The Homiletical Plot Quotes

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The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form by Eugene L. Lowry
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The Homiletical Plot Quotes Showing 1-23 of 23
“diagnosis is central to our homiletical task.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“So it is that once a person has settled on the question as to what is wrong, the choice of cures is limited. You do not prescribe surgery for a minor cut, nor do you put a Band-Aid on cancer. The question of the human condition is, I believe, the most fundamental and consequential question of all.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“the primary purpose of sermon introductions is to produce imbalance for the sake of engagement.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“I noted a second time appreciation for the author’s making room for intuition in the sermon process. Most of us give lip service to the fact that preaching is an art as well as a science, but then we become afraid that someone will think we speak of preaching as an art as an excuse for ambiguity, sloppy thinking, and poor reasoning. In defense, we omit all art and artistry and proceed to offer the reader an adequate technology for framing and delivering the message.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“Note, too, that fiction writers inevitably catch their central characters in situations involving ambiguities, not contradictories. The marshal in High Noon was being asked to choose not between a good and a bad but between two goods (or two bads, depending upon your angle of view).”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“The set of outline notes of our poorer sermons, however, will likely reveal that they were shaped by the nature of their substantive content, not by the process of the narrative experience that is anticipated.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“In the case of the movie High Noon, it is obvious that the viewers are not held by their intrinsic interest in the history of the American frontier, in law enforcement, or in noon trains.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“The term plot is key both to sermon preparation and to sermon presentation.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“One might say that any sermon involves both an “itch” and a “scratch” and sermons are born when at least implicitly in the preacher’s mind the problematic itch intersects a solutional scratch—between the particulars of the human predicament and the particularity of the gospel.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“It is not enough to probe the question of what the text is saying. It is equally important to discover why it is saying what it says. The question of why is most often the context for the transition into homiletical form.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“The plain fact was he knew how to do it intuitively, but he could not articulate what it was that he did.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“A sermonic idea is a homiletical bind; a sermon is a narrative plot!”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“And so I shall prefer to speak of the continuity or the movement of a sermon, rather than of its outline.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“Why not conceive every sermon as narrative—whether or not a parable or other story is involved?”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“Hence there is more action or natural movement in describing, for example, a God who walks in the garden in the cool of the day than in defining a pre-existent Logos.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“Says Robert Roth in Story and Reality: “For the Greeks . . . words were definitions. . . . For the Hebrews, on the contrary, words were descriptions.” 14”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“Sometimes a sermon idea seemed to emerge on its own, possessed of its own power, and required a developmental process more akin to pruning than putting together.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“So it is that much homiletical advice tends to function in reverse—that is, it works reasonably well in evaluating a sermon already formed, but provides very little help en route!”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“It is indeed The Story, and our task is to tell it, to form it, to fashion it—not to “organize” it.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“Transforming our intuitions into articulate form is precisely the purpose of this book.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“It is a disservice to any form to elevate it as the form.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“Whatever the thinking of Prof. Lowry and his editor, they obviously share the conviction that The Homiletical Plot can sit comfortably on the shelf with the scores of books on preaching since 1980.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form
“So it is that once a person has settled on the question as to what is wrong, the choice of cures is limited.”
Eugene L. Lowry, The Homiletical Plot: The Sermon as Narrative Art Form