PREACHING MATTERS: A PRAXIS FOR PREACHERS
By Bishop Sylvester Ryan and Deborah L. Wilhelm
Chicago: Catholic
Theological Union, 2015
Review by Fr. R. B. Williams, O.P.
"And how can
they believe in him of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear
without someone to preach?" (Romans 10:14). The last five years have seen
what amounts to an awakening at the highest levels of leadership in the
church to what folks in the pews have known for years: that the quality of
liturgical preaching - particularly on Sundays - leaves much to be desired.
This is all the more regrettable since the Second Vatican Council on
December 7, 1965, published Presbyterorum Ordinis (Decree On the Life
and Ministry of Priests) which states in paragraph four:
"The People
of God is formed into one in the first place by the Word of the living God,
which is quite rightly sought from the mouth of priests. For since
nobody can be saved who has not first believed, it is the first task of
priests as
co-workers with
the bishops to preach the Gospel of God to all men." (PO#4)
Five years
ago, Pope Benedict published his post-synodal exhortation, Verbum
Domini, which showed a new concern about the importance of preaching in
the liturgical celebrations, especially on Sunday. In response to this, the
American Bishops published in 2012, Preaching the Mystery of Faith: the
Sunday Homily. Then Pope Francis, shortly after his election in
2013 weighed in with some very eloquent and pointed comments and direction
on preaching in his "The Joy of the Gospel," ##135-159. These latter three
documents are quoted liberally in the very fine effort by Bishop Sylvester
Ryan and Dr. Deborah L. Wilhelm entitled PREACHING MATTERS: A PRAXIS FOR
PREACHERS. They are responding to the challenge contained in the American
Bishops' document to develop practical resources to help in the improvement
and development of liturgical preaching in the U.S.A. It is to be hoped
that their book will receive wide circulation.
First, it is
based on years of collaboration between Bishop Ryan (Emeritus Bishop of
Monterey, CA) and Dr. Wilhelm (who has a D.Min in Preaching from Aquinas
Institute in St. Louis and has taught preaching to deacon candidates with
Bishop Ryan and serves as a qualified lay preacher in addition to teaching
writing on the university level). The two of them have taught preaching to
deacon candidates for some years. They have managed to bring their efforts
to paper in a highly readable and practical way.
The book has a
kind of workshop tone to it, very encouraging and aware of the practical
difficulties facing all Catholic liturgical preachers. (The word "gently"
appears often!) Their examples are frequently amusing and reflect years of
preaching experience. They offer a very detailed program of preaching
preparation fully aware of the time limits faced by pastors and other
preachers who have more than Sunday (or daily) preaching to worry about.
The format of the book itself reflects this in the brevity of the chapters!
(But I mention the time worry below as well.)
The book is
divided into two sections. The first section is a overall view of the
importance of preaching and its context, the lectionary, the Roman Missal
and the "Art of Interpretation." The second section contains their
recommended process of preparation. Since they recommend preaching without
notes and in a "conversational" style, their approach surprised me by its
writing and editing process prior to delivery. Separate (again very brief
and practical) chapters are given to each step of the process. At the end
of the book, they offer homiletic examples of the points they make
earlier. I definitely applaud their recommendation that a Sunday homily be
highly focused and no more than 8-10 minutes in length. (Chapters 10 and 15
alone are worth the price of the book.)
The sheer length
of the documents by Popes Benedict and Francis and the American Bishops (as
well as the "Homiletic Directory published in February 2015 by the
Congregation for Sacraments and Divine Worship, published after this book)
virtually guarantees that they will not be widely read. The authors of
PREACHING MATTERS quote them often, which may or may not tempt others to
read them. I would simply recommend that anyone charged with liturgical
preaching read Ryan and Wilhelm's PREACHING MATTERS: A PRAXIS FOR
PREACHERS.
One of the
limitations that this book faces is the almost exclusive focus on Sunday
preaching. This is also the focus of the official documents that the
authors often quote. While the authors acknowledge the considerable
limitations on time of the busy pastor (deacon, lay preacher), they still
propose a process of preparation that does take a lot of time and
attention. This can be frustrating to the pastor or deacon or lay preacher
who may be called upon to preside and hopefully preach at very different
services during the week. In the mission diocese where I live, the same
presider may be at a funeral, wedding, anointing, baptism and daily
Eucharist all in the same day. How does this preparation process address
this very real challenge in many dioceses?
In addition to
that concern, if I had suggestions to make for future editions, I would
like to see some material on cross-cultural preaching. Many pastors in the
U.S.A. find themselves preaching in a language that is not their first
language. This would be true of Anglo pastors in parishes rapidly becoming
Hispanic. It would also be true of the many "international" priests who are
now pastoring parishes. What could the authors offer to the Filipino,
African, Indian and Latino priests who are coming to serve in dioceses that
lack the priests to provide the preaching that is so important? Itinerant
preachers like myself also preach retreats and parish missions. The
preaching challenge is quite different in terms of preparation, length,
etc. Last but not least, the internet offers tremendous opportunities to
any preacher. Can a resource be developed to assist those who might try
that form of preaching?
None of these
questions is meant to take away from the value of PREACHING MATTERS: A
PRAXIS FOR PREACHERS but rather to challenge them and others interested to
develop these resources. I hope dioceses will buy a copy of this book for
all the priests, deacons and lay preachers of their territory. Bishop Ryan
and Dr. Wilhelm have done a great service in providing this resource. I
just hope it will have a large audience.
Fr. R. B.
Williams, O.P., Itinerant and Internet Preacher.