{"id":35058,"date":"2022-09-10T21:53:49","date_gmt":"2022-09-11T02:53:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/preaching-passion-an-interview-with-robert-smith\/"},"modified":"2022-09-10T21:53:49","modified_gmt":"2022-09-11T02:53:49","slug":"preaching-passion-an-interview-with-robert-smith","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/preaching-passion-an-interview-with-robert-smith\/","title":{"rendered":"Preaching &#038; Passion: An Interview with Robert Smith"},"content":{"rendered":"<p align=\"justify\"><em>Robert<br \/> Smith teaches preaching at Beeson Divinity School and has been a featured preacher<br \/> at past sessions of the National Conference on Preaching. He will be part of<br \/> the 2005 conference in Nashville, which will use the theme &#8220;Preaching With<br \/> Passion.&#8221; <\/em>Preaching<em> editor Michael Duduit recently talked to Robert<br \/> about the place of passion in preaching.<\/em><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> Whenever you preach I sense an enormous amount of passion in your preaching.<br \/> Tell me a little bit about what you see as the place of passion in your preaching<br \/> specifically and then generally with preaching.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> My passion does not come simply become I&#8217;m outgoing. Really I&#8217;m very introverted.<br \/> But my passion comes as a result of my being engaged with the text. When God<br \/> has revealed to me through my studies the meaning of something that is so revelatory<br \/> and relevant and the text literally comes to life, then my passion is ignited.<br \/> I feel a relationship with Jeremiah. In Jeremiah 29 he said: &#8220;I said I<br \/> was not going to speak in His name anymore but his word was in my heart like<br \/> fire shut up in my bones, and I couldn&#8217;t hold my peace. Because His word was<br \/> in my heart then it was like fire. Ignited my emotions, and I had to speak it.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Those<br \/> kinds of passages help me to understand the role of passion in preaching, which<br \/> is directed by an engagement with the text so that exegetically one comes to<br \/> understand what that text is saying to Gods people. In the passage as they are<br \/> leaving Jerusalem on the way to Emmaus, they said, &#8220;Did not our hearts<br \/> burn within us while he talked with us by the way and opened to us the scripture.&#8221;<br \/> Hear what they said: Eyes were opened. Opened to us the scripture. There&#8217;s burning,<br \/> and a desire to go back to Jerusalem to tell the eleven that the Lord is risen.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> Most people would tend to think of passion as being emotionally-driven but you<br \/> talk about it being textually-driven.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> Exactly, because all of us are emotional. Maybe some are more subdued than others.<br \/> Real passion comes from listening to God&#8217;s Word and being engaged in a conversation<br \/> with the text. Passion is not simply feeling in the pulpit, to scream and holler.<br \/> A preacher may stand still, never bobs and moves and does nothing emotional,<br \/> that individual can still have passion because of the Holy Spirit.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> What is the role of the Holy Spirit in passion and preaching?<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> The Spirit is the catalyst, the energizer. He is the one who gives unction.<br \/> This is how I picture it. I think of preaching and passion in terms of the role<br \/> of the Spirit in Genesis 2, Ezekiel 37. Adam had everything he needed to be<br \/> considered a human being except breath. He had all the bones he needed, he had<br \/> skin, organs. The only thing God did was to breathe into his nostrils that breath<br \/> of life. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">The<br \/> same think in Ezekiel. There are dry bones, then they take on flesh  &#8211;  there&#8217;s<br \/> everything but they&#8217;re still lying down. They need the breath. I think preaching<br \/> can&#8217;t really stand until the Holy Spirit takes our message and breathes upon<br \/> it, because He knows  &#8211;  He&#8217;s omniscient. He knows what Robert Smith needs. He<br \/> can take something that I&#8217;ve prepared &#8211; I have no idea what you need or what<br \/> the congregation needs &#8211; and He takes that and distributes it in diversified<br \/> ways. And that&#8217;s exciting. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Sometimes<br \/> we&#8217;re not aware of it until after the service is over and people come up to<br \/> us and ask, &#8220;How did you know?&#8221; with tears in their eyes, and the<br \/> Holy Spirit has been moving. Sometimes what we&#8217;ve said has not necessarily been<br \/> said well in terms of articulation and presentation but the Spirit takes what<br \/> we consider an aside and applies it to the people. I see the Holy Spirit as<br \/> the omniscient one who is fitting us for being in the pulpit. He&#8217;s with us in<br \/> the study preparing. He is the preacher doing the sermon and He&#8217;s the after-preacher,<br \/> because after the sermon is over the Spirit is still preaching all week long<br \/> applying the message to people. Most of the time we never see our product and<br \/> we won&#8217;t know how our preaching hits some people until we get to Heaven.