Authentic
Spiritual formation through preaching to postmoderns will necessarily involve
irreverence towards anything that is merely modern or institutional. In
practice, this may shock some who confuse merely institutional or modern things
with sacred things. Mark Twain also apparently said, “Sacred cows make the best
hamburger.” In rejecting the religions of modernism, postmoderns may seem
irreligious. This is certainly how Jesus was viewed as he challenged what he
called “the traditions of men” (Mark 7:8 NIV), which were the “sacred cows” of
his day.
Irreverence in Preaching (Part 1)
Mark Twain said, "Irreverence
is the champion of liberty and its only sure defense.”
With
the death of European Christendom, and as the age of modernism disappears,
preaching can no longer assume a common belief in or language of “the
traditions of men.” When John McLeod Campbell preached his excellent sermon,
“What Does It Mean to Be a Christian?” he could say, “...if the end of our
being be to know and enjoy God...” rightly assuming that his audience had a
familiarity with the “Westminster Catechism.” This cannot be assumed today.
People must be made familiar with the wonderful theology of the Westminster
Catechism, but it cannot be assumed that they have even ever heard of it, let
alone that they are familiar with its excellent contents. This generation is
more familiar with “The Simpsons,” “Survivor,” “Charlie’s Angels,” and the
content of a Beatles’ song.