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Book reviews for "Allen,_Ronald_J." sorted by average review score:

God in Pain: Teaching Sermons on Suffering (Teaching Sermon Series)
Published in Paperback by Abingdon Press (February, 1998)
Authors: Barbara Brown Taylor, Ronald J. Allen, and Barbara Brown-Taylor
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Excellent teaching model for divinity students!
I was so enthralled with the sermons written by this female minister, that I could not put the book down! I read 70 pages the first sitting, when I had intended to read only the first two sermons. This is a collection of sermons that is divided into two major categories: the first deals with the problems of pain, tribulations and suffering while we are yet alive and struggling with our spiritual journeys, the second is dealing with the pain of loss by relating it to God's pain in allowing His Only Son to choose to die for us. For anyone who wishes to learn how to make every word count, this is an excellent resource. Human suffering is often one of the hardest issues to address with congregations. This resource can definitely start you on the right foot.

Provocative like all BBT sermons, but not always consistent
She goes where few preachers or theologians dare, and never, ever leaves the reader without plenty to think about. Of all her books, this one is the least satisfying in some ways because of what seem to me to be some inconsistencies on key points. Maybe that's to be expected given the subject matter. What she succeeds beautifully in doing is revealing how shallow and inadequate most Christian thinking is on the subject of the passion and death of Jesus. No pat answers from BBT, ever. Good for her, and good for those who read her and are prompted to go deeper into what Good Friday means.


Interpreting the Gospel: An Introduction to Preaching
Published in Paperback by Chalice Press (January, 1999)
Author: Ronald J. Allen
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Too mechanical
Although Ron Allen makes an attempt to sound very human when trying to explain his initial struggles to preach. His progression is very wooden in his approach. He doesnt seem to approach his topic from the feet of the throne but more on humanistic experience. Try again later when youve drawn nigh to the thrown of God Mr Allen then maybe your works wont be as spiritless.

Preaching Revisionist Style . . .
Allen does a fabulous job of orienting his reader to the theological landscape of recent homiletical discussion. Especially helpful is his discussion of the theological schools that have arisen in the late-20th century and had marked influence on preaching (liberation, post-liberal, revisionist, and evangelical. Allen also offers some very practical advice for preaching students intimidated by the prospect of weekly (weakly?)preaching. Finally, Allen includes some fine sermons in his introduction that serve as helpful models for discussing the process of preaching. When supplemented with the companion volume to the introduction (_Patterns of Preaching_) the series could be valuable in getting students to think about alternative ways of structuring sermons.

This said, the book is not without its weaknesses. Allen's 27-step (!!!) approach to sermon prep seems overly cumbersome, something that may actually create more misery than it relieves for young preachers. Also, Allen comes out squarely as a Revisionist homiletician in this book (i.e. one who argues that the "gospel" will sometimes stand over and against scripture, obligating the preacher to preach against what is proclaimed in scripture). While I can appreciate what Allen is struggling with--how to preach from difficult texts related to topics like holy war, slavery, etc.--one wonders if Allen is here defining "gospel" as some eternal essence disconnected from the narrative of scripture (i.e. is he not suggesting that one can know the "gospel" apart from the narrative framework he wishes to critique?). This seems overly reductionistic, ignoring what role countervoices in scripture may play in exploding hardened theological claims.

How can I preach?
Ronald J. Allen is the senior professor of preaching at my seminary, Christian Theological Seminary. Allen is also one of the most prolific writers on faculty at this (or any) seminary. I have a shelf full of books by Allen, and the volumes on the shelf seem to keep multiplying. I have reviewed several of Allen's works here, and will be adding further reviews of his work in the future.

This particular book is a fairly recent text, growing out of Allen's experience of training new preachers and observing preachers in congregational and other settings for many years. The book is divided into the following sections:

- Thoughts and Issues for Beginning Preachers
- Three Contexts for Preaching Today
- Preaching as Theological Interpretation
- Establishing and Developing a Direction for the Sermon
- Putting the Sermon Together
- From the Study to the Pulpit and Back
- Case Studies of Sample Sermons

Thus, one can see that most of the topics that are of concern to beginning preachers (as well as more-seasoned ones) are covered in this text. Allen states up front what he is and isn't attempting to do in this text:

'In this book, I develop a process of learning to preach that builds on a student's energy, while addressing uncertainties that haunt many beginning preachers-- and that plague some of us as long as we preach. ... I do not offer a unique theory of preaching, nor one that contends that all sermons must be developed in a singular way. To the contrary, I build on the recognition that individuals and communities are pluralistic in the ways in which they think and feel and in the ways in which they receive and process communications.'

From the start, Allen addresses questions that naturally arise (at least one hopes they will arise) in those who dare to preach.

