In this Strengthening Preaching blog series, preachers from a range of Christian traditions and denominations reflect on their growth as preachers through their involvement in the Strengthening Preaching initiative of Lilly Endowment Inc., which is coordinated by the 91ÁÔĆć. At the heart of the initiative are preaching peer groups, sponsored by various seminaries, which engage preachers in reading, discussion, preaching, and feedbackâall within a collegial circle of support.
In this edited conversation, Frank A. Thomas discusses how he came to see the need for African-American preaching to spark a preaching renaissance and revive American Christianity.
Tell us a little about your life story and what has led to your interest in African-American preaching.
I didnât have a traditional church upbringing. My family, they were pragmaticâchurch on Motherâs Day, Christmas, Easter. And my background is eclectic. I started in a Catholic school and then went to a public school. My mother moved me to a Lutheran school in eighth grade, and I went to a Lutheran high school. My girlfriend at the time, now my wife, was a member of the United Methodist Church, so I joined the Methodist Church.
Later, in seminary in Chicago, I ended up being introduced to , and I became a member of Trinity United Church of Christ. He taught me a lot about pastoring people and social justice ministry. I was ordained UCC, and from there I became the pastor of a Baptist church for eighteen years. After that I was called to a Disciples of Christ congregation, which I served for thirteen years. Now Iâm at a Disciples of Christ seminary where Iâm a homiletics professor. So Iâm ecclesiastically diverse.
I became interested in preaching because of an incident in my junior year of college. I grew up on the south side of Chicago, and one of my friends there was working in a shoe store part time. There was a botched robbery, and he was shot and killed.
The did his funeral. We were a distraught group of young people, and we were grieving very hard. And it was amazing to me, but after the preacher got through, I felt better. When he finished, I had some hope. And Iâm like, âHow in the world did he do that? How is it that you can take a group of people who are in despair and when you get finished preaching the gospel, they have hope?â I know itâs the gospel. But itâs also a faithful messenger and a skilled preacher.
So that was my beginningâwhat is this thing called preaching? And how can it be such a powerful force both in the social lives and in the personal lives of people? Those questions lingered and set me on a journey.
In college, I joined the campus ministry of the Lutheran church, and the pastor tried hard to get me to go to seminary in St. Louis. He did everything he could; I just couldnât see it. So when I graduated from college, I went home and went back to my United Methodist church. The Fatherâs Day speaker cancelled, so the pastor asked me if I would be willing to speak that Sunday morning. My answer came up out of nowhere: âYes, Iâll do it.â
So there I was, with no training. But I put my message together, and afterward, the old mother of the church said to me, âYou were goodâbut you were long.â And I was. I went from Genesis to Revelationâthere was nothing I did not cover.
The next week, the pastor met with me, and he took me to the Chicago Theological Seminary and said, âThis is where you ought to be. You have gifts.â From there I ended up pastoring two congregations.
Tell us about the Academy of Preaching and Celebration and its dedication to the study of African-American preaching. What nurtured your keen interest in African-American preaching?
In 1982 I became a pastor and began to preach every Sunday, but I didnât have confidence in my preaching skills. So I started reading to improve my preaching, and I ran across a book by called . Mitchell talked about the genius of African-American preaching. He talked about celebration as a part of African-American preaching, and as a pastor I adopted that model. I began to preach in the celebrative model of preaching every Sunday.
In 1988 I got word that Henry Mitchell was forming, along with , a DMin group whose purpose was to teach a cadre of preachers how to teach African-American preaching. I didnât necessarily think about teaching African-American preachingâI just wanted to be next to Henry Mitchell because I wanted to continue improving my preaching.
So we got to class, and I studied. One of Mitchellâs main tenets was to read the whole field of homileticsâweâre not going to be pigeonholed as African-American preachers who donât know the whole field. And I took to it, and he encouraged me and said, âYou have gifts for the teaching of it.â
He had a book coming out called and he asked the class to critique it. I went home and wrote a five-page critique. I said, âDr. Mitchell, you have âcelebrationâ in the title, but you never define it.â And he said, âYou define it.â So I worked on it, and it became a book called .
