Showing posts with label Narrative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Narrative. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Effective First-Person Biblical Preaching: The Steps from Text to Narrative Sermon (repost)




Effective First-Person Biblical Preaching: The Steps from Text to Narrative Sermon by J. Kent Edwards


English | 2005 | ISBN: 0310263093 | 192 pages | PDF | 1,2 MB




A practical text to help students and pastors understand why and how first-person sermons can be preached with biblical integrity. While following Haddon Robinson"s "big idea" preaching methodology, the author walks the readers through the steps they can take to prepare an effective first-person message.












Thursday, September 10, 2015

Hell Without Fires: Slavery, Christianity, and the Antebellum Spiritual Narrative




Hell Without Fires: Slavery, Christianity, and the Antebellum Spiritual Narrative (History of African-American Religions) by YOLANDA PIERCE


English | Mar. 12, 2005 | ISBN: 081302806X | 168 Pages | PDF | 590.86 KB




Hell Without Fires examines the spiritual and earthly results of conversion to Christianity for African-American antebellum writers. Using autobiographical narratives, the book shows how black writers transformed the earthly hell of slavery into a "New Jerusalem," a place they could call home.             Yolanda Pierce insists that for African Americans, accounts of spiritual conversion revealed "personal transformations with far-reaching community effects. A personal experience of an individual"s relationship with God is transformed into the possibility of liberating an entire community." The process of conversion could result in miraculous literacy, "callings" to preach, a renewed resistance to the slave condition, defiance of racist and sexist conventions, and communal uplift.             These stories by five of the earliest antebellum spiritual writers–George White, John Jea, David Smith, Solomon Bayley, and Zilpha Elaw–create a new religious language that merges Christian scripture with distinct retellings of biblical stories, with enslaved people of African descent at their center. Showing the ways their language exploits the levels of meaning of words like master, slavery, sin, and flesh, Pierce argues that the narratives address the needs of those who attempted to transform a foreign god and religion into a personal and collective system of beliefs. The earthly "hell without fires"–one of the writer"s characterizations of everyday life for those living in slavery–could become a place where an individual could be both black and Christian, and religion could offer bodily and psychological healing.             Pierce presents a complex and subtle assessment of the language of conversion in the context of slavery. Her work will be important to those interested in the topics of slave religion and spiritual autobiography and to scholars of African American and early American literature and religion.