Ritröð Guðfræðistofnunar - 01.01.2011, Side 14

Ritröð Guðfræðistofnunar - 01.01.2011, Side 14
human, and very few of us have not “borrowed” extensively from another preacher we admire, at least once. I think it’s one of those experiences a preacher has to have, actually: you have to know what it feels like to preach what is not yours. You have to cross the line before you see where it is. It’s like an adolescent, waking up the morning after the party, with a headache and a heartache and a terrible feeling in his gut that he went too far, last night, because that isn’t who he is, to act that way or say those things; that isn’t who he is, to let himself be swept along by the crowd. It’s a hard thing, to stand in your own life; every teenager knows that. It’s a hard thing to stand in your own sermon. We have to keep practicing, because we aren’t going to do it every week, not without a lot of work. So please: don’t take these questions as a fmger-pointing moment: No, no, bad dog! What I hope we can do is start a conversation that I think we need to have, as preachers, about the particular challenges that have crept up on us, in the last ten years. Because it isn’t just that the internet tempts us to plagiarize, and so compromise our ethics. No, the internet tempts us to trade access for interpretive freedom. And when you give up your interpre- tive freedom as a preacher, you give up your sacred calling to be minister of Word and Sacrament. You know, I think Charlemagne would love the internet. It is the mother of all homiliaries. It can give you any sermon you want, anywhere, anytime. And you don’t need a Master’s degree to work it; you just have to know how to read. Click a few keys, and you can find advice about the most efficient and successful way to preach the gospel in any conceivable situation. It’s like having your own personal court of advisers, if you don’t mind that they all say the same thing. Because here’s what the internet can’t do: it can’t mediate wisdom, or faithfulness, or love. It can’t interpret information. It just spits it out. Which makes our interpretive job bigger than ever, because now we have to sort through the volume to find the value. Rick Warren says he would like to help with this. Subscribing to his sermons, he says, can save time and money and souls, because truth is the same from age to age, and the numbers in his church testify to the truth in his sermons. The problem is that he becomes a sort of Charlemagne for us: the Saddleback homiliary is not very different from the Holy Roman Empire’s homiliary, no matter how well intended. Each contains the sermons of famous preachers. Each professes to be a tried and true collec- tion, thereby guaranteeing a measure of success. Each contains sermons 12
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