In August, we asked a question, and offered the beginning of an answer: What is distinctive about the Dominican approach to preaching? We identified four characteristics, all of which apply to praising-proclamation, blessing- proclamation, and preaching- proclamation:
· It flows from a contemplative gaze at the Word–made-flesh in our historic times.
· It is incarnational rather than abstract.
· It is communal rather than individualistic.
· It is liturgical-sacramental rather than merely humanistic.
This month, we will tease out a bit more meaning to each of these characteristics. First, we will set the pattern: Experience-the Word-Experience. From what is happening, to the Word, and back to what is happening, in light of the Word. We begin with loving wonder, with awe.
The Contemplative Gaze: We begin with a long, loving look at what is going on around us. We bring this to the Word…both in person, and in scripture. We listen. This must not be rushed…we wait…we hold back the questioning. Flannery O’Conner said it well: “If the Church doesn’t listen, no one will listen to the Church.”
The Incarnational Questioning: What is going on here for real flesh-and-blood people? Enfleshed people? What are they seeing? Hearing? Feeling? Rejecting? Receiving? Avoiding? What about me? The word for flesh is sarx. It means ‘limited, imperfect, wounded, abused…’
The Communal Questioning: What difference does this make for all of us, for setting a new tone, for fostering compassion, care, and justice? What needs to be different?
The Liturgical-Sacramental Questioning: The liturgical is a gathering of all the above into worship, and the sacramental transforms…so the holiness shines through, for the Word permeates and changes. Real presence results…and I return to the experience where both it and I are different.
The Dominican difference is that all the dimensions above are dynamically present.
Proclamation is not a lecture. It differs from teaching in its goal. It is more than informative, for some information is but its tool. This is about conversion. It is about transformation. Whether it is praise-proclamation in prayer, blessing-proclamation in a hospital room, or pulpit-preaching, it calls for both the proclaimer and the hearer to become different in our time and place. It is about real presence that flows from the Word who is Real Presence.
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