Monday, January 17, 2022

Today in the Mission Yearbook - The preacher’s power to persuade

Synod of the Covenant webinar helps preachers to marshal their rhetorical chops each week

January 17, 2022

the Rev. Dr. Chip Hardwick is interim executive at the Synod of the Covenant. (Contributed photo)

Their place at the pulpit offers Presbyterian preachers a weekly opportunity to persuade parishioners of the power and reach of God’s love for them — as well as hundreds of other messages found in Scripture.

How to effectively use those powers of persuasion was the topic of a recent podcast, “Opening Your Listeners to New Perspectives,” offered by the Rev. Dr. Chip Hardwick, interim executive of the Synod of the Covenant, which is offering monthly online opportunities to preachers from across the denomination. Watch the 85-minute webinar here.

Early on, one participant noted that preachers have at least two tasks as they sit down to write their sermon: be open to the Holy Spirit’s moving and invite hearers to take action.

“You hear wonderful sermons and afterward you wonder, ‘So what?’” the workshop participant said. “What’s the invitation or application or challenge? God wants us to be involved in God’s mission. How are you going to take up that challenge?”

The preacher’s weekly task can be found toward the end of the A Brief Statement of Faith, Hardwick said: “In gratitude to God, empowered by the Spirit, we strive to serve Christ in our daily tasks and to live holy and joyful lives …”

“We write sermons that are helpful and effective,” Hardwick said. “We do that because we are grateful to God.”

Sermons, he said, are “a mix of theological claims and rhetorical choices.” As defined by Aristotle, rhetoric has no negative connotation. Rather it describes “the available means of persuasion in each case.” After that, it’s the job of the hearers “to decide whether they will adhere more fully to what we say,” Hardwick said.

“The more effective a sermon’s rhetoric,” Hardwick said, “the more likely your listeners will be open to a new perspective.”

The words that preachers use and the ideas they present “will totally depend on who your listeners are,” Hardwick said. “What’s the occasion? What does this particular group of people need to hear on this particular date for a particular purpose in a particular space?”

But while listeners determine what’s effective rhetoric, only God can determine whether a preacher’s theology is faithful, according to Hardwick.

As Aristotle taught, speakers have three rhetorical devices:

Logos, persuasion that occurs through arguments when preachers show the truth or the apparent truth from whatever is persuasive in each case.

Pathos, or persuasion that causes hearers to feel emotion. Almost any sermon illustration falls in this category, Hardwick said: “It helps people emotionally relate to what you’re talking about.”

Ethos, defined as persuasion through character whenever the speech is spoken in such a way as to make the speaker worthy of credence, for “we believe fair-minded people to a greater extent and more quickly.”

Ethos can be both internal and external, Hardwick pointed out. The former is how speakers present themselves while they’re speaking, such as the illustrations they use. External ethos is how speakers present themselves outside the pulpit. When the preacher delivers a sermon on caring for Creation but leaves the porch light on at home on a Sunday morning, a parishioner passing by the preacher’s home is sure to notice — and just might say something.

But above all three rhetorical devices hovers this important question: Does the preacher love those hearing the sermon? Another is almost as important: Do they feel that love?

The ethos-based response might be, “We have a long relationship with each other, and you’re going to have to trust me” when I preach on this difficult biblical text, Hardwick said. “Please go with me this time.”

Hardwick also encouraged white preachers to draw on people of color, young people and the LGBTQ community to “lift them up in your [sermon] illustrations. Lift them up as a fully human part of the body of Christ from whom we can be inspired.”

Then Hardwick prayed to close out the time together, thanking God that “these ideas that have been around for 2,000 years can help us today.”

Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff

Crystal Heath, Business Administrator, Plan Operations, Board of Pensions
Josh Heikkila, Mission co-worker serving in Ghana, World Mission, Presbyterian Mission Agency

Let us pray

Sovereign God, help your church in every corner of the earth to be committed to and effective in ministries with children and youth. Amen.

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