tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329600504016968888.post8589644407248299397..comments2024-03-29T04:31:15.219-05:00Comments on Pastoral Meanderings: Good Theater Is NOT Good WorshipPastor Petershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10653554256101480140noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329600504016968888.post-80171282906901288572018-03-01T11:37:13.952-06:002018-03-01T11:37:13.952-06:00I have heard Pastors preach the way you described....I have heard Pastors preach the way you described. None were LCMS. The Gospel can be effectively preached without trying to turn the pulpit into a Shakespearean monologue.John Joseph Flanaganhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06596324816480709495noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329600504016968888.post-48199522384139487222018-03-01T07:25:03.295-06:002018-03-01T07:25:03.295-06:00The inspiration for this latest Schwärmerei may be...The inspiration for this latest <i>Schwärmerei</i> may be a 2013 book, <a href="https://books.google.com/books?id=igv4kVDD-34C&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false" rel="nofollow"><i>Bring the Word to Life: Engaging the New Testament through Performing It</i></a>, by Richard F. Ward & David J. Trobisch (Wm B. Eerdmans, 110 pages). Referring to a Christmas party in which Luke's story of Jesus' birth was read by United Theological Seminary professor Thomas Boomershine, Richard Ward writes (pp. ix - x):<br /><br />"The manner of his presentation was also intriguing. It was similar to other modes of performance I was familiar with but didn't quite conform to any one of them. It resembled theatre because Tom treated the biblical text like a 'script' and spoke it as if he were 'acting' the part of the biblical narrator. Yet he wasn't 'in character' — he wasn't impersonating a character developed by a playwright. The presentation had the spontaniet of storytelling, but the teller of the story was sticking closely to the words of a text that he himself had not created. It was more like an oral interpretation of a text, except he had internalized the actual text — it was not something that he held in his hands or referred to on a lectern.... <br /><br />"One of the things that biblical studies awakens is an interest in 'origins,' as in 'Where did this text come from?' Performing a text awakens an interest in origins too — 'How was a text like this done?' 'How was it 'performed'?' And then, 'How shall I perform it now?' Asking these questions together brings about a vital collaboration between performance studies and biblical interpretation through the practice of performing literature. Performance study of biblical texts yields new, imaginative ways to experience them and to present the interpreter's understanding of both the texts and the narrative worlds they come from."Carl Vehsehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00348831096001668813noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6329600504016968888.post-91332178659924022292018-03-01T07:21:18.789-06:002018-03-01T07:21:18.789-06:00In the Concordia Seminary Concordia Theology video...In the Concordia Seminary <i>Concordia Theology</i> video, <a href="https://concordiatheology.org/2018/02/what-is-the-verbal-performance-of-scripture/" rel="nofollow">WHAT IS THE “VERBAL PERFORMANCE OF SCRIPTURE”?</a>, CSL Prof. David Schmitt interviews the Rev. Dr. Michael Zeigler:<br /><br /><b>Prof. David Schmitt:</b> "Michael, could you explain just what the 'verbal performance of Scripture' is?" <br /><br /><b>Rev. Michael Zeigler:</b> "It is the retelling of a passage of Scripture—some longer, some shorter—in a way that tries to be authentic to the first century experience, when not a lot of people are reading. Small literacy rate, so most of these texts were heard or performed by a reader or preacher." <br /><br /><b>Schmitt:</b> "So instead of reading the texts to myself, and instead of somebody reading the texts to me, I'm going to have somebody actually perform it. What would be the value of that?"<br /><br /><b>Zeigler:</b> "Not being able to stop and go back or to pause on one word you receive the Word in an immersive kind of experience that the Word kind of washes over you. And it has the feeling kind of like listening to a story. If soneone were sharing some event that happened to them and they were interested and wanted to share it with you, you wait on them to tell you what comes next. They might delay the punchline or whatnot, and you're just there listening."<br /><br />At 15:00 in the video Dr. Zeigler demonstrates an example of the "verbal performance of Scripture."Carl Vehsehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00348831096001668813noreply@blogger.com