{"id":43,"date":"2021-11-18T11:38:09","date_gmt":"2021-11-18T11:38:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/?post_type=chapter&#038;p=43"},"modified":"2021-11-18T19:35:19","modified_gmt":"2021-11-18T19:35:19","slug":"collaborative-preaching","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/chapter\/collaborative-preaching\/","title":{"raw":"Collaborative Preaching: God\u2019s Empowering Word","rendered":"Collaborative Preaching: God\u2019s Empowering Word"},"content":{"raw":"For those of you who don\u2019t know, I am a proponent of what I call collaborative preaching. I do not assume that this is the only way to engage in a theologically sound pulpit ministry \u2013 but I do hold that it is a form of pulpit ministry that is timely and can be a significant <em>empowering ministry<\/em> in churches who take lay involvement and participation in the Church seriously. I will return to describe what I mean by collaborative preaching later, and tomorrow.\r\n\r\nLet me give you a brief summary definition of collaborative preaching to tide you over: The word \u201ccollaboration,\u201d of course, means \u201cworking together.\u201d Collaborative preaching is a form of preaching in which homilist and hearer work together in a group\u00a0(the sermon roundtable) to establish and interpret topics for preaching. They also decide together what the practical results of those interpretations might be for the congregation. The homilist then goes into the pulpit and re-presents the dynamics of this collaborative conversation in the sermon.\r\n\r\nThe title for my lecture tonight is \u201cCollaborative Preaching: God\u2019s Empowering Word.\u201d Empowerment is one of those words that we hear all the time these days, yet I am never quite sure that we know what it means, or why it is important for the Church and its ministry. One of the most useful definitions of empowerment that I have found is in the work of an old friend of many of us, Rollo May. According to May, empowerment includes two kinds of power: <em>nutritive<\/em> power (power for others), and <em>integrative<\/em> power (power with others).[footnote]Regina Coll CSJ, \u201cPower, Powerlessness and Empowerment,\u201d Religious Education 81, no. 3, (Summer \u201886): 417.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nNutritive power is nutritious, it feeds power to others, by giving it away. It is power <em>for<\/em> others, shared power, power that has the other person\u2019s well-being in mind, power that is undergirded by love. Nutritive <em>empowerment<\/em> includes all the ways that leaders\u00a0invite or permit others to assume responsibility for the direction of their own lives and to assume leadership roles themselves. It is all the ways a leader includes followers in an active role in the interpretation of their situation and in making decisions about the future.\r\n\r\nI will say more about nutritive empowerment at the end of this lecture, because to my way of thinking, nutritive power (power for others) is the means or pathway to integrative power (power with others). Tonight, however, I want to concentrate first on <em>integrative<\/em> empowerment in ministry. Then I want to move on to consider how nutritive power provides a pathway to integrative empowerment in our churches.\r\n\r\nFirst, integrative empowerment. Simply put, integrative empowerment is power with others. It is generated when people are integrated with one another. Integrative empowerment is sparked when spiritual conversations, connections and alliances are formed between persons or communities that are, in reality, very different from one another. Integrative <em>empowerment<\/em> includes all the ways that a leader connects people within one community or between communities.\r\n\r\nIn our generation, integrative empowerment requires that we develop a \u201cpublic theology\u201d for preaching.\r\n\r\n<strong>A Public Theology for Preaching<\/strong>\r\n\r\nPublic theologians assert that the central task of the Christian ministry in the late modern period is to \u201cresist the gravitational pull of privatization\u201d[footnote]\u201cA Spirituality of Public Life\u201d in Parker Palmer, Barbara G. Wheeler, and James W. Fowler, (eds.), Caring for the Commonweal: Education for Religious and Public Life (Mercer University Press, 1990), 159.[\/footnote] that has gripped the churches, and to re connect the Gospel message with the public realm. According to Parker Palmer, the word \u201cpublic\u201d is a metaphor for the \u201cebb and flow of the <em>company of strangers<\/em>, which happens in relatively\u00a0unstructured and disorderly ways: on the city streets, in parks and squares, at festivals and rallies, and shopping malls, neighborhoods and voluntary associations.\u201d[footnote]Ibid., 152.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nPublic life is a \u201cmessy middle layer\u201d between formal social or political institutions (such as the government) and the private realm (of family and friends) \u201cfrom which the stranger <em>qua<\/em> stranger is excluded.\u201d[footnote]Ibid., 152-3.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nPhilosopher of communication Jurgen Habermas speaks about this realm of the public as \u201cthe lifeworld.\u201d According to Habermas, in our world today, this \u201clifeworld\u201d is being squeezed from two sides. On one side is what he calls the \u201csystem\u201d (of\u00a0exchange\/money, media, and corporate and political institutions). On the other side is the private realm \u2013 the ever-expanding cult of the individual, accumulation and the closed family.\r\n\r\nThe communicative goal of voluntary organizations like the Church, therefore, is to wage a war for this messy middle layer \u2013 strengthening it so that community is not lost, and so the \u201csystem\u201d can once again become a servant, rather than our master.\r\n\r\nAccording to Palmer, we cannot be spiritually alive as Christians unless we venture forth into the public realm and encounter the \u201cstrangers\u201d who live there. The stranger is the <em>other<\/em> who presents us with what Edward Farley calls the \u201cmysterious presence of something which contests my projecting meanings on it, an unforeseeable depth which ... cannot be cognitively or emotionally mastered.\u201d[footnote]Good and Evil, Interpreting a Human Condition (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress Press, 1990), 39.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nTheologically, the stranger represents both the Holy Other and the human <em>other<\/em>: the dual foci of the great commandment. As Christians, we are commanded to love God, the Holy Other, who is the ground of all love and justice. We are likewise commanded to love neighbor, the human <em>other<\/em>, whose vulnerability invites us beyond ourselves into the realm of compassion, suffering and responsibility.[footnote]Farley, Good and Evil, 41-42.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nPatrick Keifert identifies three ways to think of the stranger in relation to the Church: 1) as the outsiders who come from beyond the Church itself; 2) as \u201cinside strangers\u201d who \u201cremain outside the intimate group that usually makes up most of the leadership in a\u00a0congregation\u201d; and 3) as a description of \u201cthe irreducible difference between two persons that exist in any encounter.\u201d[footnote]Welcoming the Stranger: A Public Theology of Worship and Evangelism (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992), 8-9.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nWhen I use the word \u201cstranger,\u201d therefore, do not assume that I am speaking of persons who represent some exotic form of experience or behavior. I am simply re-conceptualizing the way we think about the people all around us, in the Church and beyond. The realm of the stranger is <em>one step beyond the realm of identification<\/em>. Once we cease to assume that we can identify with the person sitting next to us, or the person we think we know so well, and once we learn not to project our own meanings or expectations onto them, then we enter into that uncharted territory where they might instruct us as strangers.\r\n\r\nStrangers are all around us, in the pews next to us and beyond the sanctuary doors. There\u2019s Martha who, age 68 and childless, battles loneliness. There\u2019s Susan, a lesbian, who wonders what to do with her sexuality in both culture and Church. There\u2019s Bill, a busy lawyer, who is often angry and suffers under the oppressive weight of the upper middle class rat race.\r\n\r\nThere\u2019s Clara, a heavy smoker dying from lung cancer, living in fear and denial because her family owns part of a huge tobacco interest. There\u2019s Bob, a missionary, who sometimes wonders if what he does really makes a difference. There\u2019s Jenny, a 7-year-old, who feels a great love for God and who wants to give more to the Church and to the poor. There\u2019s Carol, a single parent of three\u00a0children, struggling at the bottom of the pay scale. And there are many, many others in the church and in the community around us.\r\n\r\nTo ask these people what kinds of interpretive spins they put on the Gospel of Jesus Christ is to embark on an adventure in the public realm. If we ask what in particular they see in the Gospel that is meaningful for their lives, we will hear all kinds of things, some of which will seem to us to be heretical.