The Rev. Dr. Leah D. Schade
Assistant Professor of Preaching and Worship
Lexington Theological Seminary
Lexington, Ky
You’re a preacher and you know you need to address the
assault against humanity and our planet that is being perpetrated by the Trump
administration. But some things are
holding you back. Maybe you don’t feel
informed enough about certain issues.
Maybe you don’t feel you received enough training in seminary for how to
preach a prophetic sermon. Maybe you’re
afraid of the push-back from members of your congregation if you tackle topics
that seem too “political.” Or maybe you
just need a shot of homiletical chutzpah.
If you’re reading this, consider yourself part of the new Prophetic
Preacher of the Month Club. Below are my recommendations for the coming
year. This is an arbitrary list, I
know. And there are many more that could
(and should) be included. But this is a
start. If you read just one book a
month, you will increase your effectiveness as a preacher and be doing a great
service for those in your congregation who are looking for a sermon that
addresses the issues that matter to them, to our communities, to our Earth, and
to “the least of these.”
Preaching Justice: Ethnic and Cultural Perspectives; Edited by
Christine Smith (Wipf and Stock, 1998)
Black History Month is an ideal time to familiarize yourself
with the standpoints of “the other.”
Whether you are a white preacher looking for an essay from an African
American woman’s perspective (provided by Teresa Fry Brown), or an African
American preacher wondering how Korean Americans fare in this country
(explained by Eunjoo Mary Kim), or a Latina/o preacher wanting to help your
congregation understand the Jewish perspective on justice (shared by Stacy
Offner), these and five other essays will expand your preaching horizons.
Preaching Fools: The Gospel as a Rhetoric of Folly; Charles L.
Campbell and Johann H. Cilliers (Baylor University Press, 2012)
You’ll be reading this book in preparation for Sunday, April
2, the day after April Fool’s. There
will be many times when you feel like an utter fool in the pulpit against the
powers of evil-on-steroids that have strengthened with this president. Campbell
and Cilliers’ book will not only help you rethink and reframe the homiletical
task, it will equip you with stories, images and metaphors for helping your
congregation celebrate their role as “fools for Christ,” proclaiming the
message of the cross that tells the truth and calls the gospel-reality into
existence.
Creation-Crisis Preaching: Ecology, Theology and the Pulpit; Leah
D. Schade (Chalice Press, 2015)
Shameless self-plug here, I know. But Trump has appointed some of the most
heinous climate-denying, anti-environmental, anti-public-health people ever for
the positions of leadership in the White House. So preachers need to keep
Creation-care front and center for their congregations. Especially as the world celebrates Earth Day,
we need sermons that will prophetically and creatively engage this reality in
the face of the climate-change denial exhibited by the incoming administration. This book will provide theological and
scriptural background for greening your preaching, as well as practical tips
for becoming an “ecopreacher.”
Telling the Truth: PreachingAbout Sexual and Domestic Violence; Edited by John S. McClure and Nancy J.
Ramsay (United Church Press, 1998)
With Mother’s Day this month, the focus is on women. The onslaught against women’s access to
reproductive health and their right to choose how to make decisions about the
most intimate parts of their bodies is exacerbated by a misogynist president
who bragged about sexual assault. Nearly
every congregation in this country has victims, survivors, or perpetrators of
sexual and domestic violence in its pews.
This is the book I recommend
for preacher who need sage guidance about how to address these issues as a
pastor and a preacher. The collection of
15 essays covers theological and biblical perspectives, provides resources for
telling the truth about sexual and domestic violence, gives practical how-to’s
for preaching, and includes model sermons.
Resisting Structural Evil: Love as Ecological-EconomicVocation; Cynthia D. Moe-Lobeda (Augsburg Fortress, 2013)
The summer is an ideal time to tackle a sermon series on the
ways in which systemic evil attacks “the least of these.” While Moe-Lobeda’s book is not aimed at
preachers per se, her approach to the complexity of interrelated structures of
evil is very helpful for sermons because she provides case studies that give us
glimpses into the lives of real people affected by the decisions we make every
day. The first half of the book will
give you incredible insights into the economic and ideological patterns that
gave rise to Trumpism in the first place, while the second half of the book
provides concrete approaches to galvanizing yourself and your community for
resistance.
