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Home > 2004 > JanuaryChristianity Today, January, 2004  |   |  
The Colonizers
The best preachers have challenged earth to become more like heaven.



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This fall I read American Sermons, a 939-page anthology in the prestigious Library of America series. Although the collection includes sermons from Unitarians and Jews, 45 of the 53 preachers are avowed Christians, including D. L. Moody, J. Gresham Machen, Billy Sunday, Aimee Semple McPherson, and R. A. Torrey, as well as a strong contingent of Puritans.

I can't fathom how a compiler would omit George Whitefield, Charles Finney, and Billy Graham. Could a history of baseball overlook Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, and Bobby Bonds? But in general the editor, Michael Warner, did an admirable service for anyone interested in preaching.

Modern preachers owe a great debt to the Puritans, who elevated the sermon to a place of honor. The Anglican Church had downgraded sermons to quarterly events, and Catholics had likewise de-emphasized the homily. English Puritans risked arrest by meeting illicitly to hear sermons, and those who immigrated to America made the most of their freedom. Increase Mather, for example, spent 16 hours a day in his study, and recited his hour-long sermons from memory.

More than a century later, slave preachers were fashioning a new style of preaching, based not on linear reasoning but rather on soaring figures of speech. "Like a chained eagle my soul rises toward her native heben, but she can only fly just so high," cried Brother Carper. "But de fetters ob flesh shall fall off soon."

Southern revivalism confronted white audiences with a strong emotional appeal. Sam P. Jones, a former drunk, stood atop an old piano box and railed against the dangers of meanness, whiskey, and Democrats. Billy Sunday, a professional baseball player and son of a Union Army soldier, declared that "there has never been a time when it is harder to live a consistent Christian life than now."

Tellingly, representative sermons from the 20th century are half the length of those in prior centuries, far more genteel, and as likely to be psychological as theological in their thrust.

Taken together, the sermons give a capsule history of the United States. Famous preachers of modern times, especially those who speak on radio and television, emphasize success and "health and wealth." Such an emphasis apparently never occurred to the tiny knot of Puritan settlers, only half of whom survived their first winter in New England. Even so, early immigrants envisioned themselves entering the Promised Land of possibility and freedom. The later legions of slaves brought from Africa in chains found it easier to identify with the Israelites in bondage in Egypt.

Every era has its preferred sins. Today we hear sermons about the evils of abortion and homosexuality. Earlier congregations heard about witchcraft, demon rum, rampant capitalism, and foreign entanglements. During the Civil War, preachers in both North and South quoted the Bible to justify their regions' convictions.

John Winthrop preached his famous "City upon a Hill" sermon aboard a ship bringing settlers to America. "The eies of all people are uppon us," he said, and if America failed to meet its ideals, "wee shall be made a story and a by-word throughout the world." Almost two centuries later, the former slave Absalom Jones preached a powerful Thanksgiving sermon honoring Congress for abolishing the African slave trade. Little did he know that another 55 years would pass before slaves already in America would receive their freedom.

Fast forward another century, and Martin Luther King Jr. was still repeating the simple refrain, "We want to be free." King is one of five individuals who merit two sermons in this anthology: the "I've Been to the Mountaintop" sermon preached the eve of his assassination, and "Transformed Nonconformist," which explores the Christian's citizenship in two worlds.





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