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Preaching Re-Imagined: The Role of the Sermon in Communities of Faith
 
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Preaching Re-Imagined: The Role of the Sermon in Communities of Faith (Hardcover)

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3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

What is the role of preaching in the postmodern church? Doug Pagitt takes on this pivotal question as he invites you to reimagine the goals and roles of preaching. Using a few questions as guides, learn how to create followers of God who thrive amidst the complexities of life. Perfect for pastors and emergent thinkers, this book is a hopeful look at the present and future of preaching.


From the Back Cover

Preaching Re-Imagined The Role of the Sermon in Communities of Faith Imagine for a moment … that you can forget almost everything you’ve ever read, ever heard, ever been taught about preaching. Somehow, everything is new; nothing is impossible. Imagine if—with the Holy Spirit’s working—missional communities could be formed, vibrant stories could be told and retold for generations, in new and ever vivid manners of communication. emergentYS author and pastor Doug Pagitt offers an invitation to the kind of preaching that "creates followers of God who serve the world well and live the invitation to the rhythm of God." He introduces you to an approach to engaging the Bible with a focus on three questions: • What kind of communities are we forming? (Sociology) • What story are we telling? (Theology) • How can we tell it more effectively? (Communication) These questions are engaged through the introduction of Progressional Implicatory Preaching. This insightful combination of both theory and practical advice will open the floodgates of your imagination to once again dream big dreams for your church. Envision preaching beyond speechmaking as an agent in the creation of Christian communities and take a hopeful look toward new approaches to encouraging the spiritual formation of your church body. * Includes study/discussion questions

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Zondervan/Youth Specialties (September 1, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0310263638
  • ISBN-13: 978-0310263630
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #553,097 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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43 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Needs to be a part of every preaching class, September 20, 2005
By Bob Hyatt (USA) - See all my reviews
  
This is a book that those who currently teach preaching and those who practice the art of preaching would do well not to miss.

Doug Pagitt, aside from being an excellent communicator, is also a top notch, challenging thinker. In Preaching Re-Imagined he lays out the problem (preaching as we know it is broken- the same people hear the same messages year after year and yet continue to struggle with the same problems) and some of the standard reasons why people imagine preaching is ineffective (the problem is the people, the method, the preacher, the content, etc).
Those aren't the problem, Pagitt says. Rather, the issue is "speaching", that is, defining preaching down to simply a monologue. And a steady diet of monologue is detrimental to the soul of the community- when all the communication runs in one direction, there are unintended consequences both to the speaker and the hearers. It may be fine in the short term, but long term this tends to stunt the growth of all involved.

Doug advocates something he calls progressional dialogue- becoming communities who listen to the preachers among us, not only the preacher standing in front of us.

This is a seriously great book that will challenge anyone who fills the role of "preacher" for his or her community to consider the impact their method may have on the hearers, and to consider from the ground-up the "hows", "whys" and "whats" of preaching.

Check this book out- even if you are at a size as a church where dialogue has become impossible on Sundays, there's much here to glean. This book serves as a wake up call for pastors to once again begin involving the people in the work of teaching one another.

A quote:
"As pastor I want to be part of a community where the workings of God are imbedded in all, where the roles of teaching and learning aren't mine alone, but instead are intrinsic to who we are as a people."

Amen.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Light Disappointment, September 15, 2008
By J. Miller (LA, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Pagitt has taken a stand against oratory in general. For a book on preaching, it is guaranteed to be lost in the history of the discipline, buried under better works.

Pagitt's contention is that oratory, to which he gives the inane and grammatically painful term, "speaching," exalts an individual to an undeserved position of authority which doesn't honor the community's role in discerning truth. Instead, he recommends the equally painful "dialogical progression" (as though any dialogues don't have an intended progress), which boils down to nothing more than talking with his audience. What Pagitt lacks, and what I'll go to pains to detail, is 1) any biblical foundation, 2) any accurate understandings of history, and 3) any proof that his own methods are fruitful.

Pagitt makes wild claims about dialoging with the audience to be a biblical norm, even stating that speeches in the Bible are a rarity. This is, in a word, nonsense. In nearly every book of the Bible someone makes a speech, and in every case, the Bible exalts their speaking with authority FOR the community, and not merely with the community. Pagitt offers no proof that his assertions about what the Bible says and does are accurate.

Secondly, Pagitt makes the completely unfounded and uncited claim that "speaching," or oratory in general, are a product of the Enlightenment. Anyone with a college education will find this intellectually insulting. From the ancient greco-roman orators, whose methods influenced the biblical writings, history and timelessly and repeatedly proven the effectiveness of oratory (that is, of a speaker in authority moving an audience to an intended purpose).

