I know I recently started Darrell Johnson’s book and mentioned that I would review it, but have not had a chance to finish it since. And I know that I should probably finish that before I start another. But, well, too late. I just started into Michael Pasquarello’s We Speak Because We Have First Been Spoken. So far so good.
Here’s a taste:
If we are what we know and love and become what we do and say, our way of speaking will be intrinsic to, and indicative of, what we are and what we hope to be by the grace of God. And while most preachers will acknowledge the importance of “practicing what you preach,” they give too little attention to the manner in which the character of a preacher’s way of being, the conversation of one’s loves, habits, and desires, is communicated as “preaching what you practice.”
It is vital that we realize that “effective preaching” (a term Pasquarello would probably resist) is built not only on the communication of our words, but more substantially by the communication of our life. So I am challenged by the relative clarity of not only “practicing what we preach,” but actually “preaching what we practice.”
Worth pondering.