Thursday, October 21, 2021

What American Christians Hear at Church

 “Now that I have preached about a dozen sermons I find I am repeating myself,” a young minister wrote despairingly in his diary in 1915. He was barely out of school and only a few months into his first call, at Bethel Evangelical Church in Detroit. “The few ideas that I had worked into sermons at the seminary have all been used, and now what?” It would be fourteen years before anyone else read those words, published under the title “Leaves from the Notebook of a Tamed Cynic.” It would take even longer for their author, Reinhold Niebuhr, to become one of the best-known theologians in the country, famous for works such as “The Irony of American History” and “The Nature and Destiny of Man.”

Niebuhr was twenty-three when he was assigned to Bethel, and so timid that he often walked past the houses of parishioners a few times before he worked up enough courage to knock. “There is something ludicrous about a callow young fool like myself standing up to preach a sermon to these good folks,” he wrote in his diary. “I talk wisely about life and know little about life’s problems. I tell them of the need of sacrifice, although most of them could tell me something about what that really means.” But Niebuhr knew preaching was the core of worship, and that the task fell entirely to the minister, no matter her age or experience: “Without an adequate sermon no clue is given to the moral purpose at the heart of the mystery,” he wrote, “and reverence remains without ethical content.”

sermon transcription

A century later, sermons remain the core of worship. They also represent a curious literary genre. Like short stories, sermons have certain formal characteristics; unlike sonnets, they have no set form. They can focus on a single verse or several passages, take on a specific theological concept or doctrine, be timely and topical or conspicuously old-fashioned. Christians continue to preach today because Jesus preached during his ministry; the Gospels document the sermons he gave in the years preceding his crucifixion. Following Christ’s example, the disciples also went out to preach; we know this from accounts preserved in the Book of Acts and in the letters of the apostle Paul. Some of the oldest records of the early church attest to the central role of preaching in Christianity. The second-century writings of Justin Martyr, for example, include this description of contemporary worship: “And on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country gather together to one place, and the memoirs of the apostles or the writings of the prophets are read, as long as time permits; then, when the reader has ceased, the president verbally instructs, and exhorts to the imitation of these good things.”

Yet not even the earliest apologists agreed about what preaching should be or how anyone should do it, and sermon records from the next few centuries expose how quickly the methods of different preachers began to diverge. In his homiletics anthology “The Company of Preachers,” the Duke professor Richard Lischer wrote that “the universal association of preaching with the Christian faith has not led to a uniform definition of the task.” That was largely because, as he wrote, “preaching presents an eternal triangle of message, speaker, and audience.” In other words, any definition of preaching depends on whether you begin with scripture or doctrine, the character of the preacher, or the nature of the congregation.

Homiletics—the proper name for the art of preaching—is still taught in seminaries and divinity schools, but it is not often studied outside of those institutions. This is regrettable, since many more Americans attend church than subscribe to a newspaper. Yet one needn’t even go to worship to consider sermons; plenty of churches now stream their services, and, for decades, archivists have been uploading sermons from some of the country’s greatest preachers. After a quick YouTube search, you can watch the evangelist Billy Graham answer “Who is Jesus?” in Chicago, in 1971, and “Is There a Hell?” in Sacramento, in 1983—or see him preach to a hundred thousand people, among them Vice-President Richard Nixon, in Yankee Stadium, in the summer of 1957. Even if you’ve never been to New York City, you can settle into one of the Riverside Church’s pews as Barbara Brown Taylor preaches on the parable of the Good Samaritan. Click again, and you can enter the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on March 31, 1968, as Martin Luther King, Jr., preaches his last sermon, “Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution.”

