The Preacher and His Models. James Stalker

The Preacher and His Models - James Stalker


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       James Stalker

      The Preacher and His Models

      The Yale Lectures on Preaching 1891

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066161873

       LECTURE I.

       INTRODUCTORY

       LECTURE I. ToC

       LECTURE II.

       THE PREACHER AS A MAN OF GOD

       LECTURE II. ToC

       LECTURE III.

       THE PREACHER AS A PATRIOT

       LECTURE III. ToC

       LECTURE IV.

       THE PREACHER AS A MAN OF THE WORD

       LECTURE IV. ToC

       LECTURE V.

       THE PREACHER AS A FALSE PROPHET

       LECTURE V. ToC

       LECTURE VI.

       THE PREACHER AS A MAN

       LECTURE VI. ToC

       LECTURE VII.

       THE PREACHER AS A CHRISTIAN

       LECTURE VII. ToC

       LECTURE VIII.

       THE PREACHER AS AN APOSTLE

       LECTURE VIII. ToC

       LECTURE IX.

       THE PREACHER AS A THINKER

       LECTURE IX. ToC

       APPENDIX

       AN ORDINATION CHARGE

       APPENDIX. ToC

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      INTRODUCTORY.

      Gentlemen, it would be impossible to begin this course of lectures without expressing my acknowledgments to the Theological Faculty of this University for the great honour they have done me by inviting me to occupy this position. When I look over the list of my predecessors and observe that it includes such names as Bishop Simpson, Henry Ward Beecher, Dr. John Hall, Dr. W.M. Taylor, Dr. Phillips Brooks, Dr. A.J.F. Behrends, and Dr. Dale—to mention only those with which it opens—I cannot help feeling that it is perhaps a greater honour than I was entitled to accept; and I cannot but wish that the preaching of the old country were to be represented on this occasion by some one of the many ministers who would have been abler than I to do it justice. It is with no sense of having attained that I am to speak to you; for I always seem to myself to be only beginning to learn my trade; and the furthest I ever get in the way of confidence is to believe that I shall preach well next time. However, there may be some advantages in hearing one who is not too far away from the difficulties with which you will soon be contending yourselves; and the keenness with which I have felt these difficulties may have made me reflect, more than others to whom the path of excellence has been easier, on the means of overcoming them.

      I warmly reciprocate the sentiments which have led the Faculty to come across the Atlantic the second time for a lecturer, and the liberality of mind with which they are wont to overstep the boundaries of their own denomination and select their lecturers from all the evangelical Churches. It is the first time I have set foot on your continent, but I have long entertained a warm admiration for the American people and a firm faith in their destiny; and I welcome an opportunity which may serve, in any degree, to demonstrate the unity which underlies the variety of our evangelical communions, and to show how great are the things in which we agree in comparison with those on which we differ.

      The aim of this lectureship, if I have apprehended it aright, is that men who are out on the sea of practical life, feeling the force and strain of the winds and currents of the time, and who therefore occupy, to some extent, a different point of view from either students or professors, should come and tell you, who are still standing on the terra firma of college life, but will soon also have to launch forth on the same element, how it feels out there on the deep.

      Well, there is a considerable difference.

      The professorial theory of college life is, that the faculties are being exercised and the resources collected with which the battles of life are subsequently


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