The Sermon and the Academy Award
Release date:
Topic(s):
UPDATE: Another great meditation on the connection between The King’s Speech and the act of preaching from our friend William Willimon . What a gift Willimon is!
—
An interesting reflection from the (ht ) on how the Academy Award winning motion picture The King’s Speech parallels the Ministry of the Word.
As is often the case, Martin Luther explains it best: āIf we hold the Word of God in high regard, then we would be glad to go to church, to listen to the sermon and to pay attention. But if you look more at the pastor than at God; if you do not see Godās person but merely gape to see whether the pastor is learned and skilled, whether the pastor has good diction, then you do not have eyes to see the river of the water of life, bright as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lambā¦. For a poor speaker may speak the Word of God just as well as he who is endowed with eloquence.ā Of course, this recognition does not excuse pastors from their duty to become better preachers, trained in the art of rhetoric and public speaking. But Luther does well to remind us where a congregationās focus should be in the midst of preaching: on God and not the pastor.
God speaks to us through pastors. āWould to God,ā Luther writes, āthat we could gradually train our hearts to believe that the preacherās words are Godās Word and that the man addressing us is a scholar and a king.ā For it truly is the āKingās speechā a pastor is trying to communicate. And we, clergy and laypeople alike, must listen attentively to hear what He says.
Read .