Under the Oak Tree: The Church as a Community of Conversation in a Conflicted
and Pluralistic World; Edited by Ronald J. Allen, John S. McClure and O.
Wesley Allen Jr. (Cascade Books, 2013)
You’ll be reading this book in preparation for leading a
series of conversations in your congregation about some of the “wicked” (i.e.
complex) problems our country is facing.
The task of preaching about difficult social justice issues is helped
when we have cultivated a culture of dialogue in our congregations. Under
the Oak Tree contains eleven essays to help you think through the concept
of conversational practical theology and how to view the tasks of ministry
(including preaching, worship, evangelism and interfaith relations) through
this lens of conversation.
Prophetic Preaching: A PastoralApproach; Leonora Tubbs Tisdale (Westminster John Knox Press, 2010)
With the “community of conversation” as your frame of
reference, you’ll read Tisdale’s book to give you that infusion of courage for
addressing social issues in the pulpit in tandem with the dialogue series you’ll
be leading this month. The author suggests
a myriad of reasons why pastors resist preaching about justice issues and
offers practical suggestions for ways to be both pastoral and prophetic in
their preaching. This book offers
specific strategies to break through resistance as well as a variety of forms
to help spark your prophetic imagination.
Preaching as Weeping, Confession and Resistance: Radical Responses to
Radical Evil; Christine M. Smith (Westminster/John Knox, 1992)
The month of October brings out the ghosts and goblins as
our culture celebrates Halloween.
Consider a sermon series entitled “Something Wicked This Way Comes” and
address the true demons loosed on our society.
Christine Smith’s book gives you the theological and biblical tools to
address handicappism, ageism, sexism, heterosexism, white racism and
classism. The last chapter provides some
model sermons to prime your preaching pump.
Preaching Politics: Proclaiming Jesus
in an Age of Money, Power, and Partisanship; Clay Stauffer (Chalice Press,
2015).
November is usually the month
when churches launch their stewardship campaigns. This year as we contend with a president who
wouldn’t even be forthcoming about his tax returns or divest himself from his
companies, help your congregation understand why Jesus’ teachings speak a
necessary ethical corrective. Stauffer
provides a guide for understanding the need and biblical justification for
preaching about the politically contentious issues of money, greed, and power
within a capitalist society. With sound exegesis of key teachings
of Jesus on money and faith, as well as robust theological engagement with
Stanley Hauerwas and Adam Hamilton, this book is useful for both preaching and
leading Bible studies. Stauffer encourages, equips and emboldens
preachers to tackle these issues from the study and the pulpit with renewed confidence.
DECEMBER
Living Beyond the “End of the World”:
A Spirituality of Hope; Margaret Swedish (Orbis Books, 2008)
If you follow the Revised
Common Lectionary, the Advent readings contain the apocalyptic texts of
Jesus. The Bible does not shy away from
naming the upheaval in our world, and neither does Swedish. Yet she challenges us to articulate
what kind of human beings we will be as we approach this difficult period in
human history, and how we will live into that.
With solid biblical exegesis (especially her treatment of the “loaves
and fishes”) your preaching will benefit from the way she clearly presents the
values, vision, and spiritual resources that can nurture a new human community
even when the evidence points to the world falling apart.
AND COMING SOON: PREACHING IN THE ERA OF TRUMP by O. WESLEY ALLEN. Watch for a release date from Chalice Press soon!
AND COMING SOON: PREACHING IN THE ERA OF TRUMP by O. WESLEY ALLEN. Watch for a release date from Chalice Press soon!
Leah is currently working on her next project, Preaching in the Purple Zone: Homiletics in the Red/Blue Divide, that will look at ways in which preachers can effectively address controversial justice issues in the pulpit. Click here to learn more.
Leah, this is a great list. I'm thinking about an online book group for preachers through Discipleship Ministries if you would be cool with that.
ReplyDeleteThat's a great idea! Send me an email at lschade@lextheo.edu and let's talk about the details.
DeleteI have read or have worked with most of these books. They are all really insightful books!
ReplyDelete