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Year D (Hardcover)
Timothy Matthew Slemmons
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Synopsis: Although one often hears of the need to preach "the whole
counsel of God," few resources have seriously and specifically
attempted to assist the preacher and planner of worship to do just
that--until now. Year D makes the case for the need and promise of
supplementing the Revised Common Lectionary with a fourth year of
lections and arranges many previously excluded biblical texts in an
orderly, one-year preaching plan. It fills a need widely voiced by
preachers that the lectionary effectively limits and censors the
functional canon of Scripture. Destined to serve as a staple source
of significant revitalization in mainline preaching and worship,
Year D banks on the agency of Word and Spirit to renew the church
as few practical proposals have done in the last twenty years,
lending new focus and impetus for exploring the Bible's forgotten
riches. A timely and urgently needed "return to the sources," Year
D represents a fresh appropriation of neglected and marginalized
texts for preaching, worship, education, and devotion, and thus
constitutes a substantive, scriptural attempt to address what
Walter Brueggemann has called "the current preaching emergency."
Endorsements: "Slemmons, a creative and careful scholar, spent
years researching, drawing up, collegially testing, and critically
assessing Year D, an every fourth-year supplement to the Revised
Common Lectionary that encourages preachers to seek for themselves
and their congregants the 'whole counsel of God.' Well written and
theologically perspicacious, Year D is a superb practical
achievement." --Charles Louis Bartow, Egner Professor Emeritus of
Speech Communication in Ministry, Princeton Theological Seminary
"Slemmons urges preachers to break out of the lectionary and bring
to the pulpit difficult texts the Revised Common Lectionary
studiously muffles--texts of judgment and penitence, Gospel
conflict stories, apocalyptic material, and household codes.
Further, with a disciplined Reformed vision and a pastor's longing
for the church's renewal, Slemmons engages readers in a stimulating
project of rethinking preaching and liturgy as both judgment and
grace." --Sally A. Brown, Elizabeth M. Engle Associate Professor of
Preaching and Worship, Princeton Theological Seminary "One does not
have to agree that 'the primary and most valid objection to the RCL
. . . is] its incompleteness, ' to yet assert that Slemmons's Year
D is a remarkable piece of work . . . Slemmons's work with untapped
psalms is particularly helpful, and his demand that we hear the
prophets is crucial. This document feels like a lifetime
commitment. Year D will stimulate a pastor's work and deepen its
result." --Eugene Lowry, William K. McElvaney Professor Emeritus of
Preaching, Saint Paul School of Theology Author Biography: Timothy
Matthew Slemmons is Assistant Professor of Homiletics and Worship
at the University of Dubuque Theological Seminary. He is author of
Groans of the Spirit: Homiletical Dialectics in an Age of Confusion
(2010).
What has faith to do with esthetics? What role has poetry in
devotion and worship? These poems, or devotional responses to the
Scriptures (lectionary passages) that inspired them, represent one
preacher's oblation, an artless offering of adoration, confession,
wonderment, and praise. Neither esthetic creation nor ecclesial
proclamation, at times homely, at others sublime, these poems
sojourn in hope toward "a better country, that is, a heavenly one."
About the Contributor(s): Timothy Matthew Slemmons is Assistant
Professor of Homiletics and Worship at the University of Dubuque
Theological Seminary. He is the author of Groans of the Spirit:
Homiletical Dialectics in an Age of Confusion (2010) and Year D: A
Quadrennial Supplement to the Revised Common Lectionary (2012).
A pensive pastor finds his trip to the zoo transformed at Christmas
when the inspired wisdom of the animals is revealed, and an ancient
promise of God is fulfilled, in a tale told by one phenomenal
llama. What did the llamas have to do with the first Christmas? Of
all the animals, theirs was the most important, and the most
mysterious, role of all
About the Contributor(s): Timothy Matthew Slemmons is Assistant
Professor of Homiletics and Worship at the University of Dubuque
Theological Seminary. He is the author of Groans of the Spirit:
Homiletical Dialectics in an Age of Confusion (2010) and Year D: A
Quadrennial Supplement to the Revised Common Lectionary (2012).
