The following case study correlates theory and praxis by demonstrating how I teach students to preach funerals using homiletical theory. This method is useful for any funeral sermon. However, it is most useful for preaching funerals for people the preacher does not know well. From my experience as a hospice chaplain who preached funerals for strangers regularly, I used this method to gain an understanding of the life of the deceased. Then, I was able to connect the life of the deceased with the characteristics of God in a manner that celebrated life and honored God.
In this section, I provide a brief introduction to Christian funeral preaching. Then, I claim that funeral preaching is taught best with rhetoric leading as focal attention on the rhetorical situation of the death of a loved one. Next, to further substantiate my claim, I delineate potential course material for the class. Using the cycling metaphor, the course material aligns with my homiletical theory of rhetoric leading, pastoral care following, and theology bringing the sermon home for the win. An indicator of rhetoric leading is that each assigned book is about the Christian funeral, which deepens the student’s understanding of the rhetorical situation in various cultural contexts, the African American community, and mainstream Protestantism in the United States of America. Even though the cultural understanding of Christian values is not monolithic, the course material provides foundational knowledge for the preacher. Then, in praxis, the cultural understanding is nuanced through pastoral care with the deceased’s family. The particularities of the deceased’s faith are understood as the preacher asks the family questions that point towards the existential question: how then shall we live now that the deceased has died? The theological constructs supporting the deceased’s faith bring the sermon home for the win.
4.1. Introduction to Christian Funeral Preaching
Christian clergy are tasked with preaching funerals for persons they may not know due to a myriad of reasons. For pastors, the deceased may be a member’s adult child who is inactive in the church or the death of a local community member without any church affiliation. For military chaplains, often the deceased is a soldier assigned to their unit who was not active in the spiritual life of the unit. Further, for hospice chaplains, the deceased may be a patient who was in a coma-like state during admission to hospice or a patient that the chaplain visited once before their death. At the time of death, these individuals are not actively engaged in the Christian religious community. However, they identify as Christians and desire a Christian funeral. Their expectation presents a dilemma for the clergy presiding over their funerals: how do clergy honor the faith of the deceased who identified as Christian, but lived outside of a faith community?
Typically, the type of sermon preached for the deceased within the faith community is a eulogy, presumably, because the clergy has firsthand knowledge of the details of the life of the deceased. If the deceased is unknown to the clergy, he/she delivers a generic funeral sermon. My working definitions of a eulogy and funeral sermon are as follows: The eulogy honors the deceased by describing how the deceased’s life exuded Christian characteristics, i.e., the image of God. The funeral sermon focuses on the Gospel message of hope and negates the details of the deceased’s life. However, through the use of pastoral care, clergy may develop a eulogy regardless of the relationship between clergy and the deceased.
Eulogies redeem the value of the deceased by revealing their Christian witness as a testament to their faith. The eulogy narrates the deceased’s faith by giving examples of how his/her life exemplified Christian characteristics. Since the details of the deceased’s faith are unknown to the clergy, during the bereavement visit clergy must employ pastoral care skills to understand the Christian witness of the deceased. Through the integration of pastoral care and prophetic preaching, clergy can develop eulogies for people they do not know, rather than generic funeral sermons. These eulogies require distinct skills in pastoral care that help the clergy “get to know” the essence of the deceased as they listen to the stories told by the bereaved family and friends.
As a hospice chaplain, my point of departure is always the image of God in the life of the deceased, regardless of how they lived or died. As I prepare a eulogy for someone I do not know very well, I ask myself the following questions as I reflect on the stories shared by the deceased’s family and friends: In the life of the deceased, where do I hear God’s love, grace and mercy as the family engaged the life review process? What godly characteristics are evident in the life of the deceased? Then, how do I uphold these God-like qualities as an offering honoring the life of the deceased and the living God in a manner that comforts the audience of accountability? The fundamental question that eulogies answer is as follows: how then shall we live now that s/he has died?
How then shall we live now that the deceased has died is an existential question grounded in the rhetorical situation. “Rhetoric is a study of the rhetorical situations that gave rise to the response, and is an examination of how the speaker/writer invited the audience to respond” (
Johnson 2010, p. 282). The rhetorical situation is “a natural context of persons, events, objects, relations, and an exigency which strongly invites utterance; this invited utterance participants naturally in the situation, is in many instances necessary to the completion of situational activity, and by means of its participation with situation obtains its meaning and its rhetorical character” (
Bitzer 1999, p. 219). Therefore, the grounding question situates the audience in the reality of death while inviting them to reflect on the Godly characteristics of the deceased that can be emulated in honor of the deceased and to the glory of God. Theology drives the sermonic development concerning the character of God displayed in the life of the deceased. The preacher’s personal reflection is that of their understanding of the nature and character of God and how that is exhibited in the life of the deceased.
4.2. The Pedagogy of Funeral Peaching
Pertaining to homiletical theory, the pedagogical approach of the existential question driving sermonic development hinges on the frames of references of rhetoric, pastoral care, and theology. Using the cycling metaphor, the homiletical theory of preaching funerals consists of rhetoric being the team lead, the first in line doing the heavy lifting of the sermon. Rhetoric grounds the sermon in the rhetorical situation of the death of the loved one, which asks the question, “How then shall we live now that the deceased has died?” The answer to this question is anthropomorphic in that the preacher places human qualities on God; thereby, expanding our theological understanding of God.
