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  • Michael Duduit
    March 1994
    As I sit at the computer on a winter day -- the snow piling higher by the moment -- and dream of spring, several things come to mind:-...
  • Michael Duduit
    January 1994
    We preachers live and die by words. Sometimes die is hardly an overstatement, as in the case of the pastor who announced to his congregation,...
  • Michael Duduit
    November 1993
    While the rest of America gets into the joyous spirit of Christmas, I'm still working on that stupid list.You know the one I'm talking...
  • Michael Duduit
    September 1993
    During the state fair, my wife and I received free admission to a musical concert. Early in the concert I noticed something I had never...
  • Michael Duduit
    July 1993
    Preaching is about to get what many of its readers probably thought it's always had: a full-time editor.It seems like only yesterday...
  • Michael Duduit
    May 1993
    One of the interesting things we learned about Bill Clinton during the campaign and transition was that he has a cadre of long-time...
  • Michael Duduit
    March 1993
    "We had a grand and glorious Sunday," said Brother Bill to his fellow pastors on Monday morning."Every Sunday at your church is grand...
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Looking Ahead to the Next Ten
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Looking Ahead to the Next Ten
By Michael Duduit
With this issue, Preaching officially celebrates its tenth birthday. Ten years of publication -- sixty issues. Few of the hundreds of publications born each year last long enough to make such a claim, so forgive us the luxury of reveling in the moment.

OK, revel over. Now what?

Preaching's first decade has corresponded with a renewed interest in the pulpit throughout much of the Christian world. Even seminaries where preaching's obituary was being written just a few years ago are today recognizing that such views were not simply premature but naive. Over the past decade we have witnessed a multitude of preaching resources come and go: books, periodicals, video and audio tapes, and so on. Preaching is again a hot property.
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But where is preaching going from here? In the coming decade, preaching faces a significant opponent that threatens its viability. That opponent is to be found in the rampant relativism that has come to characterize American culture -- even within the church.

A 1991 national survey indicated that 67 percent of all Americans rejected the existence of absolute truth. By 1994, that number had risen to 72 percent. Even among self-proclaimed evangelicals, more than half (52 percent in 1991, 62 percent in 1994) do not accept the notion of absolute truth.

In contemporary western culture, tolerance is valued above truth. No wonder, if we no longer believe truth exists. Even within much of theological education today, the only "truth" that cannot be tolerated is the failure to tolerate all views. Confused? No more than tomorrow's ministers.

Preaching is endangered by such moral and theological relativism because the very act of proclaiming the gospel is based on the existence of absolute truth: God has spoken, and we proclaim His Word. Where truth ceases to exist, preaching ceases to have any meaning.

But despite cultural protests to the contrary, absolute truth does exist. God has revealed to us the One who is "the way, the truth and the life." Our task is the same as that given to the first Christian preachers: to go into a pagan, unbelieving culture and proclaim Christ and His truth.

And if we are faithful at that task, we will have the opportunity -- as did those first missionary preachers -- to transform our world. Could there be a more exciting and worthy calling as we enter a new century?
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