Preaching is in crisis. Why? Because the traditional, conceptual
approach no longer works, says Richard L. Eslinger. It fails to
capture the interest of listeners and is not sufficiently
Scripture-based. The time has come to listen to new voices, new
methods. And that is what A New Hearing provides.
Eslinger offers as "living options" the work of five
preeminent--though quite different--preachers who represent the
"cutting edge" of preaching in the 1980s: Charles Rice and the
storytelling method; Henry Mitchell and the black narrative method;
Eugene Lowry, who bridges the narrative and inductive methods; Fred
Craddock and the inductive method; and David Buttrick, who
emphasizes the structure and movement of biblical material.
Eslinger devotes an entire section to each preacher. He
explicates each man's technique, shows how it differs from the
traditional "three points and a poem" approach, and presents one
sample sermon from each. Eslinger then critiques these "new
homileticians," delineating the strengths and weaknesses of their
respective methods.
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