For example, the preacher could highlight the deceased’s smile and their ability to find joy. Joy becomes the anthropomorphic quality attributed to God. Joy is an aspect of the deceased’s life that we can honor and can contribute to our faith formation regardless of whether the deceased was an active member in the church. The preacher honors the deceased’s life, specifically how the deceased lived faithfully. Pastoral care is the ministry of comfort the preacher provides to the bereaved family and friends through visitations, listening during the life review process, and the words of comfort expressed in the sermon and worship service. The disciplines of rhetoric and pastoral care work together for theology to bring the sermon home for the win. Theology determines the sermon’s effectiveness by presenting the case for how the listeners might live the anthropomorphic characteristics of God now that the deceased has died.
The syllabus for the course on funeral preaching reflects the cycling pedagogical paradigm with rhetoric setting the tone, pastoral care supporting rhetoric, and theology bringing the sermon home for the win. The course material addresses all the disciplines that create the frames of reference of my homiletical theory. Course materials may include the books Passed On: African American Mourning Stories: A Memorial Collection by Karla Holloway, Accompany Them with Singing: The Christian Funeral by Thomas Long, Preaching Funerals in the Black Church: Bring Perspective to Pain by Peter Wherry, and A Balm in Gilead: Eulogies of Comfort compiled by Randall C. Webber.
Passed On is an intimate portrayal of the funeral history of African Americans in the 20th Century. Karla Holloway provides personal narratives along with detailed historical accounts of African American mourning and burial practices. Beginning with the death of her son, Holloway interweaves personal experience with ethnography, church history, and socio-economic research to tell the story of the death and dying of Africans of the diaspora in America. This book centers on the rhetorical situation of funerals within the African American context.
In Accompany Them with Singing, Thomas Long provides a history of the Christian funeral, theologically and liturgically. The historical aspects focus on funeral trends based on religious and cultural shifts in America. The final chapters emphasize Long’s perspective of a good funeral, wherein he provides concrete examples for preachers to model as best practices for funeral preparations. This book centers on the rhetorical situation of the Christian funeral to identify best practices for funeral worship within the social context of America.
In Preaching Funerals in the Black Church, Peter Wherry provides a pastoral approach to preaching funerals within the context of the African American church. Wherry gives practical examples based on his pastoral experience preaching funerals in the church. For example, Wherry states that inductive preaching is possibly the most effective method for preaching funerals. He compares the inductive preacher to a docent in a museum taking listeners on a guided tour of biblical content. The preacher introduces the hearers to the sermon, not forcing them to view the exhibit. When done well, this method facilitates “Aha!” moments in which the hearers perceive some biblical insight that sheds light on the life of the deceased. Wherry merges pastoral care and pastoral preaching to develop a book that centers on the rhetorical situation of death within the religious context of the Black church.
A Balm in Gilead: Eulogies of Comfort provides examples of funeral sermons for students to model. The sermons come from various African Americans, including Gerald J. Joiner, President Barack Obama, and Nicole McDonald. Webber includes an introduction that contextualizes each sermon. This resource demonstrates how theological implications impact funeral sermons, especially considering how the deceased lived their theological beliefs.
In the classroom, since rhetoric sets the tone, the focal emphasis is the question, “How then shall we live now that the deceased has died”? The students reflect on the life of the deceased to determine the anthropomorphic characteristics that the living can emulate as an act of faith in God. These anthropomorphic characteristics expand our understanding of God. The written assignments reflect a rhetorical pedagogical approach to teaching preaching—practice, practice, practice. During class, the students work collectively to write an outline for a funeral sermon based on an obituary from the paper. Additionally, the students select the sermonic scripture and choose a title for the sermon. The class discusses which sermonic form might work best to answer the existential question. Additionally, as an individual assignment, the students write a funeral sermon from reading a biography or autobiography of a historical figure. The funeral sermon must answer the question, how then shall we live now that the s/he has died?
The students do not learn a particular method in this course; however, they learn various sermonic forms that represent the best approach for funeral preaching. By teaching sermonic forms, students learn how to structure their funeral sermons to have a more significant impact on the hearers. Henry Mitchell, Peter Wherry, and John McClure provide best practice approaches to funeral preaching. Mitchell introduces the character sketch as a best practice for funeral preaching. The character sketch is a genre in preaching that consists of the combination of biblical data and other materials, designed to bring to full, living proportions, a character from the Bible (
Mitchell 1990, p. 101). To develop a character sketch, the preacher chooses a biblical character that presents a trait worthy of emulation. The preacher gathers small narratives, not entire biographical sketches, to illustrate the trait in a manner that resonates with the hearers. The connection with the character provokes the hearers to embody that trait in their lives.
Both Wherry and McClure identify inductive preaching as a best practice for funeral preaching. Inductive preaching is a form of preaching in which the preacher delays the full statement of the sermon’s theme or idea (
McClure 2007, p. 62). In
Preaching Words: 144 Key Terms in Homiletics, McClure attributes the move towards inductive preaching to Fred Craddock, who encouraged inductive preaching as a means to meet the need for more participative forms of communication from the pulpit in the 1970s. Through inductive preaching, Craddock believed the preacher and listeners traveled together toward insight within the preaching experience. The insight that comes from the stories is often more ambiguous than other forms of preaching. According to McClure, the preacher’s subject weaves through stories and images that invite the listeners to resonate with the shared experiences, leading up to the sermon’s theme. The listeners participate in the sermon by making their own connections and conclusions; therefore, the preacher leaves the inductive sermon open-ended.
Wherry identifies the following guidelines for inductive sermons:
They must be textual, always anchored in the biblical text to keep the focus on the message of biblical transformation.
They assist the hearers in drawing connections between the text and the story (typically some aspect of the life story of the deceased in funerals) using transitional phrases, word pictures, and/or quotations from songs.
They are amorphous in terms of structure, and not likely to have three (3) neat points of exposition and a poem at the end (
Wherry 2013, p. 57).