The Crisis of Bad Preaching is an audacious response to a long-simmering pastoral crisis: poorly prepared, often stale, and largely irrelevant homilies that are fueling the mass exodus of people from the Church.
Echoing Popes Benedict and Francis, Rev. Joshua Whitfield confronts what is perhaps the most common complaint of Catholics around the world: hollow, vacuous preaching. A parish priest in Dallas, Whitfield encourages fellow preachers to profound renewal, reminding them that preaching is not just something they do, it is essential to who they are.
Catholic preaching today often achieves the opposite of what it should, which is connecting the People of God with the Gospel of Christ in a compelling and motivating way. With an insider's candor, biting honesty, and persuasive conviction, Whitfield stresses that preachers need to return to this ideal because the wellbeing of the Church depends on it.
More than just another how-to book, The Crisis of Bad Preaching is at once deeply challenging and uplifting and full of practical advice for a reversal of the status quo.
In Part I, Whitfield explores the essential role of the preacher as a public intellectual and member of the communion of preachers that spans the history of the Church. Whitfield offers advice about which great preachers--from Origen, Augustine, and Aquinas to Martin Luther King, Jr. and Bishop Robert Barron--to study and what to learn from them. Whitfield also explains why preachers must submit in humility to the fullness of the Church--its teachings, authority, practices, and structures.
In Part II, Whitfield explores the important habits of prayer, preparation, cultivating rhetorical skill, and learning to take full advantage of both positive and negative criticism. He explains how the way of the preacher must be the way of the Holy Spirit and argues that without the preacher opening his heart to the fire of evangelical proclamation, he will lack the capacity to preach the transforming grace of the Gospel, his mandate.
In a brief epilogue, Whitfield encourages ten habits for listening. Addressed to both laity and the ordained, he asserts that fixing preaching will take the concerted effort of all members of the Church.
Rev. Joshua J. Whitfield is pastor of St. Rita Catholic Community in Dallas, Texas, where he has served in a variety of roles since his conversion to Catholicism in 2009. Whitfield previously served as an Episcopal priest and was ordained in the Catholic Church under the pastoral provision of St. John Paul II in 2012.
Whitfield is a contributor to The Dallas Morning News, for which he was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 2016. His work also has been published in The Texas Catholic, Newsday, and America magazine. He has appeared on Catholic Answers Focus and local television affiliates in Dallas. Whitfield is the author of Pilgrim Holiness.
He is a 1999 graduate of Texas Tech University, with a bachelor's degree in English and history. He trained for ministry at the College of the Resurrection in Mirfield, England, from 2000 to 2003, while earning bachelor's and master's degrees in theology and a master's degree in theology and pastoral studies from the University of Leeds. He earned his master's degree in theology from Duke University in 2008.
Whitfield and his wife, Alli, live in Dallas with their children.
Priest @StRitaDallas + Author: Pilgrim Holiness @wipfandstock + The Crisis of Bad Preaching @avemariapress + Eucharist @litpress. At times @dallasnews.
@briankjustice @InnocentOP @frpatrickop @FrHilderbrand @FrAquinasOP @PetriOP @deaconharold @FrHarrison I humbly suggest: The Crisis of Bad Preaching: Redeeming the Heart and Way of the Catholic Preacher https://t.co/3L6TZXXF4I