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> Tell me what you see is the place of prayer in all of this.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> Prayer is my recognition that everything I&#8217;ve done by way of preparation is<br \/> in vain in my own strength. It brings me to the point that I know I&#8217;m inadequate,<br \/> I&#8217;m insufficient. When I open myself up to God to use my weakness and my wayward<br \/> thoughts and disorganized ideas  &#8211;  and sometimes to watch Him do that in the<br \/> pulpit is almost like having an out-of-body experience and saying, &#8220;This<br \/> is not me.&#8221; So prayer, for me, is opening the door so that God can come<br \/> in and take what I&#8217;ve done and use it beyond my fondest dreams. Its like Fred<br \/> Craddock saying, after he&#8217;s prepared his message and is on his way to the pulpit<br \/> from the study, &#8220;God, I have nothing. Let&#8217;s see what you&#8217;re going to do<br \/> with nothing today.&#8221; Just opening yourself up to be used.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">To<br \/> go to the pulpit depending totally upon your preparation instead of the Holy<br \/> Spirit makes you a double fool, because then you don&#8217;t open yourself in terms<br \/> of praying and saying, &#8220;God, even though this is well-designed and well-manicured,<br \/> if you don&#8217;t use it I&#8217;m going to flop.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> There are many churches today where there doesn&#8217;t seem to be a lot of power.<br \/> To what extent do you see that as a lack of what we&#8217;ve been talking about in<br \/> terms of dependence on the Spirit, the role of prayer, the place of passion?<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> There is a detachment between head and heart so that some will enter the pulpit<br \/> &#8211;  the congregations are well-trained, very educated, that&#8217;s wonderful  &#8211;  and<br \/> they preach from the neck up because that&#8217;s what people want. They want to hear,<br \/> to learn, to take notes, that&#8217;s it. &#8220;Give me information.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Then<br \/> there are those who preach to people from the neck down. They want to be set<br \/> afire in the heart. They don&#8217;t necessarily want to be informed. They want to<br \/> feel good. They want to shout. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">I<br \/> think we have to come to the place where we preach to people holistically. We<br \/> want to inform them but we want to inspire them as well. To preach to some congregations,<br \/> in order to get to them you have to start with the heart. Inspire them. And<br \/> others you have to start wit the head; after you earn the right to be heard<br \/> because they understand you can be intellectual enough  &#8211;  there&#8217;s credibility<br \/> in what you say &#8211;  then they&#8217;ll open themselves up and be inspired. But for other<br \/> people, if you start there that&#8217;s too sophisticated, too educated, too high<br \/> for me. They won&#8217;t hear you but if you can start with the heart, then you can<br \/> teach them something. I just think we have to cover the whole canvas. There&#8217;s<br \/> a detachment between the head and heart, the cardiological and the cranium.<br \/> There&#8217;s a detachment between what I consider anthropological and ontological. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">I<br \/> need to know that there are people who come here who need proclamation in terms<br \/> of the gospel to be saved. I want to cater to their salvation but there are<br \/> some who have been Christians for a long time and they need to be taught, so<br \/> I want to instruct them so that they can mature in the faith and not keep drinking<br \/> milk, get ready for the meat. But then I want to inspire in terms of therapy<br \/> because there are some who are strong in faith but they&#8217;ve been beat up on.<br \/> Bad diagnosis, trouble in the family, joblessness, death, etc. They need to<br \/> be encouraged and inspired. I think what we&#8217;ve done is to dichotomize our preaching<br \/> to the point where we just shoot for the head or the heart. Instead we need<br \/> to seek a wholeness, an engagement the way Jesus did.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> You come out of an African-American tradition as a pastor for a number of years<br \/> but you&#8217;ve now taught in two schools where the majority of your students are<br \/> not African-American. Tell me what insights you try to draw out of your own<br \/> preaching tradition that students outside of that need to learn from. What are<br \/> things that pastors, preachers who are not African-American can learn from those<br \/> churches?<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> First of all I don&#8217;t consider myself a black preacher. You didn&#8217;t say that,<br \/> but I consider myself a preacher black. I say that because I want my preacherliness<br \/> to define me and not my race. I&#8217;m a preacher that just happens to be black so<br \/> I don&#8217;t want to be defined, confined and categorized by my ethnicity, which<br \/> I don&#8217;t deny. It&#8217;s to enable me to be true to who I am but to be able to move<br \/> out of who I am so that I can adapt to any audience because truth is not ethnic.