These are historic sermons by exceptional orators; on their own they cannot convey what happens during weekly worship. In the past few years, though, the Pew Research Center has found a novel way to survey American preaching similar to how it has long surveyed Americans themselves. Taking advantage of the technologies that have allowed churches to stream services and post them online, Pew has studied the length, language, and content of tens of thousands of sermons, by denomination and tradition, most recently for the nine Sundays before and the Sunday after last fall’s Presidential election. Pew’s latest analysis builds on an earlier survey from 2019, in the eight weeks from April through June that included Easter. This time, the center was aided by churches that moved their work online because of the coronavirus pandemic; this provided Pew with a welcome body of materials that researchers could use to analyze how beliefs, religious and otherwise, spread through our country every Sunday.

Precise Transcription

“Frequent churchgoers may have a good sense of what kind of sermons to expect from their own clergy,” the Pew researchers wrote in their initial report, titled “The Digital Pulpit.” “But what are other Americans hearing from the pulpits in their congregations?” The researchers identified and collected as many sermons as they could from church live streams and Web sites. (For legal reasons, Pew could not include services that were streamed on Facebook or only uploaded to YouTube.) In their first attempt, during the spring of 2019, they transcribed nearly fifty thousand sermons from more than six thousand churches. Last year, from August 31st to November 8th, they transcribed almost thirteen thousand sermons from more than two thousand churches.

Neither was a representative sample by any means—there are some three hundred and eighty thousand churches in this country—but, collectively, they provide a fascinating cross-section of American Christianity. The researchers were able to identify the denomination, membership size, and predominant race or ethnicity of nearly ninety per cent of these congregations, which they organized into four traditions: Catholic, evangelical Protestant, mainline Protestant, and historically Black Protestant.

The median sermon examined in the first survey was thirty-seven minutes long; Catholic homilies were the shortest, with a median of fourteen minutes. Not even that brevity satisfies Pope Francis, who recently advised clergy members to keep their sermons short: “A homily, generally, should not go beyond ten minutes, because after eight minutes you lose people’s attention.” (He joked, after his audience applauded the advice, “The Sisters, who are victims of our homilies, initiated that applause!”) By contrast, Pew found that the sermons at historically Black churches were the longest, at more than three times that length, with a median of fifty-four minutes. These sermons had only a few hundred more words than those from within the evangelical tradition, a detail that suggests oratorical style or musical interludes might be contributing to their length. The religion scholar Albert J. Raboteau wrote about this patient style of preaching, sometimes known as the “black folk sermon” or “old-time country preaching,” tracing its origins back to the eighteenth century in rural, Southern prayer meetings and revivals. In his book “A Fire in the Bones: Reflections on African-American Religious History,” he noted that even those who have never worshipped in a Black church may well recognize this style from its appearance in the works of writers such as James Baldwin, William Faulkner, Toni Morrison, and Ralph Ellison.

Vocabulary analysis by Pew revealed how common some language is across these four major Christian traditions—words like “know” and “God” appeared most often, not surprisingly—but also how distinctive certain words are within each of those traditions. Evangelicals referred most often to “eternal Hell,” “salvation,” “sin,” “Heaven,” and “the Bible”; mainline Protestants relied more on the words “poor,” “house,” “Gospel,” and “disciple”; historically Black Protestants were most likely to hear “hallelujah,” “neighbor,” and “praise.” The data suggest that preachers from all traditions were more likely to refer to the New Testament than the Old Testament, although the eight weeks initially surveyed fell during Lent and Easter, so the findings might have reflected the liturgical calendar as much as anything else.

Of the sermons studied during that initial period, the researchers found that just four per cent “discussed abortion even once—and when they did, it was rarely mentioned repeatedly.” In their analysis of sermons last fall, on the other hand, the researchers found that two-thirds of congregations heard at least one sermon addressing the Presidential election. Catholic priests were least likely to mention politics, whereas evangelical preachers were most likely to do so; nearly half of the historically Black churches—almost double the other traditions—explicitly mentioned voting, using words like “register,” “early voting,” or “suppress” in their discussion of the election. Very few sermons named candidates or parties, but researchers found that, of the five hundred and thirty-five that discussed the election, thirty-five explicitly advocated for the G.O.P., and twenty-six advocated for the Democratic Party. Pew found that many American sermons last fall directly addressed political issues more broadly; forty per cent of congregations heard sermons that mentioned race or racism, for instance, and a full eighty per cent heard sermons that mentioned the coronavirus pandemic.

