This book brings together a noted black preacher and a white preacher to interact on the dynamics of pulpit ministry and what we can learn from each other. It provides fresh insight and perspective to help us appreciate the rich diversity found in today's church.
Henry H. Mitchell has completely revised and integrated his popular books The Recovery of Preaching and Black Preaching for seminarians and pastors--both Black and White--who are seeking to add power and vision to their sermons.
Should we not at least introduce them to other viewpoints and voices?Sensitive to culture's influence upon homiletics, Preaching in Red and Yellow, Black and White provides thoughtful answers to ten of the beginning preacher's most basic ...
Dyan Watson writes that she worries about sending her Black son to schools that as a matter of course assign our Black boys into special education classes, criminalize their behavior at younger and younger ages, and view them as the ...
But is it good religion ? There's a whole lot of dangerous , bad , sick religion in the world ; bad religion can make you hard , cold , mean , and insensitive . Bad religion is worse than no religion . Krister Stendahl said that there's ...
Tinney , James S. “ The Miracle of Black Preaching . " Christianity Today 20 ( January 1976 ) : 14–16 . Titon , Jeff Todd , ed . Give Me This Mountain . Champaign , Ill .: University of Illinois Press , 1989 . Trimiew , Darryl M. , ed .
As preachers and pastors, do we coddle the frail tendencies of our white folks or do we challenge them? ... especially as it is likely to limit the ability of listeners to absorb or respond to our message of racial reconciliation.
From Nat Turner to Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Jesse Jackson, from the rural South to the Northern ghetto, black ministers have always been the leaders of their...
Preaching in Red and Yellow, Black and White provides a good starting point for thinking about preaching from a multicultural perspective.
On wax, Reverend Dr. J. Gordon McPherson also took the name Black Billy Sunday. He recorded six sermons with Paramount records circa January 1931. See Dixon et al., 74. He was reportedly the inspiration for “De Lawd” in The Green ...
The contributors in this volume give examples of African American Biblical exposition in every section of the Old Testament and New Testament.