\r\n\r\nYet, if we dare to involve these diverse folk in a roundtable process through which they are invited to wrestle with the Scripture, theology and confessions of the Church, and are expected to come to terms with the Gospel and with each other, we will create an opportunity for a preachable Word to emerge that may bind the Church and the world together in solidarity and hope.\r\n\r\nThis is the adventure that follows when we take the discernment of the Word of God out of the private realms of the pastor\u2019s study and the devotional closet into the public arena, where strangers within and beyond the Church hold us accountable to the unique reality and particularity of their own spiritual experience.\r\n\r\nThere are at least two usual ways to miss out on this adventure in the public realm. One way is to \u201ctry to gain enough power to enforce our own standards on the alien experience.\u201d[footnote]Palmer, \u201cSpirituality,\u201d 155.[\/footnote] According to Palmer, \u201c(this) takes the form of religious institutions and hierarchies controlling the definition of \u2018orthodoxy\u2019 and suppressing all signs of \u2018heresy.\u2019\u201d[footnote]Ibid.[\/footnote] Homiletically, it takes the form of preaching in which a clerical elite rehearses timeless exegetical pearls of wisdom and dated doctrine, or repeats platitudes and formulas that are supposed to have magical efficacy.\r\n\r\nThe second way to miss out on this adventure in the public realm is to create and fortify something called a \u201cprivate life.\u201d[footnote]Ibid.[\/footnote] Palmer asserts that \u201cinstead of encountering, engaging, and growing from the diversity within and outside us, we have tried to avoid it altogether by building high walls of privatism.\u201d[footnote]Ibid.[\/footnote] Congregational life is given over to what Richard Sennett calls the \u201cideology of intimacy,\u201d[footnote]The Fall of Public Man (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1977), 259.[\/footnote] the idea that \u201cthe purpose of human life is the fullest development of one\u2019s individual personality, which can take place only within ... intimate relationships.\u201d[footnote]Kiefert, Welcoming the Stranger, 24.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nWhen this is the case, worship and preaching tend to go in one of two different directions. The first direction is toward anonymity and bureaucratization. Worship becomes either an aesthetic or entertainment experience in which one simultaneously is left alone in one\u2019s private world and is engaged by a constant barrage of entertaining or aesthetic stimuli. Sermons resemble after-dinner speeches that entertain us, or they become moments of highly crafted aesthetic or oratorical wonder. This is worship controlled by the metaphor of the home theatre.\r\n\r\nAt the other end of the continuum, worship and preaching become attempts to <em>recreate the private sphere<\/em> in what Mark Searle calls \u201cthe psuedo-family atmosphere cultivated by suburban fellowshipping. Worship becomes what Robert Bellah calls a \u2018life style enclave.\u2019[footnote]Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984), 72ff., quoted in Ibid., 34.[\/footnote] Preaching will usually be folksy and intimate in style, with an abundance of storytelling and heart-rending self disclosure by the preacher. This is worship controlled by the metaphor of \u201cfamily\u201d as \u201cfolks like us.\u201d\r\n\r\nThroughout such worship and preaching, God is usually fairly domesticated. To use Palmer\u2019s language:\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px\">God is made an inmate of the private realm. Gone is the strangeness of God, the wild and alien quality of holiness that was so well known to primal peoples (witness the Hebrew Bible). In its place is an image of God as a\u00a0member of the church family circle. God is like a kind and comfortable old friend, a God who comforts and consoles us \u2013 and even reinforces our prejudices \u2013 but in no way challenges or stretches our lives.[footnote]\u201cSpirituality,\u201d 158.[\/footnote]<\/p>\r\nUnwittingly, many churches create a private realm in which neither the human stranger nor the strangeness of God has any place, a den of comfort in which parishioners can remain anonymous and not have to encounter anything that is strange or alien.\r\n\r\nKiefert points out how the stranger was very important to the worship and preaching of Israel.[footnote]Welcoming the Stranger, 57ff.[\/footnote] Worship was not a human device to hold God or others at bay; worship was a gift from God of God\u2019s self. This gift was offered in both the preaching and the worship of the people of God and was available to all. The stranger was invited to worship, and the needs and hopes of the stranger filled the preaching that guided the people of God in their journey away from sectarianism and nationalism toward becoming a truly universal faith.\r\n\r\nFrom the three mysterious strangers who visited Abraham and Sarah (Genesis 18:1-21), to the centurion who begged Jesus to heal his slave (Luke 7:1-10), to the woman who anointed Jesus\u2019 feet\u00a0with her tears (Luke 7:36-50), to the stranger who broke bread with the disciples on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13-35), the Biblical testimony reminds us over and over that strangers \u201cmay be God\u2019s special envoys to bless or challenge us.\u201d[footnote]John Koenig, New Testament Hospitality: Partnership with Strangers as Promise and Mission (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985), 3.[\/footnote] The history of the Church\u2019s mission is a testimony to the many ways that people of other nationalities, cultures and experiences re-interpret the Gospel so that the message comes alive in new, life-giving ways.\r\n\r\nThe reality of the stranger in our midst, therefore, <em>anticipates a Church not yet revealed<\/em> and becomes for us today a symbol of the next generation of believers, those who do not know the limitations of this generation\u2019s rituals and creeds. All these new believers know is that there has been a Word of hope spoken in the wilderness and that perhaps they can share in the discernment and articulation of this Word in this day and age. This will only happen, however, if the Church dares again to reach across its carefully defined boundaries and welcome these strangers into conversation.\r\n\r\n<strong>Preaching that Empowers<\/strong>\r\n\r\nWe now turn to the question: How can preaching express integrative power? Recent attempts to develop public theologies suggest several commitments that preachers must have if they are to form deeper alliances of spiritual power within the community of faith and between the community of faith and the world in which we live.\r\n\r\nFirst, we must attempt in our preaching to re-connect the private realm and the public realm. We must strive to take ourselves and those around us who have become satisfied with living cloistered lives of religious and personal self-protection and enter into some form of teaching-learning encounter with the\u00a0strangers both within the church and just beyond the walls of the church building. We must seek out the unique, strange and sometimes bizarre interpretations of the Gospel that are around us in our culture, in the minds and hearts of good church people, and latent within the recesses of our own lives, and come to terms with these in the pulpit.\r\n\r\nWe do not do this in order to appear contemporary and inclusive, to develop market-driven leadership strategies, or to make preaching more relevant. We do it because we believe that the Word of God becomes known when real people, who are in reality more different than they are alike, strive to discern and express their solidarity in Christ. We do this in order to cultivate within the theological imagination of our Christian communities an understanding of the other, the stranger, as the potential bearer of wisdom and insight, rather than the bearer of threatening values.\r\n\r\nSecond, we must cultivate in our worship and preaching a sense that our proclamation of the redemptive work of Christ is in continuity with the creative Word of God, the Word that created\u00a0and breathed life into the world. John Calvin, in Book I of the <em>Institutes of the Christian Religion<\/em>, asserts that the Scriptural testimony to God\u2019s revelation in Jesus Christ is a \u201chelp ... to direct us aright to the very Creator of the universe.\u201d[footnote]ed. John T. McNeill, trans. Ford Lewis Battles, The Library of Christian Classics, Vol. XX (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1975), 69.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nLike a pair of \u201cspectacles,\u201d biblical revelation helps us see clearly the hand of God at work redemptively in the world.[footnote]Ibid., 70.[\/footnote] In the same way, Roman Catholic scholar Karl Rahner has pointed out how Christian worship is the redemptive culmination of the \u201cliturgy of the world and its history.\u201d[footnote]\u201cSecular Life and the Sacraments,\u201d The Tablet (6 March, 1971) 236-38; (13 March, 1971) 267-68. Quoted in Searle, \u201cPrivate Religion,\u201d 41.[\/footnote] Our preaching must never proclaim Christ as if Christ\u2019s redemptive work related only to a selective history of salvation. Our homiletical imaginations must become large enough to embrace the relatively chaotic depths of both the inner life and the public life.\r\n\r\nIn order to accomplish this, the focus of preaching must move from the center of the Christian community to its margins, from the pastor\u2019s study to the sanctuary door. The preacher must stand at the boundary of the community, at the place where its cultural linguistic <em>mythos<\/em> is being challenged and assailed by the often silenced voices of strangers and of the \u201cGod beyond the gods.