Pastors urged to put the ha in hallelujah

For everything, there is a season, says the book of Ecclesiastes.

A time to be born, a time to die. A time to love and a time to hate.

And definitely a time to laugh.

That’s the message the Rev. Susan Sparks has for her fellow preachers.

That passage also says that there’s a time to weep — but that’s where too many preachers stop, said Sparks, a former trial lawyer turned American Baptist preacher and stand-up comic.

“I think we’ve erred too much on the weeping side,” she said.

Sparks, the pastor of Madison Avenue Baptist Church in New York City, was in Nashville on Wednesday for the Festival of Homiletics, a conference that’s brought preachers from around the U.S. to town.

She says that humor can help preachers connect with their parishioners, defuse church conflict and deal with an often-stressful calling. To help get her message across, Sparks gave preachers a Ten Commandments of stand-up comedy. First on the list was “edit, edit, edit.”

“Preachers have this very bad habit of never getting to the point,” she said.

Sparks said she wasn’t advocating replacing theology with jokes. But she did remind preachers that in a world where texting and Twitter are commonplace, they can’t afford to drone on and on.

Full Article

Actually, I’m pretty against this because most of the pastors I know (except you, Dale) really aren’t that funny, and their failed attempts at humor are only encourage by courtesy laughter, and the courtesy laughter is only brought about because of the esteem position they hold.

Posted in Spiritual | Comments Off on Pastors urged to put the ha in hallelujah

After keeping us waiting for a century, Mark Twain will finally reveal all

Exactly a century after rumours of his death turned out to be entirely accurate, one of Mark Twain’s dying wishes is at last coming true: an extensive, outspoken and revelatory autobiography which he devoted the last decade of his life to writing is finally going to be published.

The creator of Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn and some of the most frequently misquoted catchphrases in the English language left behind 5,000 unedited pages of memoirs when he died in 1910, together with handwritten notes saying that he did not want them to hit bookshops for at least a century.

That milestone has now been reached, and in November the University of California, Berkeley, where the manuscript is in a vault, will release the first volume of Mark Twain’s autobiography. The eventual trilogy will run to half a million words, and shed new light on the quintessentially American novelist.

Full Article

Posted in Interesting, Pop Culture | 2 Comments