Not every church is technologically equipped to post its worship services online, and some Christian communities would never do so for theological reasons; as a result, the Pew data sets skew more urban than rural and include larger-than-average congregations. And there are other limitations. The appearance of certain words is hardly a sophisticated metric of anything, including sermons: a mention of the coronavirus does not convey the preacher’s theology of suffering or the community’s medical ethics, just as a reference to any given book of the Bible does not itself reveal the church’s relationship to scripture or church history. Sermons are not mere collections of words, and a survey of diction or duration is not sufficient for understanding the argument of the one preaching or the beliefs of those listening.

But they are listening: when surveyed by Gallup, a full seventy-five per cent of respondents indicated that, of all the offerings from their places of worship, they cared most about sermons, preferring those which taught scripture and were relevant to their lives. That’s somewhat surprising, since many devout Christians can summon only a handful of sermons that they have found memorable or meaningful, even though a faithful parishioner might hear a few thousand in a lifetime. An average preacher might deliver some thousand sermons in a career, devoting dozens of hours every month to the task of preparing them, sometimes with the aid of online repositories like SermonCentral or lectionary resources like Working Preacher. Some preachers are more committed to originality than others: earlier this summer, Sermongate, a slow-simmering scandal in the Southern Baptist Convention, revealed how freely clergy members sometimes borrow from one another. A side-by-side video comparison showed that the incoming president of the S.B.C. copied text for a sermon from the outgoing president without any acknowledgment or attribution.


Sermongate was written up in the mainstream press—a rarity for sermons these days. Sometimes a specific sermon causes a scandal, as when two sermons from President Barack Obama’s former pastor, Jeremiah Wright, were circulated, each collapsing into one incendiary refrain—“God Damn America.” More recently, the Reverend Raphael Warnock’s elaboration on Matthew 6:24—“No man can serve two masters”—became fodder for his political opponents. (Warnock had said, “America, nobody can serve God and the military. You cannot serve God and money.”) Earlier this year, a Baptist pastor in Malden, Missouri, was put on leave after alleging, during a controversial sermon on marriage, that God wanted women to be attractive for their husbands and that adultery arose when women failed to be so. The month before, some parishioners at St. Elizabeth Seton Church in Illinois walked out of Father William Corcoran’s homily denouncing the Capitol riot and atoning for his failure to condemn the cruelty and dishonesty of contemporary politics: “I have never spoken out,” he said, “and fear we are teaching the young that truth and facts do not matter.”

Although sermons used to be reprinted regularly in newspapers, such controversies are uncommon, and homiletics rarely makes headlines anymore. The local news does not hype or recap sermons the way national outlets do sitcoms or “Saturday Night Live,” and preaching clips don’t typically go viral. Still, what the Pew Research Center was able to do quantitatively most of us can now do qualitatively, surveying countless denominations of Christian worship in the American context. In the past year, plenty of Christians have Zoomed with their home parish one Sunday only to Vimeo with a childhood friend’s church the next, or have reconnected with old church homes on Facebook Live and then have logged on to a neighborhood church’s YouTube channel because someone in their pod is a member there. For all the ways that virtual worship felt compromised or isolating, the digitization of preaching made it possible to experience the diversity of worship more easily. You could join parishioners at one of the smallest churches in the country—the Little White Church of Elbe, an eighteen-foot-by-twenty-four-foot building on the road to Paradise by Mt. Rainier National Park—or one of the largest—Joel Osteen’s evangelical Lakewood Church, which meets in the former arena of the Houston Rockets and attracts as many as sixteen thousand in-person attendees to each Sunday service, along with millions more online.