\u201d Such preaching struggles to discern what the redemptive power of Christ is in this one world and in this one history.\r\n\r\nThird, we must preach in such a way that the Church becomes a community of both ecclesial and public memory. Not only should our preaching remember and celebrate the history of the Church and the history of a particular congregation, but also we must remember especially the things that our culture and Church of privatism tend to forget.[footnote]Ibid., 42-3.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nChristine Smith, in her book, <em>Preaching as Weeping, Confession and Resistance<\/em>,[footnote](Louisville: Westminster\/John Knox Press, 1992).[\/footnote] encourages the preacher to remember the radical equality of all human beings before God. She invites preachers to remember the disabled, the sick, the aged, the dying, the abused, the unsuccessful, and all who have been relegated to the margins by our society.\r\n\r\nWe must cultivate in our preaching what Elaine Ramshaw calls a \u201ccritical memory.\u201d This means that we must work to recall the history, not of the conquerors, in order to display power and protect the status quo, but of the oppressed, the marginalized and the everyday saints, in order that all may find themselves present in the way that we narrate the story of God\u2019s saving activity in Jesus Christ.\r\n\r\n<strong>Nutritive and Integrative Power Together<\/strong>\r\n\r\nThe pathway to integrative power runs through nutritive power. I do not want it to sound as if I want to encourage preachers to stand on platforms and harangue congregations for being victims of privatization, pleading with them to become \u201cprophets like me.\u201d Neither do we need to sneak up behind parishioners with stories or parables in which the congregation consistently wears the \u201cbad guy\u201d hat of social alienation and privatization.\r\n\r\nInstead, we must place preaching into a larger process in which we slowly pry open the private realm by placing people face to face with each other in a context in which otherness, rather than homogeneity, is valued and taken seriously. My desire with collaborative preaching is to help to re-create congregations as learning communities where Christians share power and permit themselves to be instructed by each other\u2019s differences.\r\n\r\nThe only way to accomplish this is to include others in the theological interpretation of their situation and in making decisions about their own future. This requires that we take a good hard look at <em>how<\/em> we prepare and preach sermons and how we lead our congregations. We have to examine carefully the hidden curricula in our governance, programs, worship and preaching.\r\n\r\nWe must ask methodological, rhetorical and communicational questions. We must look at the relationship between our preaching style and our leadership style. Alfred North Whitehead reminds us that \u201cstyle\u201d is \u201cthe fashioning of power.\u201d[footnote]The Aims of Education (New York: The Free Press, 1967), 12.[\/footnote]\r\n\r\nIs there a style of preaching that is appropriate to express the kind of nutritive power that supports and fosters integrative power? I believe that there is. I call it collaborative preaching.[footnote]See my forthcoming book entitled: The Roundtable Pulpit: Collaborative Preaching and Congregational Leadership (Nashville: Abingdon Press, summer, 1995).[\/footnote] Let me project a hypothetical scenario that will suggest what I mean by collaborative preaching.\r\n\r\nWhat if preachers saw themselves as parish-based \u201chosts\u201d like Barnabas or Lydia, or Philologus and Julia, rather than as itinerant prophets like Jesus or the apostle Paul? What if preachers put together sermon brainstorming groups that would meet weekly to engage in critical roundtable conversation about the biblical text for Sunday morning? What if this group not only included the usual always-involved church members but also part-timers, folk on the margins of the community, missionaries on furlough, even members of the surrounding community?\r\n\r\nWhat if this group changed regularly, with five members rotating on and five members off every two months or so, so that within a couple of years, in the average-sized congregation, a hundred or so members would have had the chance to be involved? What if the names of those in the group were printed in the bulletin on Sunday morning in order to foster feedback and accountability?\r\n\r\nWhat if this group were given a <em>leading role<\/em> in helping the preacher to study the Bible, establish topics to preach, interpret these topics and decide what the congregation could do in light of these interpretations? What if the dynamics of their conversation were described or imitated from the pulpit on Sunday morning, so that the entire congregation was \u201clet in\u201d on this ongoing conversation?\r\n\r\nWould this kind of collaborative process help the pulpit ministry empower members of a congregation to stand with others (integrative power) at the same time that it expressed power for others (nutritive power)? I believe that it would.\r\n\r\nCollaborative preaching is not a new idea. It has been suggested, even tried, by well-respected homileticians and pastors for at least 40 years.[footnote]In the 1963 Lyman Beecher lectures entitled Parish Back Talk, (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1964), 76-82, Browne Barr advocated a \u201csermon seminar\u201d to assist the preacher in sermon preparation. Later, in The Ministering Congregation, (Philadelphia: United Church Press, 1972), 75-82, he and co pastor Mary Eakin described how the sermon seminar could become an integral part of an entire program of lay ministry. Homiletician John Killinger saw collaborative sermon preparation as a way to recover congregational interest in preaching. Listen to the cassette tape series by John Killinger entitled: \u201cHow to Enrich Your Preaching: An Eight-Session Cassette Course for Individual or Group Use\u201d (Nashville: Abingdon Press, Abingdon Audio Graphics, 1975). Collaborative models were also suggested by theoreticians of parish dialogue such as Ruel Howe and Clyde Reid. See Ruel L. Howe, The Miracle of Dialogue (New York: The Seabury Press, 1963), and Clyde. H. Reid, \u201cPreaching and the Nature of Communication,\u201d Pastoral Psychology 14 (1963), 40-49. More recently, Don Wardlaw has identified collaboration as a way to help the preacher correlate today\u2019s social context with the ancient social context of biblical passages. See \u201cPreaching as the Interface of Two Social Worlds: The Congregation as Corporate Agent in the Act of Preaching,\u201d Arthur Van Seters (ed.), Preaching as a Social Act: Theology and Practice (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1988), 55-93. Pamela Ann Moeller, in her book entitled A Kinesthetic Homiletic: Embodying Gospel in Preaching (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1993), 21, includes corporate sermon preparation as an integral part of her performative homiletic.[\/footnote]25 But only recently has it been explored\u00a0theologically, homiletically and practically as a viable, ongoing form of pulpit ministry. It is my belief that collaborative preaching may be one important road to travel in our quest for a way of preaching that actually empowers others to become the church of Jesus Christ.\r\n\r\nI have chosen in this lecture to accentuate one theological trajectory for collaborative preaching \u2013 its ability to empower congregations \u2013 to welcome the strangers in our midst into the fullness of liturgical, homiletic and congregational participation, to connect us with the \u201cpublic\u201d in our midst and beyond our church doors, and to share power and authority in interpreting our mission.\r\n\r\nLet me mention briefly six other benefits of collaborative preaching.\r\n\r\nFirst, it dramatically increases biblical literacy in local congregations. In essence, the method puts together inductive Bible study and preaching. In order to teach collaborative preaching, I have to spend as much time teaching my students how to lead Bible studies as I do teaching them how to prepare sermons that \u201clisten\u201d to what happens in Bible studies.\r\n\r\nThrough collaborative preaching, laity learn the Bible, and they learn what the Bible is for \u2013 i.e. proclaiming the good news to our generation. Laity are also empowered as interpreters of the Bible for their own daily lives. No longer do they feel that they need \u201cexperts\u201d on hand in order to read the Bible devotionally. If you couple this practice with the use of the lectionary to set the text each week, then your congregation will learn even more.\r\n\r\nSecond, collaborative preaching teaches congregations what preaching is, and what it is for. Lay participants say things like: \u201cI never realized that so much Bible study went into preaching.\u201d Or,\u00a0\u201cNow I know how important preaching is.\u201d Collaborative preaching tends to up the ante of appreciation for preaching and to make better listeners out of our congregations.\r\n\r\nThird, collaborative preaching closes the gap between preaching and the real lives of hearers. <em>Fulfilled in Your Hearing: The Homily in the Sunday Assembly<\/em>, (approved by the Bishop\u2019s Committee on Priestly Life and Ministry, National Conference of Catholic Bishops), states that \u201cthe preacher provides the congregation of the faithful with words to express their faith, and with words to express the human realities to which this faith responds.