The Preacher Under Pressure: Crunch-time For The Christian Communicator
By David L. Larsen
We are living
in cyclonic times for preachers. Students of the history of preaching realize
that such seasons for the craft have occurred sporadically across the centuries
but we seem to be experiencing some especially poignant pressures and stresses
right now. Many preachers feel themselves to be caught in a vicious and violent
vortex of pressure to change, adapt, retreat, retool or something and they are
abit confused and bewildered by it all. QUO VADIS?
Living in a context
of widespread deconstruction, the preacher faces the fact that many deny there
is any text at all. Meaning and authorial intent are gone. The very idea of
history has collapsed and the classics are gone. The ego disease is pandemic
and the quest for the authentic self has pretty well edged out any transcendent
vertical. Is any coherent, stable linguistic meaning possible today? Preaching
is under serious assault.
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The American "religion"
is an amalgum of Emersonian gnosticism and its "self-reliance;" Harvard pragmatism;
and American "manifest destiny." E. Brooks Holifield's classic A History
of Pastoral Care in America has the subtitle, From Salvation to Self-Realization.
A very clear paradigm shift has moved much preaching from text-centered, text-derived
proclamation to audience-centered, need-driven, problem solving discourse. Many
have succumbed.
New technologies
like Powerpoint and the use of film clips seem to leave many preachers with
high levels of frustration. Preachers stagger from one faddish program to another
always under the gun of unfavorable comparison with neighbors and highly visible
national pacesetters. Endless seminars on how to reach boomers, busters and
millennials have only added to their consternation. Are we touching the more
auditory, the more visual and the more kinesthetic? Besides, some are telling
us that linear reasoning is done, induction has triumphed and narrative is all.
Where has this left many highly motivated preachers who find themselves stunned
and confused. Is it all up for grabs?
Worship wars continue
to devastate many congregations. One able young preacher and his leadership
were slow to include any newer sound and a large contingent of the younger folk
decamped to a nearby media center. By the time the church began to seek a judicious
blend, they found the older element was offended and they left the church or
absented themselves from it. No winning for losing. Now with the advent of "hi-tech
worship," in some cases the pastoral staff no longer decides on what will be
preached. The technicians do because they have to get the images to be projected
and that determines the preaching topic. The clash of culture wars continues.
But not only is
there great pressure to adapt feel-good theology or "Christianity-lite," but
some key evangelicals are bailing out from the high view of Scripture but also
from the doctrine of the substitutionary atonement. Conversion is a process
not an event some insist (isn't that a false dichotomy?). Voices are heard among
us deriding absolute authority, absolute certainty and the centrality of Scripture.
Rejection of propositional truth is urged as our exit from too servile a bondage
to "modernism." "What I've experienced" is the be-all and end-all. And add to
all of this and what appears to be the triumph of the therapeutic gospel is
the fact constantly thrown at us, that the life of the mind is virtually extinct
among evangelicals. So where are we?