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people continue to discover that the young man who hung to death on a cross one dark Friday afternoon is the Father’s way of restoring the whole inhabited world.

      Notes

      1. Canon B5.

      2. Held at Birmingham Cathedral, 13 June 1997, and addressed by Professor Sir John Polkinghorne.

      3. Weddings Project of the Church of England. See [email protected].

      References

      Barley, Lynda, 2006, Christian Roots, Contemporary Spirituality, London: Church House Publishing.

      Brueggemann, Walter, 1989, Finally Comes the Poet, Minneapolis, MN: Fortress.

      Common Worship: Daily Prayer, 2005, London: Church House Publishing.

      Croft, S., 1999, Ministry in Three Dimensions, London: Darton, Longman and Todd.

      Fenton, J. C., 1975, ‘The preacher and the biblical critic’, in What about the New Testament? Essays in Honour of Christopher Evans, ed. Morna Hooker and Colin Hickling, London: SCM Press, pp. 178–86.

      Lynch, Gordon, 2008, ‘The preacher as cultural critic: possibilities and pitfalls’, The Preacher 129, April, pp. 7–9.

      MacCulloch, D, 2009, A History of Christianity, London: Allen Lane.

      Partington, Andrew, and Paul Bickley, 2007, Coming off the Bench: The Past, Present and Future Representation in the House of Lords, London: Theos.

      Wells, S., and S. Coakley (eds), 2008, Praying for England, London: Continuum.

      4

      Charismatic Utterance

      Preaching as Prophecy

      ian stackhouse

      Historically, charismatic renewal has had an ambivalent relationship to preaching. Even though it has produced some outstanding preachers, at other times it has ended up ignoring preaching altogether. For instance, the other day I heard of a church service where, instead of preaching the sermon he had prepared, the preacher announced to the congregation that the Spirit had led him to abandon the sermon in favour of a time of prayer and healing. And thus ensued what can only be described as ‘a holy carnage’, as people came out in their droves to be prayed for.

      To one who has hung around the charismatic wing of the Church for the best part of nearly 30 years there is nothing particularly unusual about this nor particularly wrong with it. Whatever else the charismatic movement has contributed to the wider body of Christ, it is surely this: that ability to suspend the liturgy out of an instinct of ‘Behold, I am doing a new thing.’ And maybe we should leave it there. Our preacher was simply acting out of his very best instincts for the new wine of the Spirit.

      But why we cannot leave this unchallenged is because such times often bequeath something of a mixed blessing to the Church. What so often communicates to the congregation as a result of such a decision on the part of the preacher, sometimes inadvertently and other times deliberately, is that the essence of the charismatic life of the Church is by definition non-kerygmatic or, worse still, irrational. A consequence of such a move on the part of the preacher, or sometimes the worship leader, to abandon the sermon for ‘just worship’, is that Paul’s desire in 1 Thessalonians 1.5 for preaching that is ‘not in word only but with the Holy Spirit and with deep conviction’ is misunderstood as a desire for no word at all. In other words, abandonment of preaching, in the way described, sends its own message to the congregation that the deeper one goes into the things of the Spirit the less textual we need to be.

      It is this false dualism that I want to correct here. Preaching, I want to argue, is the charismatic event. The Pentecostal experience of the early chapters of Acts issues forth not only in strange tongues but also in preaching in the Spirit. As has often been pointed out, the same Spirit that gave utterance to the disciples in Acts 2.4 to praise God in foreign languages is the same Spirit that enables Peter to open his mouth in Acts 2.14 in a sermon. ‘The holy wind at Pentecost is power unto speech’, as William Willimon puts it (2005, p. 25). Clearly there are times when the Spirit’s activity may well relativize the importance, and even the length, of the sermon (the homily remains largely unexplored by Baptist preachers!). Furthermore, we must be careful not to read back our own sermonic forms into the pages of the New Testament. The fact of the matter is: we don’t really know how the early Church did their preaching. Even so, we must be careful that in our pursuit of charismatic experience we do not miss the essentially charismatic nature of preaching. Preaching is not something to satisfy the rationality of our faith – as it is often regarded even in Reformed charismatic circles – so that we can then attend to the non-rational work of the Spirit.1 That way lies Gnosticism. Rather, the combination of text, congregation and preacher ought to be understood as replete with charismatic possibilities. Indeed, in so far as the Scriptures are themselves prophetic, as Walter Brueggemann has been at pains to point out throughout his writings (Brueggemann, 1989, p. 4), then, strange as it may sound, expository preaching ought to be as momentous an event as the giving of an oracle of God (1 Peter 4.11). That it so often isn’t is the fault not of preaching per se but of low expectations on the part of the preacher and the congregation.

      We can perhaps see this coming together of Spirit, text and preacher most clearly in the letter to the Hebrews. Despite attempts by David Norrington and others to deride sermons and to question their existence in the New Testament, it turns out that one of the reasons we can’t find sermons is because, like searching for the hippo in the river, we are standing on it: Hebrews is a rhetorical and homiletical master class. Described by the writer himself as ‘a word of exhortation’, Hebrews does what we see Paul and his companions doing in the synagogue in Acts 13.15: namely, expounding from the law and the prophets as they are read to the congregation (Long, 1997, p. 2). Indeed it may well be that Hebrews is one long (as opposed to short!) sermon, in which the preacher expounds and exhorts, in equal measure, the deep truths arising from his initial reading of Psalm 110.

      What is important to note, however, and why we mention it here, is the role of the Spirit in all of this; because, as far as this preacher is concerned, it is the Spirit who brings home to the congregation the immediacy of the Scripture. Arriving at one of the many exhortatory breaks in the letter, following three chapters of text upon text, one can almost see the preacher point his finger at the congregation as he announces, ‘So, as the Holy Spirit says, “Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts”’ (Heb. 3.7). In fact, it is the Spirit who for this preacher provides the hermeneutical key to unlock Scripture. Disregarding the historical-grammatical method, the Spirit instead guides us into all truth, and enables this congregation at least to see the new covenant not simply emerging from the words of Jesus but going all the way back to the Psalms and the prophets. Theologians speak about Spirit hermeneutics; this is Spirit hermeneutics at its best: taking the text of Scripture and, by the Spirit, driving it home to the hearts of the listening congregation.

      Again, it is important to repeat that this celebration of charismatic preaching should in no way minimize the importance of other charismatic gifts, nor to conflate preaching completely with prophecy. It is important we recognize the place for the whole panoply of charismatic gifts, including healing and miracles. This has been one of the important legacies of the charismatic renewal. Indeed, for all of our commitment to the text in preaching, there is a very real sense in which Paul admits a certain irrationality

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