\u201d (6) Furthermore, \u201cthe preacher represents the community by voicing its concerns, naming its demons, and thus enabling it to gain some understanding and control of the evil which afflicts it.\u201d (7)\r\n\r\nCollaborative preaching does not assume that preachers can do this enormous task simply by \u201cidentifying\u201d with hearers. The range and breadth of human life and of the demonic in human life requires a careful exegesis of human life and the demonic <em>in this place and time<\/em>. In our socially diverse context today, it is more likely that we, as preachers, cannot identify with our hearers \u2013 and so we must <em>ask<\/em> them about their lives and about their afflictions.\r\n\r\nAlso, collaborative preaching groups, as I envision them, must move toward tentative decisions for forms of practice in their own lives and in and for the congregation as a whole. Preaching, then, becomes embedded in the lives and practices of living out the faith that actually exists in a particular local congregation.\r\n\r\nFourth, collaborative preaching acknowledges the influence of social location on biblical interpretation. It makes a difference whether I interpret the crucifixion while sitting in my study or office, or if I do it while sitting with a group of people at the mall,\u00a0or in someone\u2019s home or, perhaps, in a shelter for battered women. Even moving from the pastor\u2019s study to the youth room will make a tremendous difference.\r\n\r\nFifth, collaborative preaching teaches the preacher the humble practice of generosity as the priest\u2019s first movement in all relationships with laity. Fundamental to this method is learning how to put generosity before suspicion when engaged in theological and spiritual conversations with laity. Priests must learn to bring all of their learning in seminary in under the fledgling interpretations of laity <em>first<\/em>! Then they will invite the community to critique and discern itself <em>second<\/em>. And only <em>last<\/em> will the priest wade into the waters of didactic communication.\r\n\r\nFinally, collaborative preaching symbolizes that leadership in a particular congregation is collaborative in the first instance. Without precluding the need for sovereign and consultative leadership styles in certain circumstances, collaborative preaching symbolizes, from the center of liturgical practice, that participation in leadership in this congregation is welcomed \u2013 indeed, expected, and that an ecclesiology of the Church\u2019s sacramentality is taken seriously.\r\n\r\nHaving shared with you tonight what collaborative preaching is, and my convictions about why it is important, theologically and ethically, tomorrow I will walk you through the process of how to get and prepare a collaborative sermon. I hope that you will come back for more!","rendered":"<p>For those of you who don\u2019t know, I am a proponent of what I call collaborative preaching. I do not assume that this is the only way to engage in a theologically sound pulpit ministry \u2013 but I do hold that it is a form of pulpit ministry that is timely and can be a significant <em>empowering ministry<\/em> in churches who take lay involvement and participation in the Church seriously. I will return to describe what I mean by collaborative preaching later, and tomorrow.<\/p>\n<p>Let me give you a brief summary definition of collaborative preaching to tide you over: The word \u201ccollaboration,\u201d of course, means \u201cworking together.\u201d Collaborative preaching is a form of preaching in which homilist and hearer work together in a group\u00a0(the sermon roundtable) to establish and interpret topics for preaching. They also decide together what the practical results of those interpretations might be for the congregation. The homilist then goes into the pulpit and re-presents the dynamics of this collaborative conversation in the sermon.<\/p>\n<p>The title for my lecture tonight is \u201cCollaborative Preaching: God\u2019s Empowering Word.\u201d Empowerment is one of those words that we hear all the time these days, yet I am never quite sure that we know what it means, or why it is important for the Church and its ministry. One of the most useful definitions of empowerment that I have found is in the work of an old friend of many of us, Rollo May. According to May, empowerment includes two kinds of power: <em>nutritive<\/em> power (power for others), and <em>integrative<\/em> power (power with others).<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Regina Coll CSJ, \u201cPower, Powerlessness and Empowerment,\u201d Religious Education 81, no. 3, (Summer \u201886): 417.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-1\" href=\"#footnote-43-1\" aria-label=\"Footnote 1\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[1]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Nutritive power is nutritious, it feeds power to others, by giving it away. It is power <em>for<\/em> others, shared power, power that has the other person\u2019s well-being in mind, power that is undergirded by love. Nutritive <em>empowerment<\/em> includes all the ways that leaders\u00a0invite or permit others to assume responsibility for the direction of their own lives and to assume leadership roles themselves. It is all the ways a leader includes followers in an active role in the interpretation of their situation and in making decisions about the future.<\/p>\n<p>I will say more about nutritive empowerment at the end of this lecture, because to my way of thinking, nutritive power (power for others) is the means or pathway to integrative power (power with others). Tonight, however, I want to concentrate first on <em>integrative<\/em> empowerment in ministry. Then I want to move on to consider how nutritive power provides a pathway to integrative empowerment in our churches.<\/p>\n<p>First, integrative empowerment. Simply put, integrative empowerment is power with others. It is generated when people are integrated with one another. Integrative empowerment is sparked when spiritual conversations, connections and alliances are formed between persons or communities that are, in reality, very different from one another. Integrative <em>empowerment<\/em> includes all the ways that a leader connects people within one community or between communities.<\/p>\n<p>In our generation, integrative empowerment requires that we develop a \u201cpublic theology\u201d for preaching.<\/p>\n<p><strong>A Public Theology for Preaching<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Public theologians assert that the central task of the Christian ministry in the late modern period is to \u201cresist the gravitational pull of privatization\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"\u201cA Spirituality of Public Life\u201d in Parker Palmer, Barbara G. Wheeler, and James W. Fowler, (eds.), Caring for the Commonweal: Education for Religious and Public Life (Mercer University Press, 1990), 159.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-2\" href=\"#footnote-43-2\" aria-label=\"Footnote 2\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[2]<\/sup><\/a> that has gripped the churches, and to re connect the Gospel message with the public realm. According to Parker Palmer, the word \u201cpublic\u201d is a metaphor for the \u201cebb and flow of the <em>company of strangers<\/em>, which happens in relatively\u00a0unstructured and disorderly ways: on the city streets, in parks and squares, at festivals and rallies, and shopping malls, neighborhoods and voluntary associations.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 152.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-3\" href=\"#footnote-43-3\" aria-label=\"Footnote 3\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[3]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Public life is a \u201cmessy middle layer\u201d between formal social or political institutions (such as the government) and the private realm (of family and friends) \u201cfrom which the stranger <em>qua<\/em> stranger is excluded.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 152-3.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-4\" href=\"#footnote-43-4\" aria-label=\"Footnote 4\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[4]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Philosopher of communication Jurgen Habermas speaks about this realm of the public as \u201cthe lifeworld.\u201d According to Habermas, in our world today, this \u201clifeworld\u201d is being squeezed from two sides. On one side is what he calls the \u201csystem\u201d (of\u00a0exchange\/money, media, and corporate and political institutions). On the other side is the private realm \u2013 the ever-expanding cult of the individual, accumulation and the closed family.<\/p>\n<p>The communicative goal of voluntary organizations like the Church, therefore, is to wage a war for this messy middle layer \u2013 strengthening it so that community is not lost, and so the \u201csystem\u201d can once again become a servant, rather than our master.<\/p>\n<p>According to Palmer, we cannot be spiritually alive as Christians unless we venture forth into the public realm and encounter the \u201cstrangers\u201d who live there. The stranger is the <em>other<\/em> who presents us with what Edward Farley calls the \u201cmysterious presence of something which contests my projecting meanings on it, an unforeseeable depth which &#8230; cannot be cognitively or emotionally mastered.