Novelist John Updike, after listening...
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Novelist John Updike, after listening to a United Methodist minister explain the pain of a difficult appointment in New York City, said, "I hope you don't get so bent out of shape that you don't recognize yourself."
The greatest challenge in preaching is to get people who can't bear either to look at themselves or to look away, to look within and to see the shape they are in. We resist looking in because we shrink from pain. But a doctor cannot set a broken bone without inflicting pain. The pain of setting is worse than the initial break. Only by passing through the pain can healing begin and the bone get back in joint. Those who choose not to be in the midst of their pain can never be strongest in the broken places. (From Leonard I. Sweet, Strong in the Broken Places, Akron Ohio: The University of Akron, 1995, p. 107.)
The greatest challenge in preaching is to get people who can't bear either to look at themselves or to look away, to look within and to see the shape they are in. We resist looking in because we shrink from pain. But a doctor cannot set a broken bone without inflicting pain. The pain of setting is worse than the initial break. Only by passing through the pain can healing begin and the bone get back in joint. Those who choose not to be in the midst of their pain can never be strongest in the broken places. (From Leonard I. Sweet, Strong in the Broken Places, Akron Ohio: The University of Akron, 1995, p. 107.)
