Preaching To Move A Church: An Interview With H. Beecher Hicks
I
think the challenge before the church is not necessarily in the fact that there
is a shortened attention span but that there is a new thirst for something that
will teach and instruct – something that is beyond the old didactic method
of student and teacher: you sit and I talk. That kind of modality has shifted
and I think that’s what we’re experiencing more than anything else.
Preaching:
Have you tried adapting to those changes in your own preaching?
Hicks:
Probably not as much as I should. We do use power point. We do use projection
on a large jumbo screen. We are also experimental and innovative with different
kinds of music, liturgical dance and dramatic presentations of various sorts.
What we don’t do on Sundays we do through our website. We try to find various
means of reaching out to people.
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Preaching:
How many people attend a service? How many services do you do on Sunday and
how many people do you have there?
Hicks:
We have two services. The sanctuary will hold approximately 1400 persons and
usually both services are filled. I’ll see somewhere between 2500 and 3000
on any given Sunday. The new sanctuary will be approximately 3200 seats.
Preaching:
What are the concerns that you have about the next generation of preachers coming
along?
Hicks:
I think that God will not be left without a witness. There will always be someone
who will preach the gospel with integrity and with power. Having said that,
I have a real concern about the solid biblical base of the coming generation.
In
my formative years I learned most of my Bible in Sunday School. I went to seminary
to have some skills honed, but the Bible, the doctrine, the fundamentals of
the faith were taught to us in Sunday School. There was within the church an
insistence that we understand the scriptures.
In this generation, however, what I see are those who are attracted to the glamour
of the church and not necessarily the gospel of the church. I am not sure that
our seminaries are training up a generation of biblically strong preachers.
They may in fact be training up a generation of theologians or social workers
who have a spiritual bent. Whether or not we are actually raising up a generation
of persons who are thoroughly and completely biblically grounded I have some
question. That gives me pause.
I
talk with my congregation quite a bit about the value of the hymnal and the
fact that contemporary music within the church has almost entirely walked away
from the hymnal in our interest of creating new songs. We have created new songs
but I’m not sure we have created hymns – those melodies that bear
serious theological meaning, hymns which over a long period of time will carry
the solace, the comfort, as well as the instruction that the worshiper needs.
Preaching:
What would you like to say about preaching that I haven’t asked you yet?
Hicks:
This will be my 40th year in the pastorate, so I look back now upon four decades
of preaching the gospel. I recall a conversation with myself early in my journey
inquiring: What is it that you really want to do? What is it that you want to
be? When it’s all said and over and done, what would you like to have said?
I thought then and I think now that the only thing I would want to be known
is that somebody might say, “He really was a preacher of the gospel.”
If by any means or stretch I have been faithful to that calling and I have kept
that faith, in spite of my faults and failures, I shall be pleased and I hope
that God’s benediction will rest upon it.
I’ve
never sought political office. I’ve only sought to fulfill the requirements
of this Office and of the holy imperative upon my life to proclaim the unsearchable
riches of our Christ. That’s all I ever wanted to be. That’s all I
ever hope to be. And I hope that there will be others behind me who, when I
have finished my course, shall pick up that mantle and start all over again.