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Good and Evil, Interpreting a Human Condition (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress Press, 1990), 39.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-5\" href=\"#footnote-43-5\" aria-label=\"Footnote 5\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[5]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Theologically, the stranger represents both the Holy Other and the human <em>other<\/em>: the dual foci of the great commandment. As Christians, we are commanded to love God, the Holy Other, who is the ground of all love and justice. We are likewise commanded to love neighbor, the human <em>other<\/em>, whose vulnerability invites us beyond ourselves into the realm of compassion, suffering and responsibility.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Farley, Good and Evil, 41-42.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-6\" href=\"#footnote-43-6\" aria-label=\"Footnote 6\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[6]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Patrick Keifert identifies three ways to think of the stranger in relation to the Church: 1) as the outsiders who come from beyond the Church itself; 2) as \u201cinside strangers\u201d who \u201cremain outside the intimate group that usually makes up most of the leadership in a\u00a0congregation\u201d; and 3) as a description of \u201cthe irreducible difference between two persons that exist in any encounter.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Welcoming the Stranger: A Public Theology of Worship and Evangelism (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992), 8-9.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-7\" href=\"#footnote-43-7\" aria-label=\"Footnote 7\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[7]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>When I use the word \u201cstranger,\u201d therefore, do not assume that I am speaking of persons who represent some exotic form of experience or behavior. I am simply re-conceptualizing the way we think about the people all around us, in the Church and beyond. The realm of the stranger is <em>one step beyond the realm of identification<\/em>. Once we cease to assume that we can identify with the person sitting next to us, or the person we think we know so well, and once we learn not to project our own meanings or expectations onto them, then we enter into that uncharted territory where they might instruct us as strangers.<\/p>\n<p>Strangers are all around us, in the pews next to us and beyond the sanctuary doors. There\u2019s Martha who, age 68 and childless, battles loneliness. There\u2019s Susan, a lesbian, who wonders what to do with her sexuality in both culture and Church. There\u2019s Bill, a busy lawyer, who is often angry and suffers under the oppressive weight of the upper middle class rat race.<\/p>\n<p>There\u2019s Clara, a heavy smoker dying from lung cancer, living in fear and denial because her family owns part of a huge tobacco interest. There\u2019s Bob, a missionary, who sometimes wonders if what he does really makes a difference. There\u2019s Jenny, a 7-year-old, who feels a great love for God and who wants to give more to the Church and to the poor. There\u2019s Carol, a single parent of three\u00a0children, struggling at the bottom of the pay scale. And there are many, many others in the church and in the community around us.<\/p>\n<p>To ask these people what kinds of interpretive spins they put on the Gospel of Jesus Christ is to embark on an adventure in the public realm. If we ask what in particular they see in the Gospel that is meaningful for their lives, we will hear all kinds of things, some of which will seem to us to be heretical.<\/p>\n<p>Yet, if we dare to involve these diverse folk in a roundtable process through which they are invited to wrestle with the Scripture, theology and confessions of the Church, and are expected to come to terms with the Gospel and with each other, we will create an opportunity for a preachable Word to emerge that may bind the Church and the world together in solidarity and hope.<\/p>\n<p>This is the adventure that follows when we take the discernment of the Word of God out of the private realms of the pastor\u2019s study and the devotional closet into the public arena, where strangers within and beyond the Church hold us accountable to the unique reality and particularity of their own spiritual experience.<\/p>\n<p>There are at least two usual ways to miss out on this adventure in the public realm. One way is to \u201ctry to gain enough power to enforce our own standards on the alien experience.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Palmer, \u201cSpirituality,\u201d 155.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-8\" href=\"#footnote-43-8\" aria-label=\"Footnote 8\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[8]<\/sup><\/a> According to Palmer, \u201c(this) takes the form of religious institutions and hierarchies controlling the definition of \u2018orthodoxy\u2019 and suppressing all signs of \u2018heresy.\u2019\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-9\" href=\"#footnote-43-9\" aria-label=\"Footnote 9\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[9]<\/sup><\/a> Homiletically, it takes the form of preaching in which a clerical elite rehearses timeless exegetical pearls of wisdom and dated doctrine, or repeats platitudes and formulas that are supposed to have magical efficacy.<\/p>\n<p>The second way to miss out on this adventure in the public realm is to create and fortify something called a \u201cprivate life.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-10\" href=\"#footnote-43-10\" aria-label=\"Footnote 10\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[10]<\/sup><\/a> Palmer asserts that \u201cinstead of encountering, engaging, and growing from the diversity within and outside us, we have tried to avoid it altogether by building high walls of privatism.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-11\" href=\"#footnote-43-11\" aria-label=\"Footnote 11\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[11]<\/sup><\/a> Congregational life is given over to what Richard Sennett calls the \u201cideology of intimacy,\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The Fall of Public Man (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1977), 259.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-12\" href=\"#footnote-43-12\" aria-label=\"Footnote 12\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[12]<\/sup><\/a> the idea that \u201cthe purpose of human life is the fullest development of one\u2019s individual personality, which can take place only within &#8230; intimate relationships.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Kiefert, Welcoming the Stranger, 24.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-13\" href=\"#footnote-43-13\" aria-label=\"Footnote 13\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[13]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>When this is the case, worship and preaching tend to go in one of two different directions. The first direction is toward anonymity and bureaucratization. Worship becomes either an aesthetic or entertainment experience in which one simultaneously is left alone in one\u2019s private world and is engaged by a constant barrage of entertaining or aesthetic stimuli. Sermons resemble after-dinner speeches that entertain us, or they become moments of highly crafted aesthetic or oratorical wonder. This is worship controlled by the metaphor of the home theatre.<\/p>\n<p>At the other end of the continuum, worship and preaching become attempts to <em>recreate the private sphere<\/em> in what Mark Searle calls \u201cthe psuedo-family atmosphere cultivated by suburban fellowshipping. Worship becomes what Robert Bellah calls a \u2018life style enclave.\u2019<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984), 72ff., quoted in Ibid., 34.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-14\" href=\"#footnote-43-14\" aria-label=\"Footnote 14\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[14]<\/sup><\/a> Preaching will usually be folksy and intimate in style, with an abundance of storytelling and heart-rending self disclosure by the preacher. This is worship controlled by the metaphor of \u201cfamily\u201d as \u201cfolks like us.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Throughout such worship and preaching, God is usually fairly domesticated. To use Palmer\u2019s language:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px\">God is made an inmate of the private realm. Gone is the strangeness of God, the wild and alien quality of holiness that was so well known to primal peoples (witness the Hebrew Bible). In its place is an image of God as a\u00a0member of the church family circle. God is like a kind and comfortable old friend, a God who comforts and consoles us \u2013 and even reinforces our prejudices \u2013 but in no way challenges or stretches our lives.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"\u201cSpirituality,\u201d 158.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-15\" href=\"#footnote-43-15\" aria-label=\"Footnote 15\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[15]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Unwittingly, many churches create a private realm in which neither the human stranger nor the strangeness of God has any place, a den of comfort in which parishioners can remain anonymous and not have to encounter anything that is strange or alien.<\/p>\n<p>Kiefert points out how the stranger was very important to the worship and preaching of Israel.