Who am I to preach?
What if I say something wrong about God?
Am I too young or too old?
Can I be myself?
Can I be original?
Will I be heard?

These questions and more are often present for the new preacher, but in fact they don't go away. I have been preaching weekly for four years at this point, and I find myself asking variations of these questions on a recurring basis. Allen addresses the questions in the first chapter, and follows up on the topics in later chapters.

Following this exposition of the questions, perhaps the most important question is addressed: Why is Preaching Important? Without knowing the answer to this question, preaching -- and all the anxieties and questions attendant -- are unimportant. Allen gives a number of reasons, all of which are interlocking and appropriate, but the most important I believe are two: God is active in the community through preaching and the Gospel transforms people through preaching. It is no mistake that leaders in the African-American community tend to be preachers; they are people influenced by and understanding of the power of God at work in the community through the gift of preaching, which tends to always be a central element in African-American worship experience.

The remaining sections of the book are very practical. They help to establish context of preaching: church, the world, and the life of the preacher are all used as primary examples. They work to provide a framework and substance to theological interpretation. Some preachers distrust the word theology, rather in the way many high school students flee from anything that has the words algebra or geometry attached, but in fact, even if they don't know it, they are working theologically in preaching. They will do better with a clear understanding, and Allen provides information in a non-threatening way.

The fourth and fifth sections get into the mechanics of developing sermons. Allen presents several possible models with their strengths and weaknesses. He talks about the advantages and disadvantages of lectionary preaching, thematic preaching, and topical preaching. Allen then gives a 27-point listing of considerations and tasks at putting together a sermon. I will freely confess that I have not, nor am I likely to ever, go 27 point-by-point steps in constructing my sermons. However, I can see in each of these points elements of things I do in the manner in which I construct my sermons, and seeing things laid out in the manner has helped me to incorporate considerations that might have been underexamined.

Examining different kinds of sermons as well as images and elements of the sermons come next, as well as practical advice on everything from embodying the sermon -- making sure that eye contact, writing pleasing to the ear, gestures and hand movements, etc. -- to preparing notes and keeping files follows this substantial section. Allen's example sermons from several preachers, including a sermon of his own, a great for illustrating points brought up earlier in the text.

Allen incorporates his very personal style throughout, which is characterised by a clarity and ease of language, organisation of thought without becoming overly mechanical or forced, and very personal in substance. This final point is illustrated by one of the stories Allen incorporates on the value and importance of preaching. Drawing from his background in the Ozarks, he wrote:

'My father told me about a couple in the Ozarks who lived in a house at the base of a hollow and who carried a bucket a half mile to the river for water. They worked the soil in the hollow to increase the amount of water that the soil absorbed in order to develop a spring near their cabin. At the time they died, they were still walking to the river. But years later, at the bottom of the hollow, a spring bubbled up. Preaching is often that way.'

The companion volume, 'Patterns in Preaching' released at the same time as this one, contains sermons from various preachers that can be used as illustrations of the points brought up in this text.


1991 Federal Rules of Evidence/With Legislative History and Case Supplement Including Recent Supreme Court Decisions
Published in Paperback by Aspen Law & Business (June, 1991)
Authors: United States, Richard B. Kuhns, and Ronald J. Allen
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Adventures of the Spirit
Published in Hardcover by University Press of America (14 August, 1997)
Authors: Clark M. Williamson and Ronald J. Allen
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Analytical Approach to Evidence Text Problems and Cases
Published in Hardcover by Little Brown & Company (June, 1989)
Authors: Ronald J. Allen and Richard B. Kuhns
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Are You the One?: Teaching Sermons on Crucial Questions in the Bible (Teaching Sermon Series)
Published in Paperback by Abingdon Press (September, 1997)
Authors: William D. Watley and Ronald J. Allen
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Business and Legal Guide to Online Internet Law
Published in Hardcover by Glasser Legalworks (June, 1997)
Authors: Jon A. Baumgarten, Michael J. Epstein, Robert J. Butler, Allen R. Grogan, Ronald L. Johnston, and Richard E. Wiley
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Can-Am Eastern 90 (Proceedings of S P I E, Vol 1398)
Published in Paperback by SPIE--The International Society for Optical Engineering (April, 1991)
Authors: Ronald L. Antos and Allen J. Krisiloff
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Comprehensive Criminal Procedure
Published in Hardcover by Aspen Publishers, Inc. (April, 2001)
Authors: Ronald Jay Allen, William J. Stuntz, Joseph L. Hoffmann, Debra A. Livingston, and Joseph Hoffman
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Constitutional Criminal Procedure 1999
Published in Hardcover by Panel Pub (August, 1999)
Authors: Ronald J. Allen, Richard B. Kuhns, Aspen Law & Business, and William J. Stuntz
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