Thirdly, Solomon's Porch, his popularized church, has proven to have an actually minimal effect in its immediate community. While their event invitation list claims hundreds, actual attendance is small. His "radical" move to church without microphones doesn't forward the priesthood of all believers, it only forwards the cause of having a minimal number of priests in your church. Pagitt speaches widely at conferences in exactly the form he decries, despite the fact that he has no proven track record of his own effectiveness.

All that to say, this book is a waste of time. It is founded on nonsense and it will be lost in history. Perhaps the most telling indicator is that Pagitt dismisses the expository methods of Martin Lloyd-Jones, and tells readers who like him simply to return Pagitt's book to the store. It kind of gives you a sense of how much Pagitt is really interested in dialogue.

James W. Miller is the author of God Scent: A Devotional.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Waste Of Time, July 7, 2008
To borrow the wording from a couple other reviews on here about this book, Pagitt's book is a bunch of post-modern, rambling fluff that throws the baby out with the bath water. While I can somewhat sympathize with some of his concerns about the nature of preaching, his answers to his concerns are all wrong. I whole-heartedly believe there is and should be a place for group interaction and discussion about the scriptures, but that place is better suited for a small group or sunday school setting, not as a replacement for good sound biblical preaching.

I am a senior at a bible college and once a week we have a freshmen chapel where a freshmen who has had no training in homiletics and very little hermeneutical training gets to preach, and let me tell you, it never comes out good. Allowing just anyone to preach to the church isn't the best idea.

Paggit's book is also very repetitive. He probably could have shortened it from 262 pages to about 150 or less. The whole book is just him rambling. I looked at the works cited page in the back and he has four sources cited throughout the whole book.....FOUR! The whole book is just him talking about the same couple of things over and over again with no support from outside sources.

If you're looking for a good book on preaching, DO NOT read this one. but if you're looking for a pretty awful book about preaching, by all means, pick up "Preaching Re-Imagined"
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Important and Practical, But not New
The book "Preaching Re-Imagined" re-discovers and re-packages the idea of dialogical preaching. Creative styles of preaching in general, and dialogical styles of preaching in... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Brian

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Insight
Doug Pagitt argues for dialogue prior to, during and after a sermon between the preacher and parishioners. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Scott Tait

2.0 out of 5 stars exaggerated and filler full
Doug Pagitt is convinced that preaching would be more faithful to Biblical faith formation and the nurturing of healthy communities if it were more dialogical and less monologue... Read more
Published 22 months ago by C Eric

3.0 out of 5 stars Pagitt throws the baby out with the bath water
Pagitt asks some tough and good questions about today's preaching style, some which need to be seriously considered and answered by today's preacher. Read more
Published on March 7, 2007 by R. Welch

5.0 out of 5 stars Preaching for the 21st Century
I'm a sociologist of religion and I came across this book during my research on the emerging church. Read more
Published on December 8, 2006 by Shayne Lee

5.0 out of 5 stars Don't Miss This One
Doug Pagitt's book, Preaching Re-Imagined, is a must have for your library. It was inspiring, useful and thought provoking. This book has changed the way that I approach preaching.
Published on August 28, 2006 by Robert D. Lafler, Jr.

1.0 out of 5 stars Post-modern emergent fluff
Doug starts with a warning cry that pastors and spreachers pose a danger to the church. He tells us to re-image preaching but in the process reinvents preaching. Read more
Published on February 27, 2006 by Timothy J. Mcneely

4.0 out of 5 stars Starting Over
This book is a great way to re examine methods used for preaching. Doug deconstructs many of the common thoughts and practices used in churches today to look at what the... Read more
Published on October 31, 2005 by R. Brown

5.0 out of 5 stars Preach On
Having had a chance to visit Solomon's Porch and interact with Doug and some of the wonderful folks there in Minneapolis, I can honestly say that this approach to preaching is... Read more
Published on October 24, 2005 by Ryan L. Sharp

5.0 out of 5 stars Fresh Thinking
I found this book to fresh. While not perfect, it seemed to demonstrate what it was advocating. The book called for a dialog, and it helped create one. Read more
Published on October 23, 2005 by Pastor

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Preaching Re-Imagined

This is what God's word says about preaching.  It's a one way communication from the top down and God is not interested in progressional dialogue with you over it.  Preach the Word. You, however, have followed my teaching, my conduct, my aim in life, ...

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