Other kinds of worship moved online, too, such as the recorded services for some of this country’s more than two million incarcerated people, including one led by the Reverend Nadia Bolz-Weber for her flock at the Denver Women’s Correctional Facility. Still in lockdown, the women watched her sermon last June over closed-circuit television. Bolz-Weber preached on the fifth chapter of Romans, in which the apostle Paul argues that Christians are justified by faith in Jesus Christ, and that they rejoice in their suffering, “knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not disappoint us, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us.” The chapter is often read on Trinity Sunday. Bolz-Weber’s sermon was only seven minutes long, and focussed on the connection between hope and disappointment. The theologically curious could compare it to “Our Benefits Package,” a forty-seven-minute sermon by Skip Heitzig, the evangelical pastor of the Calvary Church in Albuquerque, New Mexico, or one of hundreds of other sermons on that chapter of Romans or any of the Epistle’s other fifteen chapters.

This country is filled with preaching on all sides of every political or social movement, with sermons on any given Sunday praying for the President or calling him illegitimate, arguing for reproductive freedom or against abortion, praising social welfare or condemning it, decrying socialism or explaining how Jesus practiced it. The fissures of our society are evident in our churches, as they have always been, and although the hope is that the divisions of the secular world can be erased there, all too often they are reinforced instead.

Perhaps that is why Pew’s second and third surveys seem so much more fraught than the first. (At present, there are no plans for a fourth, though Pew is exploring ways that other researchers can use its existing data sets for additional studies.) By focussing on some of the most charged political issues of the day, Pew’s abortion analysis and election report evidenced the church’s ongoing engagement with pressing social concerns and also suggested how readily its ministers can slip into the language of secular politics. Such politicking can seem prophetic if the sermon encourages the welcoming of refugees through the sanctuary movement, but less so if the pastor proclaims QAnon conspiracy theories about sex trafficking and election fraud.

But one person’s prophecy is another person’s apostasy, and most of us don’t object to preachers airing political opinions per se, only those which conflict with our own. Such is the ambiguity of these surveys: counting word choices or cataloguing political themes does not itself illuminate the content of sermons, for both a call to apostolic poverty and a zealous argument for the prosperity gospel would be included in the category of sermons about wealth. And even if Pew were able to parse the language of sermons in ways that shed more light on the views of preachers, it would not be able to illuminate the most fundamental question of preaching—when, whether, and why a sermon moves a congregant to new or deeper beliefs. What the young Reinhold Niebuhr experienced as a sense of fraudulence was really more like an appropriate humility: the words of sermons matter, even if neither Pew nor the very people who deliver them can ever know precisely how.


Originally published on "The New Yorker" What American Christians Hear at Church | The New Yorker

Casey Cep is a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of “Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee.”

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Elijah’s Prayer for Rain

 Read: 1 Kings 18:41-46

How do we pray when we already have been told what God will do? That may seem like a bizarre question, yet it is one that Elijah could have answered. It is obvious that his experience as he prays for rain provides an example for us because he had been told by God that he would soon send rain. No doubt, some will dismiss the question by saying that it could only be asked of someone like Elijah who had been given a special promise by God. Yet God has given us many promises in connection to prayer. Are they as real as the one he made to Elijah? We will consider this aspect later. 


This incident is important for us as New Testament believers. When the apostle James wanted to encourage his first-century readers about the topic of prayer he chose this event. They too were living in difficult circumstances. What hope could James offer them? He told them about Elijah and how his prayers influenced the events in the natural world. This story from another time is always an encouragement to God’s people because it reminds them of what was achieved through prayer.

Only a short time before, Elijah had prayed publicly for God to accept the sacrifice offered to him on Mount Carmel. Now he prays again, except this prayer is a private one in the sense that the onlookers have gone. It is obvious that his prayer method in private differed from how he prayed in public. I suspect that both incidents have been recorded in the Bible so that we will think about both our public and our private prayers.