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Welcoming the Stranger, 57ff.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-16\" href=\"#footnote-43-16\" aria-label=\"Footnote 16\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[16]<\/sup><\/a> Worship was not a human device to hold God or others at bay; worship was a gift from God of God\u2019s self. This gift was offered in both the preaching and the worship of the people of God and was available to all. The stranger was invited to worship, and the needs and hopes of the stranger filled the preaching that guided the people of God in their journey away from sectarianism and nationalism toward becoming a truly universal faith.<\/p>\n<p>From the three mysterious strangers who visited Abraham and Sarah (Genesis 18:1-21), to the centurion who begged Jesus to heal his slave (Luke 7:1-10), to the woman who anointed Jesus\u2019 feet\u00a0with her tears (Luke 7:36-50), to the stranger who broke bread with the disciples on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13-35), the Biblical testimony reminds us over and over that strangers \u201cmay be God\u2019s special envoys to bless or challenge us.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"John Koenig, New Testament Hospitality: Partnership with Strangers as Promise and Mission (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985), 3.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-17\" href=\"#footnote-43-17\" aria-label=\"Footnote 17\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[17]<\/sup><\/a> The history of the Church\u2019s mission is a testimony to the many ways that people of other nationalities, cultures and experiences re-interpret the Gospel so that the message comes alive in new, life-giving ways.<\/p>\n<p>The reality of the stranger in our midst, therefore, <em>anticipates a Church not yet revealed<\/em> and becomes for us today a symbol of the next generation of believers, those who do not know the limitations of this generation\u2019s rituals and creeds. All these new believers know is that there has been a Word of hope spoken in the wilderness and that perhaps they can share in the discernment and articulation of this Word in this day and age. This will only happen, however, if the Church dares again to reach across its carefully defined boundaries and welcome these strangers into conversation.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Preaching that Empowers<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>We now turn to the question: How can preaching express integrative power? Recent attempts to develop public theologies suggest several commitments that preachers must have if they are to form deeper alliances of spiritual power within the community of faith and between the community of faith and the world in which we live.<\/p>\n<p>First, we must attempt in our preaching to re-connect the private realm and the public realm. We must strive to take ourselves and those around us who have become satisfied with living cloistered lives of religious and personal self-protection and enter into some form of teaching-learning encounter with the\u00a0strangers both within the church and just beyond the walls of the church building. We must seek out the unique, strange and sometimes bizarre interpretations of the Gospel that are around us in our culture, in the minds and hearts of good church people, and latent within the recesses of our own lives, and come to terms with these in the pulpit.<\/p>\n<p>We do not do this in order to appear contemporary and inclusive, to develop market-driven leadership strategies, or to make preaching more relevant. We do it because we believe that the Word of God becomes known when real people, who are in reality more different than they are alike, strive to discern and express their solidarity in Christ. We do this in order to cultivate within the theological imagination of our Christian communities an understanding of the other, the stranger, as the potential bearer of wisdom and insight, rather than the bearer of threatening values.<\/p>\n<p>Second, we must cultivate in our worship and preaching a sense that our proclamation of the redemptive work of Christ is in continuity with the creative Word of God, the Word that created\u00a0and breathed life into the world. John Calvin, in Book I of the <em>Institutes of the Christian Religion<\/em>, asserts that the Scriptural testimony to God\u2019s revelation in Jesus Christ is a \u201chelp &#8230; to direct us aright to the very Creator of the universe.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"ed. John T. McNeill, trans. Ford Lewis Battles, The Library of Christian Classics, Vol. XX (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1975), 69.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-18\" href=\"#footnote-43-18\" aria-label=\"Footnote 18\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[18]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Like a pair of \u201cspectacles,\u201d biblical revelation helps us see clearly the hand of God at work redemptively in the world.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 70.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-19\" href=\"#footnote-43-19\" aria-label=\"Footnote 19\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[19]<\/sup><\/a> In the same way, Roman Catholic scholar Karl Rahner has pointed out how Christian worship is the redemptive culmination of the \u201cliturgy of the world and its history.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"\u201cSecular Life and the Sacraments,\u201d The Tablet (6 March, 1971) 236-38; (13 March, 1971) 267-68. Quoted in Searle, \u201cPrivate Religion,\u201d 41.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-20\" href=\"#footnote-43-20\" aria-label=\"Footnote 20\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[20]<\/sup><\/a> Our preaching must never proclaim Christ as if Christ\u2019s redemptive work related only to a selective history of salvation. Our homiletical imaginations must become large enough to embrace the relatively chaotic depths of both the inner life and the public life.<\/p>\n<p>In order to accomplish this, the focus of preaching must move from the center of the Christian community to its margins, from the pastor\u2019s study to the sanctuary door. The preacher must stand at the boundary of the community, at the place where its cultural linguistic <em>mythos<\/em> is being challenged and assailed by the often silenced voices of strangers and of the \u201cGod beyond the gods.\u201d Such preaching struggles to discern what the redemptive power of Christ is in this one world and in this one history.<\/p>\n<p>Third, we must preach in such a way that the Church becomes a community of both ecclesial and public memory. Not only should our preaching remember and celebrate the history of the Church and the history of a particular congregation, but also we must remember especially the things that our culture and Church of privatism tend to forget.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"Ibid., 42-3.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-21\" href=\"#footnote-43-21\" aria-label=\"Footnote 21\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[21]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Christine Smith, in her book, <em>Preaching as Weeping, Confession and Resistance<\/em>,<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"(Louisville: Westminster\/John Knox Press, 1992).\" id=\"return-footnote-43-22\" href=\"#footnote-43-22\" aria-label=\"Footnote 22\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[22]<\/sup><\/a> encourages the preacher to remember the radical equality of all human beings before God. She invites preachers to remember the disabled, the sick, the aged, the dying, the abused, the unsuccessful, and all who have been relegated to the margins by our society.<\/p>\n<p>We must cultivate in our preaching what Elaine Ramshaw calls a \u201ccritical memory.\u201d This means that we must work to recall the history, not of the conquerors, in order to display power and protect the status quo, but of the oppressed, the marginalized and the everyday saints, in order that all may find themselves present in the way that we narrate the story of God\u2019s saving activity in Jesus Christ.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Nutritive and Integrative Power Together<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The pathway to integrative power runs through nutritive power. I do not want it to sound as if I want to encourage preachers to stand on platforms and harangue congregations for being victims of privatization, pleading with them to become \u201cprophets like me.\u201d Neither do we need to sneak up behind parishioners with stories or parables in which the congregation consistently wears the \u201cbad guy\u201d hat of social alienation and privatization.<\/p>\n<p>Instead, we must place preaching into a larger process in which we slowly pry open the private realm by placing people face to face with each other in a context in which otherness, rather than homogeneity, is valued and taken seriously. My desire with collaborative preaching is to help to re-create congregations as learning communities where Christians share power and permit themselves to be instructed by each other\u2019s differences.<\/p>\n<p>The only way to accomplish this is to include others in the theological interpretation of their situation and in making decisions about their own future. This requires that we take a good hard look at <em>how<\/em> we prepare and preach sermons and how we lead our congregations. We have to examine carefully the hidden curricula in our governance, programs, worship and preaching.