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"Michael Rogness has put his finger on a serious homiletical
problem -- people accustomed to being fed a video diet are having
difficulty digesting the verbal food we preachers set before them
each week. Readers will be relieved that Professor Rogness not only
identifies problems, but offers some tantalizing recipes to help us
in our task."
William R. White
Author of "Stories For Telling"
Madison, Wisconsin
"The crisis of preaching is that we face an audience accustomed to
new forms of communication. The way people listen is shaped mostly
by today's most dominant medium -- television. And yet we preach
about the same as preachers did before the arrival of television.
It isn't working very well." (from the foreword)
The gospel has always been conveyed primarily by speaking it to
people. The problem is that in today's world of television people
listen and hear differently than they listened and heard in the
past.
"When preachers understand the dynamics of this new world, then the
gospel can ring with new vigor and life in our preaching," writes
the author.
"Preaching To A TV Generation" explores the changes brought to our
society by television. It suggests what preachers can do in the
face of these changes -- in terms of language, structure,
creativity and delivery.
Michael Rogness, St. Paul, Minnesota, is a professor at Luther
Northwestern Theological Seminary. He is a former Fulbright Scholar
and holds a doctorate in theology from Erlangen/Nurnberg
University, Germany. For 15 years he was senior pastor of First
Lutheran Church, Duluth, Minnesota. He is the author of many books
and articles. His sermons have appeared in a number of Augsburg
Sermons Series.
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