Ebook
In an era when the cult of personality has overtaken the task of preaching, Charles W. Fuller offers an engaging query into the necessary boundaries between the person of the preacher and the message preached. By thoroughly evaluating Phillips Brooks’s classic “truth through personality” definition of preaching, Fuller brings to light a substantial error that remains in contemporary homiletics: namely, the tenuous correlation between Christ’s incarnation and Christian preaching. Ultimately, Fuller asserts a sound evangelical framework for preaching on revelational, ontological, rhetorical, and teleological grounds. Preachers who desire to construct pulpit practice upon a robust evangelical foundation will benefit from Fuller’s contribution.
”Is preaching really ‘truth through personality,’ as Phillips
Brooks so famously said? Although the statement has become almost
axiomatic in homiletical circles, Charles Fuller takes a different
view. In a careful and critical analysis of Brooks’s theology,
Fuller first demonstrates that Brooks meant something very
different by his definition than would many of the evangelicals who
readily quote him, and then reinvents the definition in terms of
evangelical theological convictions. This is a book that any
student of preaching will find interesting and helpful."
--Michael Duduit
Editor, Preaching magazine
“At last, Charles Fuller sets the record straight and defends
Scripture-centered preaching. Along the way, one of the most famous
statements about preaching is revealed to be a fountain of
‘religious sentimentality and moralistic humanism.’ Fuller writes
with the passion of a preacher and the skill of an investigator,
all the while setting the stage for a much-needed affirmation of
biblical preaching. This book has been needed for a long
time."
--R. Albert Mohler Jr.
President, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
Charles W. Fuller is Pastor at Bethany Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky, and Adjunct Professor of Expository Preaching at Boyce College of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Fuller lives in Louisville with his wife, Jessie, and their two children, Kaylen and Ian.
Need help?