<\/p>\n<p>We must ask methodological, rhetorical and communicational questions. We must look at the relationship between our preaching style and our leadership style. Alfred North Whitehead reminds us that \u201cstyle\u201d is \u201cthe fashioning of power.\u201d<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"The Aims of Education (New York: The Free Press, 1967), 12.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-23\" href=\"#footnote-43-23\" aria-label=\"Footnote 23\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[23]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Is there a style of preaching that is appropriate to express the kind of nutritive power that supports and fosters integrative power? I believe that there is. I call it collaborative preaching.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"See my forthcoming book entitled: The Roundtable Pulpit: Collaborative Preaching and Congregational Leadership (Nashville: Abingdon Press, summer, 1995).\" id=\"return-footnote-43-24\" href=\"#footnote-43-24\" aria-label=\"Footnote 24\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[24]<\/sup><\/a> Let me project a hypothetical scenario that will suggest what I mean by collaborative preaching.<\/p>\n<p>What if preachers saw themselves as parish-based \u201chosts\u201d like Barnabas or Lydia, or Philologus and Julia, rather than as itinerant prophets like Jesus or the apostle Paul? What if preachers put together sermon brainstorming groups that would meet weekly to engage in critical roundtable conversation about the biblical text for Sunday morning? What if this group not only included the usual always-involved church members but also part-timers, folk on the margins of the community, missionaries on furlough, even members of the surrounding community?<\/p>\n<p>What if this group changed regularly, with five members rotating on and five members off every two months or so, so that within a couple of years, in the average-sized congregation, a hundred or so members would have had the chance to be involved? What if the names of those in the group were printed in the bulletin on Sunday morning in order to foster feedback and accountability?<\/p>\n<p>What if this group were given a <em>leading role<\/em> in helping the preacher to study the Bible, establish topics to preach, interpret these topics and decide what the congregation could do in light of these interpretations? What if the dynamics of their conversation were described or imitated from the pulpit on Sunday morning, so that the entire congregation was \u201clet in\u201d on this ongoing conversation?<\/p>\n<p>Would this kind of collaborative process help the pulpit ministry empower members of a congregation to stand with others (integrative power) at the same time that it expressed power for others (nutritive power)? I believe that it would.<\/p>\n<p>Collaborative preaching is not a new idea. It has been suggested, even tried, by well-respected homileticians and pastors for at least 40 years.<a class=\"footnote\" title=\"In the 1963 Lyman Beecher lectures entitled Parish Back Talk, (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1964), 76-82, Browne Barr advocated a \u201csermon seminar\u201d to assist the preacher in sermon preparation. Later, in The Ministering Congregation, (Philadelphia: United Church Press, 1972), 75-82, he and co pastor Mary Eakin described how the sermon seminar could become an integral part of an entire program of lay ministry. Homiletician John Killinger saw collaborative sermon preparation as a way to recover congregational interest in preaching. Listen to the cassette tape series by John Killinger entitled: \u201cHow to Enrich Your Preaching: An Eight-Session Cassette Course for Individual or Group Use\u201d (Nashville: Abingdon Press, Abingdon Audio Graphics, 1975). Collaborative models were also suggested by theoreticians of parish dialogue such as Ruel Howe and Clyde Reid. See Ruel L. Howe, The Miracle of Dialogue (New York: The Seabury Press, 1963), and Clyde. H. Reid, \u201cPreaching and the Nature of Communication,\u201d Pastoral Psychology 14 (1963), 40-49. More recently, Don Wardlaw has identified collaboration as a way to help the preacher correlate today\u2019s social context with the ancient social context of biblical passages. See \u201cPreaching as the Interface of Two Social Worlds: The Congregation as Corporate Agent in the Act of Preaching,\u201d Arthur Van Seters (ed.), Preaching as a Social Act: Theology and Practice (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1988), 55-93. Pamela Ann Moeller, in her book entitled A Kinesthetic Homiletic: Embodying Gospel in Preaching (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1993), 21, includes corporate sermon preparation as an integral part of her performative homiletic.\" id=\"return-footnote-43-25\" href=\"#footnote-43-25\" aria-label=\"Footnote 25\"><sup class=\"footnote\">[25]<\/sup><\/a>25 But only recently has it been explored\u00a0theologically, homiletically and practically as a viable, ongoing form of pulpit ministry. It is my belief that collaborative preaching may be one important road to travel in our quest for a way of preaching that actually empowers others to become the church of Jesus Christ.<\/p>\n<p>I have chosen in this lecture to accentuate one theological trajectory for collaborative preaching \u2013 its ability to empower congregations \u2013 to welcome the strangers in our midst into the fullness of liturgical, homiletic and congregational participation, to connect us with the \u201cpublic\u201d in our midst and beyond our church doors, and to share power and authority in interpreting our mission.<\/p>\n<p>Let me mention briefly six other benefits of collaborative preaching.<\/p>\n<p>First, it dramatically increases biblical literacy in local congregations. In essence, the method puts together inductive Bible study and preaching. In order to teach collaborative preaching, I have to spend as much time teaching my students how to lead Bible studies as I do teaching them how to prepare sermons that \u201clisten\u201d to what happens in Bible studies.<\/p>\n<p>Through collaborative preaching, laity learn the Bible, and they learn what the Bible is for \u2013 i.e. proclaiming the good news to our generation. Laity are also empowered as interpreters of the Bible for their own daily lives. No longer do they feel that they need \u201cexperts\u201d on hand in order to read the Bible devotionally. If you couple this practice with the use of the lectionary to set the text each week, then your congregation will learn even more.<\/p>\n<p>Second, collaborative preaching teaches congregations what preaching is, and what it is for. Lay participants say things like: \u201cI never realized that so much Bible study went into preaching.\u201d Or,\u00a0\u201cNow I know how important preaching is.\u201d Collaborative preaching tends to up the ante of appreciation for preaching and to make better listeners out of our congregations.<\/p>\n<p>Third, collaborative preaching closes the gap between preaching and the real lives of hearers. <em>Fulfilled in Your Hearing: The Homily in the Sunday Assembly<\/em>, (approved by the Bishop\u2019s Committee on Priestly Life and Ministry, National Conference of Catholic Bishops), states that \u201cthe preacher provides the congregation of the faithful with words to express their faith, and with words to express the human realities to which this faith responds.\u201d (6) Furthermore, \u201cthe preacher represents the community by voicing its concerns, naming its demons, and thus enabling it to gain some understanding and control of the evil which afflicts it.\u201d (7)<\/p>\n<p>Collaborative preaching does not assume that preachers can do this enormous task simply by \u201cidentifying\u201d with hearers. The range and breadth of human life and of the demonic in human life requires a careful exegesis of human life and the demonic <em>in this place and time<\/em>. In our socially diverse context today, it is more likely that we, as preachers, cannot identify with our hearers \u2013 and so we must <em>ask<\/em> them about their lives and about their afflictions.<\/p>\n<p>Also, collaborative preaching groups, as I envision them, must move toward tentative decisions for forms of practice in their own lives and in and for the congregation as a whole. Preaching, then, becomes embedded in the lives and practices of living out the faith that actually exists in a particular local congregation.<\/p>\n<p>Fourth, collaborative preaching acknowledges the influence of social location on biblical interpretation. It makes a difference whether I interpret the crucifixion while sitting in my study or office, or if I do it while sitting with a group of people at the mall,\u00a0or in someone\u2019s home or, perhaps, in a shelter for battered women. Even moving from the pastor\u2019s study to the youth room will make a tremendous difference.<\/p>\n<p>Fifth, collaborative preaching teaches the preacher the humble practice of generosity as the priest\u2019s first movement in all relationships with laity. Fundamental to this method is learning how to put generosity before suspicion when engaged in theological and spiritual conversations with laity. Priests must learn to bring all of their learning in seminary in under the fledgling interpretations of laity <em>first<\/em>! Then they will invite the community to critique and discern itself <em>second<\/em>. And only <em>last<\/em> will the priest wade into the waters of didactic communication.