Thatâs how I got so deeply embedded in African-American preachingâthe mentorship of Henry Mitchell, plus They Like to Never Quit Praising God, an extension of Mitchellâs thought. From that book I began to teach preaching classes. I went on to pastor a church in Memphis and landed, quite to my surprise, in a PhD program in communications and rhetoric that allowed me to study black preaching. My dissertation was on Martin Luther King Jr.
From 2000 to 2010 I co-edited a journal, now defunct, called The African American Pulpit. Then we published a book called . So I kept buildingâAfrican-American preaching, African-American preaching, African-American preaching.
After thirty-one years of preaching, I became a professor at , and the president asked me what vision I had. I said I would like to develop the very first PhD program in African-American preaching. And lo and behold, we formed the . Through the vehicle of this academy, we developed a . We hope to soon graduate the programâs first ten PhDs.
As you look at the North American church and society today, what particular gifts and strengths does African-American preaching offer the broader ecology of Christian preaching?
The mission of our PhD program is to teach and develop the beauty, the depth, the genius, the history, and the power of African-American preaching in order to ignite a preaching renaissance to revive American Christianity in the twenty-first century. Thatâs what we do. Lord knows American Christianity needs revival. And Iâm just convinced that the best of African-American preaching can be pivotal in a preaching renaissance.
We desperately need it. Many of the people in our culture, they need high-quality preaching to confront the myriad of issues weâre being confronted with, from wealth inequality to poverty to voter suppression to access to health care. These are moral issues, and I believe people need direction from the Bible, from the pulpit, to give them fresh ways to think about these concerns.
What are some of the basic features of African-American preaching that give it this genius and power and potential for renewing American Christianity?
One is that we preach to the whole personâwe preach to both the head and the heart. If you just preach to peopleâs emotions or if you just preach to the intellect, you donât get at the depths of a person. But this combination of head and heart goes deeper.
Another feature is a fidelity to Scripture that says the Bible doesnât just happen back then, there. When the preacher really preaches, thereâs an immediacy that makes it come alive, that closes the distance between now and then. And once it comes alive, you have to respond to it. You have to say yes or no. Without that immediacy, itâs easier to ignore the demand of the gospel.
Celebration and hope is another a tremendous aspectâthat regardless of the situation and circumstances, the preacher is able to find hope and celebrate it and lift and encourage. If you canât bring the people hope, why get up and preach?
Also, Iâd say, thereâs a close observation of lifeâan ability to observe, to take a normal experience of life and infuse the gospel with it. African-American preaching has always had an ability to make it real through images and stories and poems that make the gospel come alive.
A big emphasis in the teaching of preaching today is embodimentâthe person of the preacher. We know today better than ever that preaching is not just a disembodied âbrains-on-a-stickâ transfer of information but is a full, body-mind-soul engagement of the person of the preacher with the congregation. How does African-American preaching inform this emphasis?
Embodiment has always been a part of African-American preaching. The way that I articulate this is that evil is felt on our bodies. So when African-American people were chattel slaves, they would be whipped. If women were molested and sexually assaulted as slaves, thatâs an experience of the body. Even if itâs the psychological assault upon your sense of personhood that for centuries we were subjected toâall these things are felt on the body. So if evil is received on the body, it seems to me that the hope has to be embodied as well.
I think that African-American preachers through the generations, and African-American people, have always embodied the hope. Sin and suffering are not just an intellectual concept; they actually debilitate bodies. So the hope has to inspire and lift bodies.
Is there anything else youâd like to add?
I lament the loss of belief in the effectiveness of preaching. I lament that the culture doesnât give the preacher the authority that it once did, and we allow that to affect our preaching. The realities that we face on a daily basisâand the moral crisis that we are in as a culture and as a nation and as a worldâdemand that the preacher stand for God, stand for truth. And here we are in a corner cowering.
I also lament the lack of creativity in many churches, in many preachers, in many theological schools. We havenât found yet the creativity to address these things. Rather than following the culture, I think we should be providing an alternative to the culture. The preacher should rise and speak for God. So I think this is a great preaching moment.
LEARN MORE
Read an in the Indianapolis Star.
Learn about the first , a program of Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis, Indiana.