I have come to the week in seminary work that I knew would come--a variety of papers and projects due this week, a crunch time, but not impossible. Last night I preached my sermon for Women and the Preaching Life class. You might say, "Big deal. Aren't you going to do this once a week in your new career?" But it's the project that gives me the most relief when it's done.
Perhaps. And yes, when giving a sermon once a week, I might not be as relieved to be done with it. But it would be different on a Sunday morning than it was last night.
For this class, we have an exegesis that we have to do in advance: we take a deep dive into the text, and we look at concordances and translations and what words mean in other languages. We consult at least 3 commentaries. We look at various angles from which we might consider the text: social justice, literary elements, where the text is situated in the Bible and throughout history. My exegesis project was 16 pages long.
We also have to turn in a written version of our sermon. That wasn't an onerous burden, since I preach from a manuscript when a grade is on the line. Does it say something about me that I preach from the written out sermon when it's for a grade, but I'm not as committed to that approach when I preach for a congregation? You decide.
To tell the truth, I had been moving in this direction. I had been preaching from an outline before we moved. I preached from a manuscript in last semester's Foundations of Preaching class, and I was surprised by how much easier it was. I may be preaching from a manuscript from now on, or at least a more complete outline.
Last night, we preached in the chapel, and it was a beautiful experience, even though it was just our class. We gathered just before the class started at 6:30, and we noticed deer grazing on the hill outside the big windows. The fading light was beautiful. I told my classmates about seeing the deer this morning across the street on the American U soccer field.
And then we settled into our sermon giving rhythm. I got to go first. Unlike last semester's class, we each got to choose our own passage. I decided to go with a selection from the Revised Common Lectionary that comes this summer, the second Sunday after Pentecost: Matthew 9:9-13, 18-26. I was pleased with what I wrote, and it was well received.
I got to go first, which made me happy. And then I relaxed into the knowledge that I had preached, and it went well. After class, I turned in my exegesis and my manuscript and tucked myself into bed.
Today I'll write and write and write some more, and then I'll drive to Vienna to pick up a classmate who doesn't drive at night. We're going to a free poetry reading: Carolyn Forché and Roger Reeves at Busboys and Poets in Northeast DC’s Brookland neighborhood on Wednesday, March 29, from 7–8:30 p.m. It's free, so if you're in the DC area, come on over and join us!
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