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, collaborative preaching symbolizes that leadership in a particular congregation is collaborative in the first instance. Without precluding the need for sovereign and consultative leadership styles in certain circumstances, collaborative preaching symbolizes, from the center of liturgical practice, that participation in leadership in this congregation is welcomed \u2013 indeed, expected, and that an ecclesiology of the Church\u2019s sacramentality is taken seriously.<\/p>\n<p>Having shared with you tonight what collaborative preaching is, and my convictions about why it is important, theologically and ethically, tomorrow I will walk you through the process of how to get and prepare a collaborative sermon. I hope that you will come back for more!<\/p>\n<hr class=\"before-footnotes clear\" \/><div class=\"footnotes\"><ol><li id=\"footnote-43-1\">Regina Coll CSJ, \u201cPower, Powerlessness and Empowerment,\u201d Religious Education 81, no. 3, (Summer \u201886): 417. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-1\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 1\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-2\">\u201cA Spirituality of Public Life\u201d in Parker Palmer, Barbara G. Wheeler, and James W. Fowler, (eds.), Caring for the Commonweal: Education for Religious and Public Life (Mercer University Press, 1990), 159. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-2\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 2\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-3\">Ibid., 152. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-3\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 3\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-4\">Ibid., 152-3. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-4\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 4\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-5\">Good and Evil, Interpreting a Human Condition (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress Press, 1990), 39. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-5\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 5\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-6\">Farley, Good and Evil, 41-42. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-6\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 6\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-7\">Welcoming the Stranger: A Public Theology of Worship and Evangelism (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992), 8-9. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-7\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 7\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-8\">Palmer, \u201cSpirituality,\u201d 155. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-8\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 8\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-9\">Ibid. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-9\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 9\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-10\">Ibid. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-10\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 10\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-11\">Ibid. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-11\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 11\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-12\">The Fall of Public Man (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1977), 259. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-12\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 12\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-13\">Kiefert, Welcoming the Stranger, 24. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-13\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 13\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-14\">Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984), 72ff., quoted in Ibid., 34. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-14\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 14\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-15\">\u201cSpirituality,\u201d 158. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-15\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 15\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-16\">Welcoming the Stranger, 57ff. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-16\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 16\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-17\">John Koenig, New Testament Hospitality: Partnership with Strangers as Promise and Mission (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985), 3. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-17\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 17\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-18\">ed. John T. McNeill, trans. Ford Lewis Battles, The Library of Christian Classics, Vol. XX (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1975), 69. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-18\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 18\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-19\">Ibid., 70. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-19\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 19\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-20\">\u201cSecular Life and the Sacraments,\u201d The Tablet (6 March, 1971) 236-38; (13 March, 1971) 267-68. Quoted in Searle, \u201cPrivate Religion,\u201d 41. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-20\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 20\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-21\">Ibid., 42-3. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-21\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 21\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-22\">(Louisville: Westminster\/John Knox Press, 1992). <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-22\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 22\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-23\">The Aims of Education (New York: The Free Press, 1967), 12. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-23\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 23\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-24\">See my forthcoming book entitled: The Roundtable Pulpit: Collaborative Preaching and Congregational Leadership (Nashville: Abingdon Press, summer, 1995). <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-24\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 24\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><li id=\"footnote-43-25\">In the 1963 Lyman Beecher lectures entitled Parish Back Talk, (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1964), 76-82, Browne Barr advocated a \u201csermon seminar\u201d to assist the preacher in sermon preparation. Later, in The Ministering Congregation, (Philadelphia: United Church Press, 1972), 75-82, he and co pastor Mary Eakin described how the sermon seminar could become an integral part of an entire program of lay ministry. Homiletician John Killinger saw collaborative sermon preparation as a way to recover congregational interest in preaching. Listen to the cassette tape series by John Killinger entitled: \u201cHow to Enrich Your Preaching: An Eight-Session Cassette Course for Individual or Group Use\u201d (Nashville: Abingdon Press, Abingdon Audio Graphics, 1975). Collaborative models were also suggested by theoreticians of parish dialogue such as Ruel Howe and Clyde Reid. See Ruel L. Howe, The Miracle of Dialogue (New York: The Seabury Press, 1963), and Clyde. H. Reid, \u201cPreaching and the Nature of Communication,\u201d Pastoral Psychology 14 (1963), 40-49. More recently, Don Wardlaw has identified collaboration as a way to help the preacher correlate today\u2019s social context with the ancient social context of biblical passages. See \u201cPreaching as the Interface of Two Social Worlds: The Congregation as Corporate Agent in the Act of Preaching,\u201d Arthur Van Seters (ed.), Preaching as a Social Act: Theology and Practice (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1988), 55-93. Pamela Ann Moeller, in her book entitled A Kinesthetic Homiletic: Embodying Gospel in Preaching (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1993), 21, includes corporate sermon preparation as an integral part of her performative homiletic. <a href=\"#return-footnote-43-25\" class=\"return-footnote\" aria-label=\"Return to footnote 25\">&crarr;<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div>","protected":false},"author":3,"menu_order":4,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":["john-s-mcclure"],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[67],"license":[],"part":3,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/43"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/43\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":66,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/43\/revisions\/66"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/3"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/43\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=43"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=43"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=43"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks.palni.org\/martenlecturesvol1\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=43"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}