Promises and prayer
In verse 41, Elijah tells Ahab to go and eat and drink because there is a sound of the rushing of rain. This statement raises a question as to the sense in which Elijah could hear it because it does not look as if Ahab could. It is possible that the Lord let Elijah hear something that was yet a long distance away because at that moment there was nothing visible in the sky that would indicate that rain was about to come. Indeed the sky remained unchanged from what it had looked like on previous days. Yet I think it more likely that what Elijah was hearing was the promise of God to send rain.

Here we see a very important aspect of prayer which is that it is based mainly on the promises of God. Of course, we can pray for matters and people about which God has not given particular promises. Yet we cannot express confidence that these prayers will be answered by a yes from God. In distinction from that type of petition there are requests that we can make expecting a yes because the Lord has given specific promises about them. 

No doubt, Elijah was thinking about God’s promise as he urged Ahab to go and eat. And it would be a useful practice for us to think about some of God’s promises before we begin to pray, and then in our prayer we can ask God to do what he has promised. 

But it looks as if Elijah did more than accept that God would send some rain. Instead he expected that the Lord would send a great deal of rain – there would be a rushing of rain, as if it would come down in torrents. Remember that there was no sign of rain in the sky, yet here is the Lord’s servant anticipating something great from God. The prophet knew that the Lord’s answer would be based on his grace, his abounding grace. We have often sung Amazing Grace, but when we do, do we think of it as abounding towards the undeserving.

There is another detail that would have helped Elijah have a sense of confidence in God’s Word, and we may find this detail a bit surprising. Is there a reason why we are told in the previous verses that he slew the prophets of Baal? We know why he did it – it was done out of obedience to God’s Word. Yet Elijah could not have found such an action as easy to perform. And is it not the case that often we fail to have the confidence we should have because we are not willing to do the difficult things that God sometimes puts in our path. Thankfully we don’t have to perform the type of action that Elijah did here. But that does not mean we will not have difficult situations in which to develop our spiritual muscles. Faith is a spiritual muscle that is strengthened in different ways, and obedience is a way of strengthening our confidence in God. 

Place of prayer
Elijah ascended Mount Carmel in order to pray, probably near to the altar that he had erected a short time previously. Perhaps he had gone there because he knew it was a place where God had been present. More likely he went there to get away from the crowds and find a place where he could engage in personal prayer. Common sense tells us that if we try and pray in a noisy location we will be distracted.

Finding a secret place to pray is a matter of obedience to the instructions of Christ. In the Sermon on the Mount he told his disciples that ‘when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you’ (Matt. 6:6). The immediate context of that requirement is to avoid showing off in prayer, of imitating the practice of the Pharisees.

A secret place is essential for bringing to God the personal burdens of our hearts. We can easily gauge the sense we have of these matters by assessing our use of a secret place. Public prayer is not the time when an individual should be going into detail about his or her heart sins. Yet private prayer is such a time. Similarly, public prayer is not an occasion for describing personal disappointments with other believers. They should be spoken about to God.

A secret place for prayer is an important contribution to the process of getting to know God, whether it be the Father, the Son or the Holy Spirit. We know that it is impossible to build healthy relationships with other people unless we spend time with them. This is also the case with increasing in our knowledge of the Lord. Personal prayer is not the only means of obtaining such knowledge – we also receive it from other means of grace such as listening to preaching, participating in the Lord’s Supper and listening to other Christians. Yet none or all of them can be a substitute for having a secret place.

A secret place and its timing must be organized by us. I don’t mean that we become fixed to praying for a certain period every day. Instead, we should mark out time in which to meet with God and that meeting can include meditation on the Bible, recording reflections in a journal or diary, utilizing a book of devotions, and other helpful tools. But it must involve prayer and we can see its different aspects in the prayer that Jesus taught his disciples to say when each of them went into his secret place: adoration (Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name); intercession for his kingdom (your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven); prayer for personal needs (give us this day our daily bread); confession of sin (forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors); and prayer for protection from evil (and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil). Jesus also points out the attitude we must have in the secret place: ‘For if you forgive others their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you, but if you do not forgive others their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses’ (Matt. 6:14-15).