<br \/> I need to be able to relate to any congregation I preach in  &#8211;  the idioms in<br \/> those congregations, the time schedules in terms of their worship  &#8211;  don&#8217;t decry<br \/> them, don&#8217;t think that there is a superiority in African-American preaching<br \/> over any other preaching. But to say that God has given all of us something<br \/> and we need to learn from each other and inform each other so we can be more<br \/> effective. My students hear that all the time. So that&#8217;s one of the things that&#8217;s<br \/> been helpful for me. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Of<br \/> course black preaching is not monolithic. There are congregations that participate<br \/> in call and response and other black congregations where if you held a gun to<br \/> their head they wouldn&#8217;t smile or do anything! <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">I<br \/> want to be myself to a point that I&#8217;m kind of like Michael Jordan. He was asked,<br \/> &#8220;What do you think about when you have 10 seconds left in a game and the<br \/> score is tied and you&#8217;re one point behind? Are you going to make a hook-shot?<br \/> Are you going to dunk, drive or you going to shoot a 20-footer, a fade-away?&#8221;<br \/> He says, &#8220;I take what the defense gives me. If there&#8217;s an opening down<br \/> the lane I take it. If someone backs off and I can fade, take a shot, I&#8217;ll do<br \/> it.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">That&#8217;s<br \/> the way I am with preaching. I take what the congregation gives me. If the congregation<br \/> is open to me swinging, I&#8217;ll swing. If it&#8217;s open to me lecturing more or whatever<br \/> . . . I want to, at the same time, still be myself and perhaps take them further<br \/> than they are used to going. And that can never be done unless there has been<br \/> an engagement of the text all the way through. Otherwise it is just emotionalism.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">I&#8217;ve<br \/> had the privilege for 38 years of probably doing 60 percent of my preaching<br \/> in a white context. I&#8217;m a product of white seminaries and white Bible colleges.<br \/> One of my African-American Ph.D. students asked me one time why I was doing<br \/> a dissertation on a white German theologian. Why not a black person that I could<br \/> write about and leave a legacy for our church? I informed him that this person,<br \/> Helmut Thielicke, was an individual that for me transcended colors  &#8211;  that he<br \/> could be linked to suffering of all people. Intellectually as a churchman he<br \/> kept his foot in the church and the academy. I wanted to present someone who<br \/> could bless more than the white church but could bless the entire church. That&#8217;s<br \/> why I chose to write on him &#8211; and he has informed me ever since. He just happened<br \/> to be a preacher who was white. That&#8217;s all.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> Who are the preachers that have influenced you?<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> My father in the ministry was Elijah Lee Alexander from Little Rock Arkansas.<br \/> Crude, rough-hewn, baptized me, made me a junior deacon at seven, ordained me,<br \/> all that. He was the kind of individual who shaped the way I think and the way<br \/> I preach. When I was probably about 10 years old I had to know the church covenant<br \/> word for word. No excuse. I had to know the 24 articles of faith. I had to know<br \/> that. My mother and father gave him permission to literally whip me  &#8211;  I know<br \/> it sounds mean &#8211; for being lazy in thought. I had to know that. I was forced<br \/> to teach adult Sunday school at 14. I had home Bible study, correspondence course<br \/> for adults in that neighborhood when I was 12, 13. All those kind of things<br \/> came as a result of him. So he shaped the way I think. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Once<br \/> I was getting ready to preach at his church as a young teenage preacher. I had<br \/> 50 pages of a manuscript that I was going to preach at Shiloh Baptist church<br \/> in Newark, Ohio, and about an hour before the service he said, &#8220;Bobby,<br \/> is this your&#8217;s son?&#8221; I said, &#8220;Yes, sir.&#8221; I had taken all these<br \/> notes on the Pulpit Commentary and all that. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">He<br \/> tore up every one of those pages and threw it into the trash can. He said, &#8220;Now<br \/> if you need all of that to preach from, if you can&#8217;t remember anything you&#8217;ve<br \/> read, how do you expect the people to remember? Now,&#8221; he said, &#8220;You<br \/> go on and preach.&#8221; <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">I<br \/> was mad  &#8211;  of course, I wouldn&#8217;t let him know that  &#8211;  but it shaped me. I&#8217;m<br \/> for any way of communicating the Word of God but it has to be internalized.<br \/> He forced me to internalize my thought, organize it and to present it. So he<br \/> informed me. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Another<br \/> person is George Q. Brown, who was pastor at New Mission Baptist Church for<br \/> 18 years, and I was there with him for ten years. I succeeded him. I used to<br \/> carry his luggage. I learned so much about preaching just incidentally, almost<br \/> accidentally. His delivery was always a delivery that focused on Jesus  &#8211;  there<br \/> was always a Christ element. It&#8217;s not preaching unless you talk about Jesus<br \/> and his death. So he influenced me. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">And<br \/> then since 1992, James Earl Massey has really influenced my life, particularly<br \/> when it comes to being scholarly and documenting everything. He&#8217;s walked with<br \/> me through some moments, like in the hospital. He was the external reader for<br \/> my dissertation and is now serving as a conversation partner in a book that<br \/> I&#8217;m working on during sabbatical. So those are the three individuals in terms<br \/> of preachers, E.L. Alexander, George Q. Brown and James Earl Massey, who had<br \/> the greatest impact on my preaching.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> Who are the preachers that you like to listen to today?<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> I love to listen to James Earl Massey. I love to listen to Charles Swindoll<br \/> because of his communication skills. He knows how to communicate. I love to<br \/> listen by tape to E.K. Bailey, because E.K. Bailey served as a model of how<br \/> to be yourself in any audience, bring the gospel, to be graphic, to make the<br \/> text live; I still like to go back and listen to him. I like to listen to John<br \/> Piper because Piper reminds me of the seriousness and the gravity of our task<br \/> of preaching. No nonsense. His emphasis on the sovereignty of God is moving<br \/> and significant for me. I love to listen to how he can let the gospel be as<br \/> radical as it is. No compromise. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Among<br \/> African-American preachers &#8211; E.K. Bailey, Tony Evans. I like to listen to him<br \/> because of his exegesis. He&#8217;s biblical. He has passion. Obviously again these<br \/> persons are speaking not only to African-American audiences but white audiences.<br \/> A. Lewis Patterson, Jr., who pastors the Mount Corian Baptist church in Houston.<br \/> I like to listen to him for his love of language. Biblical language. He&#8217;s a<br \/> word molder. Very alliterative. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">And<br \/> the last one, of course, is the dean of preachers. That&#8217;s what Tom Long calls<br \/> him. He didn&#8217;t call him the dean of black preachers, the dean of preachers:<br \/> Gardner Calvin Taylor. I&#8217;ve been listening to him preach for 30-something years.<br \/> The way that he engages you and can take one word and just continue to stretch<br \/> it until you can see what he&#8217;s saying not just hear what he&#8217;s saying.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><em>Preaching<\/em>:<\/strong><br \/> You&#8217;ve been at this for a long time now as a pastor, associate pastor and now<br \/> as a teacher. What are some things you&#8217;ve learned about preaching that you wish<br \/> you&#8217;d known when you started out preaching?<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>Smith:<\/strong><br \/> Scottish theologian Donald Baillie said, &#8220;Theology exists to make preaching<br \/> as hard as it needs to be.&#8221; Earlier in my ministry I wish I would have<br \/> spent more time reading theology, because theology for me today is serving as<br \/> a reservoir for my preaching. Theology represents the iron rods that hold my<br \/> preaching together. &#8211; like the iron rods that hold the concrete together on<br \/> the highway. So I wish I would have know that. <\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">I<br \/> read so many preaching books, wonderful books, but I wish I would have read<br \/> more theology. I wish I would have at an early point read Barth&#8217;s <em>Church<br \/> Dogmatics<\/em>. I&#8217;m finding myself now at 55 years of age devouring theological<br \/> compendiums. That&#8217;s a major thing I wish I would have known then.<\/p>\n<div style='clear:both'><\/div>\n<div class='the_champ_sharing_container the_champ_horizontal_sharing' data-super-socializer-href=\"https:\/\/www.preaching.com\/articles\/preaching-passion-an-interview-with-robert-smith\/\">\n<div class='the_champ_sharing_title' style=\"font-weight:bold\">Share This On:<\/div>\n<div class=\"the_champ_sharing_ul\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div style='clear:both'><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Robert Smith teaches preaching at Beeson Divinity School and has been a featured preacher at past sessions of the National Conference on Preaching. He will be part of the 2005 conference in Nashville, which will use the theme &#8220;Preaching With Passion.&#8221; Preaching editor Michael Duduit recently talked to Robert about the place of passion in &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/preaching-passion-an-interview-with-robert-smith\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Preaching &#038; Passion: An Interview with Robert Smith&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-35058","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sermons"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35058","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=35058"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35058\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=35058"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=35058"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=35058"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}