Monday, November 12, 2007

Do we hold the newspaper high enough?

Damien got a couple very good questions from a student this week, and we thought we'd post them on the blog to get some conversation started. Here's one of the two from Chad:
I listened to Mark Driscoll preach this week, and I was edified. I was edified before he even got spiritual. He was just being sarcastic and talking about culture. It was encouraging to me that he is such a good exegete of culture. He holds the Bible in his right hand and in his left hand, the newspaper, movies, comedians... He's as good if not better at exegeting the culture as he is exegeting the text. So my question is this: as restorationist, we hold the Bible high, but are we holding the newspaper high enough?

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Electronic Preaching Resources

The alumni office wants the preaching dept. to list the best electronic preaching resources (internet, software) out there. So, my question to our internet public (if you haven't abandoned us yet because we're not keeping up with the blog) is: what are you using by way of electronic resources?

We appreciate all the help we can get.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

New "Preaching Points" Podcast

Check out the new weekly podcast being offered by the Center for Preaching out of Gordon Conwell. So far two editions have been provided with more to come each Monday. They are short (5-6 minutes), to the point and provide some quick insights into the preaching task. Featured presenters include the likes of Scott Gibson, Jeffrey Arthurs, and "the man" Haddon Robinson. To subscribe you can either visit www.gordonconwell.edu/ockenga/cfp or you can enter "Preaching Points" into iTunes.

Here's a quote from the second edition, "Being Biblical and Contemporary:"

"I some times say, 'We don't teach the Bible, we teach people the Bible.' The task of preaching is not to help people just understand the Biblical text (as important as that is); it's to understand how the Biblical text relates to them. Quite frankly, both of those deserve our attention."
- Haddon Robinson

Monday, September 17, 2007

Thinking about Technology

This post is for thinking about the practicality of using technology in the sermon. The comments on the previous post were mostly about the need to use concrete imagery in our preaching, be that through video, story-telling, or low-tech visuals.

As a follow-up post, I think that it's fitting to get some concrete examples for how fellow preachers have used technology in their preaching, what worked and what didn't.

For my last chapel message, I used more technology than I generally do, with a film clip from A Christmas Story to begin and PowerPoint throughout. The reason I used the film clip was because it was a pretty heavy sermon and I wanted to start light (the image of Scut Farkus with his yellow eyes) -- and because the clip narrated itself (it didn't need any set-up)

The reason I used PowerPoint is because I was using a lot of text (including some quotes), and I wanted to move through them pretty quickly. Also, the stage had two enormous projection screens, and I needed something up there (else it would look pretty stark). All in all, I was really pleased with how it worked. The tech crew did a great job following along with me (here's a lesson: give the tech crew as much help as you can -- they had both my script with notations as well as a print-out of the slides).

What are your stories?

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Preaching and Video Technology

Gary Zustiak sent me the following link, it's an interview with 3 different preachers on their use of technology and the impact technology (specifically video technology) has had on the preaching task. Pretty helpful with regard to the issues involved at various types of churches (from North Point Community to a Mennonite church in AZ)

http://www.christianitytoday.com/le/2007/003/1.28.html

Here are some of my thoughts with regard to the use (and perhaps over-use) of video tech in preaching:

First, I think part of the reason video has taken off is because, in general, we are poor story-tellers. It's easier for us to put the DVD in and press "play" than to shape our story-telling in a way that is compelling for our audience to hear. I was thinking about this as I watched football this past Sunday afternoon, wondering where all the good play-by-play announcers went. The days of Pat Summerall, Keith Jackson, Dick Enberg, and Vin Scully are over, it seems. Those guys could really turn a phrase and describe the action in a concrete and colorful way, and you could listen to them for hours.

We need to work on our attention to detail in our story-telling, being more concrete in our descriptions and particular when it comes to our rhythm and pacing. I would rather listen to a good story-teller than watch a film clip in a sermon (and I'm a cinema-lover!)

Second, practicality shapes what we do to a large degree. This past Sunday, we had a long-time church member give a testimony via video. The reason she didn't do it live is because we have 6 services that meet 4 different hours (2 hours have 2 simultaneous services in different parts of the building) -- and logistics demanded that we have the testimony on the video screen. But something got lost, at least for me. There's a big difference between seeing someone stand up before God's community and nervously talk about how God is leading them rather seeing a professionally-done video with edits and different camera angles.

If Marshall McLuhan is right, and our methods carry with them implicit messages, this is definitely a conversation worth having.

Monday, September 10, 2007

"I Proclaim"

This blog is a place for the preaching faculty of Ozark Christian to post interesting our thoughts on preaching, articles and books we've read, and sermons we've heard. I'm hoping for a number of contributors, so that there's at least a couple new items each week.

The goal is to be a place where our current students and alumni, and anyone interested in preaching can find encouragement from fellow strugglers and ideas to ponder as we all grow in the awesome privilege of proclaiming the Word of God.