the hearers will know whether they are to take this text and its explanation seriously. Preaching, like all other communicative events, is a relational activity, involving not only the mind but also the emotions, the will, and the richness of person-to-person contact. Sometimes those who, for whatever reason, seek to suppress or deny this reality only succeed in making it more obvious.

      The presence of this ‘square’ of factors puts certain obligations on both sender and receiver. When communication is working well, these obligations tend to be fulfilled quite automatically. It is the first stage of reflective practice to raise such unconscious or automatic levels of behaviour to consciousness. It is often a breakdown in behaviour or relationship – in this case, that of communication – which makes us conscious of these levels; one of the great hopes of the reflective practitioner, in whatever sphere, is to achieve prevention of such breakdown rather than to be always trying to pick up the pieces.

      Although this interchange is most obvious in conversation or dialogue, in which the roles of sender and receiver are constantly being swapped, it is a mistake to think it is not also happening in a largely monological address. The receivers’ signals may be silent ones, but they are there to be discerned nonetheless. And the public nature of preaching, as an event with multiple hearers, makes this process especially complex.

      All this constitutes the most basic reason why preaching must be considered as a corporate, not an individualistic event. The previous chapters have already given strong backing to such a notion, as preaching has been located within the tradition and practices of the Church. But it is as a communicative event that it displays this corporate character most obviously.

      In this part we will unpack the implications of the ‘message square’ for preaching. In Chapter 3 we will consider the mystery of language, the words (or images) which are the basic tools of communication, and the relationship of medium and message. This will lead to examining preaching as rhetorical journey, an event in time, with constant interplay between ‘sender’ and ‘receiver’. In Chapter 4 we will explore preaching as a sociological event in which the identity of a congregation is shaped, as well as some of the psychological dynamics which feed into the preacher’s self-disclosure and appeal, the relationship between preacher and hearers, and the hearers’ response to the message.

      Finally we will raise the question of preaching as an event of spiritual encounter. How are claims that preaching is a locus for meeting with God to be assessed? This will form an appropriate transition point to Part 3, in which we will turn to our theological appraisal of preaching events.

      3

      Language, Medium and Rhetoric

      The mystery of language

      Words are a preacher’s stock-in-trade. As we have seen, live communication is a relational event, which invests words with tone and value which go far beyond anything that could conceivably be captured in a dictionary. Nonetheless, words themselves and the language-systems of which they are a part have a mysterious character and force which must