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  • David L. Larsen
    July 2006
    In his classic recommendations for seminary curriculum, B.B. Warfield of old Princeton called for “scholar-saints” in...
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    When Alexander Maclaren entered the study in his home at 9 every morning to take up his sermon preparation, he would kick off his...
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    Birdfeeders, lush gardens, and ancient cathedrals are the contexts that most of us associate with Francis of Assisi. If anything...
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    John Knox first appeared on the stage of history bearing the two-handed great sword as bodyguard to reformer George Wisehart. Canon...
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    Phillips Brooks (1835-1893) was born in Boston into an old Brahmin family. His parents had been Unitarian but became Episcopalian....
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The Weight of Glory: C. S. Lewis as Preacher
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The Weight of Glory: C. S. Lewis as Preacher
By Perry Bramlett
He encouraged the soldiers to think about what they could do for Jesus; whatever it would be, it would have to be costly. Lewis very emotionally told the men the costs he had to pay to become a Christian. Oxford had tolerated his intellectual interest in Christianity, but once he became a practicing Christian he lost friends and was in many ways ostracized.

At the end of the sermon, Lewis returned to "the indignities and calamities Christ had endured" and how the soldiers (at Golgotha) had shouted "hypocrite!" "Serves him right!" "That's what he deserved!" "Dirty traitor!" As he spoke these words, Lewis vigorously gestured and raised and lowered his voice, giving full weight to the horrors and realities of the biblical story.
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Stuart Babbage has commented that it is not surprising that Lewis "communicated," for this sermon (like many others) was powerful preaching, "born of intense and passionately felt emotion." When Lewis preached in wartime to soldiers, he was eager, passionate, and always demanded a verdict, a decision. He left it to God as to just what those decisions were.

Lewis' sermons in university churches were different, at least in style, but his passion and care were always evident. They were not "popular" preaching, but were rather more intellectual in form and theological in content. The only volume currently in print that contains his Oxford (three) and Cambridge (one) sermons is The Weight of Glory (Macmillan, revised and expanded 1980). It was first published in England (1949) as Transposition and Other Addresses. The sermons in this book are "Learning in War-Time" (1939), "The Weight of Glory" (1941), "Transposition" (1944) and "A Slip of the Tongue" (1956).

Three of Lewis' sermons were preached to churches in London and Northampton and published in Undeceptions (1971), later God in the Dock (1971). "Miracles" was delivered at St. Jude on the Hill Church, London, on November 26, 1942. "Miserable Offenders" was preached at St. Matthew's Church, Northampton, on April 7, 1945. "The Grand Miracle" was preached at St. Jude's Church, London, on November 26, 1942. "Miracles" is the most famous of these sermons, and from it Lewis developed several of the ideas contained in his later book Miracles (1947).

C. S. Lewis' sermons in The Weight of Glory are perhaps his best known and read today. These sermons (as do all of Lewis') will repay the thoughtful preacher's careful attention and study. Their theological insights, unparalleled brilliance of rhetoric, vivid imagery, and obvious pastoral concern make them models for preachers who want to go "farther up and farther in" with their sermons.

"Learning in War-Time" was preached on Sunday night, October 22, 1938, at the St. Mary the Virgin Church in Oxford. It was the first sermon Lewis preached, at age 41. The original title was "None Other Gods: Culture in War-Time," and Lewis' text and title was Deuteronomy 26:5 ("A Syrian Ready to Perish was my Father"). It was later published in pamphlet form by the Oxord Student Christian Movement under the title "The Christian in Danger."

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