Dwelling together in scripture’s room
How can preachers and listeners develop a practice of lingering with the text?
Is preparing to preach a weekly chore or transformative practice? Annette Brownlee insists it is a key spiritual practice with the potential to form and transform preachers, congregations, and broader communities. In conversation with Augustine’s On Christian Teaching, Brownlee identifies this practice as integral to the pastoral vocation of binding oneself to God’s people and God’s Word for the sake of God’s world. Such binding nurtures an appreciation for “the other” that is likely to transform preachers and their communities.
Brownlee notes the relationship between persevering with challenging aspects of scripture and loving those within our congregations and communities, difficult as they may be at times. “The art of attentively reading the strange, sometimes difficult words of Scripture is similar to the ability to love our neighbor across the chasm of difference and offense.”
Living out such attentiveness and love is integral to the vocation of the church as a light to the world. Brownlee reminds us that while the public role of the church may be shrinking within the West, its vocation to be a light to the world has not been eclipsed. The congregation learning to read scripture theologically contributes to this vocation. One way in which such reading is developed is through sermons that are theologically sound while also attentive to the world of the text.