Description: Liturgical Elements for Reformed Worship is a series
of four liturgical resources: three consisting of liturgical
elements for Years A, B, and C of the Revised Common Lectionary,
and a fourth, the rst such resource to support the implementation
of Year D: A Quadrennial Supplement to the Revised Common
Lectionary (Cascade Books). Each volume consists of a Call to
Worship, Opening Prayer, Call to Confession, Prayer of Confession,
and Declaration of Forgiveness, with Years A-C including additional
elements (A Prayer in Preparation for Worship, The Offering, Prayer
of Dedication, and a Blessing) suitable for Presbyterian, Reformed,
and other Protestant worship. Each of these practical volumes is
intended for use by pastors, liturgists, and other planners and
leaders of worship. Endorsements: ""Timothy Slemmons has done us
all a great favor with these winsome and moving resources for every
Sunday of Year B. Every prayer and response grows from his own
close and reverent meditation on the varied texts of the
lectionary. Whether used as is or adapted to local contexts, they
will push us all to a richer life of public worship."" --Gary Neal
Hansen, Associate Professor of Church History, University of
Dubuque Theological Seminary ""How wonderful that God's people
should have words by which to hear and respond to the living Word.
Fresh, varied, rich in imagery, the liturgy offered here is also
deeply familiar as it articulates truth in the relationship between
God and his people. Timothy Slemmons has loosened our tongues with
honest, biblical, joyful language with which to worship the Lord.
Our worshiping community will be eager to find their voice in this
liturgy."" --Beth McCaw, Pastor to Students, University of Dubuque
Theological Seminary ""Pastors looking to shape all the elements of
worship into one, integrated whole need to look no further than
Slemmons's creative and utterly faithful volume. Written with
beauty, yet also with an informality suitable as a guide for
contemporary worship, this is a great resource for anyone
approaching the relentless task and terrific privilege of planning
weekly worship."" --Charles B. Hardwick, Director of Theology,
Worship, and Education, Presbyterian Church (USA) About the
Contributor(s): Timothy Matthew Slemmons is Assistant Professor of
Homiletics and Worship at the University of Dubuque Theological
Seminary. He is author of Groans of the Spirit: Homiletical
Dialectics in an Age of Confusion (2010).
Description: Groans of the Spirit constitutes a rousing challenge
to mainline churches and their practice of preaching. In this
inventive work, Timothy Slemmons calls preachers beyond the
formalism of the New Homiletic, and beyond the ethical proposals
that have arisen in the frustrated struggle to transcend it, and
toward what the author calls a ""penitential"" (reformed)
homiletic. This new homiletical proposal is distinctive in that it
faithfully adheres to the Christological content of preaching,
finds its inspiration in the promise of the real presence of
Christ, and trusts in the ministry of the Holy Spirit, from whom
alone the power for the renewal of the mainline church shall come.
This book includes a thorough reconsideration of the ""infinite
qualitative difference"" between God and humanity in Barth's
thought, an important critique of Gadamer's reception of
Kierkegaard's concept of contemporaneity, an undelivered lecture on
the content of preaching, and two sermons that illustrate
Slemmons's important proposals. Groans of the Spirit is a
long-considered, calculated, and overdue break with conventional
hermeneutics that proposes a vital homiletical pneumatology, which
draws the art of the sermon out of the ghetto of mere rhetoric and
presents it as it truly is: as theological reflection of the first
order, the church's primary language of faith. Endorsements: ""Tim
Slemmons has written a 'thick, ' passionate study of the fruitful
grounding for preaching. His advocacy pivots on the verdict of
Isaiah that 'my ways are not our ways.' With appeal to Barth and
Kierkegaard (and a glance at Gadamer), he lines out the radical,
defining 'infinite qualitative difference between the divine and
the human, between eternity and temporality' that permits the good
news from 'there' to 'here.' Before he finishes, Slemmons offers
two sermons exemplifying his bold theology in bold practice.
Readers will, as a result of reading, preach differently and/or
listen differently."" --Walter Brueggemann Columbia Theological
Seminary ""Tim Slemmons argues passionately that the most important
issues in preaching are theological. What is the significance for
preaching of Isaiah's claim that God's ways are not our ways or of
the New Testament's claim that Jesus Christ draws all people to
himself but is also a narrow gate? Not just preachers, but all
those concerned about faithful preaching will find much to ponder
in these splendid essays."" --George W. Stroup Columbia Theological
Seminary About the Contributor(s): Timothy Matthew Slemmons is
Assistant Professor of Homiletics and Worship at the University of
Dubuque Theological Seminary. His sermons, essays, and poems have
appeared in various publications.
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