Posture in prayer
Elijah ‘bowed himself down on the earth and put his face between his knees’ (v. 42). Does posture in private prayer matter? We are all familiar with the concept of body language and I think it is the case that certain postures help us when praying for particular answers. They also reveal what we think about God, and after all only he sees what we do in private prayer.

Elijah’s posture revealed two aspects of his outlook towards God. First, bowing down indicated that he recognized that God was his sovereign. Out there on the top of Mount Carmel, the prophet was aware that he was in the presence of God, the real King of Israel. The only appropriate response was to bow before him in adoration at his greatness. There are three attitudes that lie behind bowing down to a superior: there is the sense of reluctant compulsion (we dislike him but cannot escape from him), there is the sense of deceptive manipulation (we pretend that we want to serve him), and there is the sense of reverent acknowledgement (we love who he is and want to elevate him higher in our own estimation). 

Should we bow in personal prayer? It depends on where we are. Paul says in Ephesians 3:14: ‘For this reason I bow my knees before the Father...’ He says elsewhere that we should follow his example. So it is appropriate to bow physically in his presence as an expression of what is felt within us as we draw near to him in prayer.

Elijah also put his face between his knees and I would suggest, secondly, that this posture indicates his sense of shame and unworthiness. Remember he is praying near to where he has had a major triumph and the evidence of his success would still have been visible on top of the mountain. I suppose he could have looked at it and said to himself, ‘God used me there and it is good to focus on such memories.’ No doubt there is a place for such reflection, but not when we are engaged in prayer for more divine actions. The fact is, even our best efforts are not really worth focusing on and sometimes they can take our eyes of God and away from the business at hand. 

It is one of the intriguing facts of Christian experience that those who have done most for God think very little about the worth of their contributions. George Muller, as an old man and after being a Christian for over fifty years, observed about himself and his prayer life: ‘He has given me, unworthy as I am, immeasurably above all I had asked or thought! I am only a poor, frail, sinful man, but he has heard my prayers tens of thousands of times...’ Many more such examples could be cited. What they tell us is that the man who stands tall before men bows low before God. Fear of man disappears when there is fear of God.

Petitioning in prayer
One thing that is clear is that Elijah did not presume anything about God’s promise. The prophet did not say to the people, ‘God has promised rain. All we have to do is sit down and wait for it to come.’ That would have been presumption. Instead he went and prayed about the matter.

Two features stand out regarding his prayer. One is the precise request that he made, which was for God to fulfil his promise to send rain. The other is that he persisted in prayer until God answered his petition. Sometimes we imagine that we should only have to persevere in praying about matters concerning which God has not given specific promises. Yet the fact is that often we have to persevere over matters which have great promises connected to them. This is one of the great challenges in our prayer lives. Because he had a promise from God, Elijah kept praying until the answer came.

Possessing God’s power
After telling Ahab to proceed back to Jezreel, Elijah ran ahead of the king’s chariot for a distance of about eighteen miles. No doubt he was physically fit, but he was also given extra strength by the Holy Spirit to run the distance. It was common for kings to have forerunners who ran ahead. When the people would have seen Elijah ahead of the king they would have assumed that the king had turned to God after the events on Mount Carmel.

The decision of Elijah would have told Ahab that the prophet was willing to serve the king. Elijah recognized that it was his duty to help Ahab govern God’s people. All Ahab had to do was ask Elijah to be his advisor. Time will tell what the king will do and who it is that will have most influence in his life. The point for us to notice is that times of prayer should be followed by dedicated service wherever the Lord has placed us.

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