Product Review
This ethics of preaching text identifies vices of irresponsible preaching practices. Preachers who fail to develop deep respect for their listeners or drift into a lack faithfulness to the Gospel can end up becoming:Â Â
·       The Pretender (The Problem of In-authenticity)
·       The Egoist (The Problem of Self-absorption)
·       The Manipulator (The Problem of Greediness)
·       The Panderer (The Problem of Trendiness)
·       The Crusader (The Problem of Exploitation)
·       The Demagogue (The Problem of Self-righteousness) Â
Just as the church historically derived its Seven Holy Virtues (chastity, temperance, charity, diligence, patience, kindness, & humility) by naming Seven Deadly Sins (lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, envy, & pride), Reid and Hogan call preachers to turn away from pulpit vices and strive to realize the homiletic virtues of becoming:Â Â
·       Authentic (The Call to Be Genuine)
·       Altruistic (The Call to Be Selfless)
·       Careful (The Call to Exercise Self-Control)
·       Passionate (The Call to Be Honest to God)
·       Courteous (The Call to Woo a Reasoned Reception)
·       A ‘Namer’ of God (The Call to Reveal an Ineffable God)  Â
The Six Deadly Sins of Preaching explores the difference between the irresponsible practices, unfortunate missteps, and mere unthinking mistakes in preaching. A chapter is devoted to Preaching Missteps (problems that do not rise to the level of being irresponsible) that includes:Â
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·       Short Changing the Process
·       Waving a Red Flag
·       Thou Shall Not Bore the Congregation
·       Through the Looking Glass Darkly
·       The Mumbler
·       TMI—Too Much Information
·       Your Cup Do Runneth Over
·       Where’s This Sermon Going, Anyway?






