Faith Works 4-17-2026
Jeff Gill
Authors, readers, and a culture of religious literacy
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How do we share the message of resurrection with others?
Some like George Whitefield and John Wesley two hundred years ago preach on street corners and out in the open; we had a good example of that on Courthouse Square last weekend, and that approach can reach new audiences.
Others are more focused on institution building, planting congregations and seeing them properly developed and led and housed, which is where figures like my own tradition’s Alexander Campbell, or Joseph Smith, Jr., or even one-time local resident Archbishop Lamy came in, building churches and temples and cathedrals. There’s a place for that kind of well-ordered religion.
And then with the rise of mass media there came a new model for extending good news to those who needed to hear it: Aimee Semple McPherson, before her Dwight Moody and after Billy Graham, all examples of ministries which used modern technology to reach new audiences.
I will confess to being a lower-key preacher in most ways, including a personal interest in how literature and history can be used to open people up to horizons beyond their own immediate circumstances. For instance, Jan Karon may have reached more people seeking the hope of the Gospel with her Mitford series of books than many on television, or even those preaching in arenas. Susan Howatch some years ago and Anthony Trollope further back have been authors who created a space where the claims of faith can be quietly considered; C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien famously have done so with their writings. Ellis Peters had a series with a medieval monk, Brother Cadfael, whose chronicles I love to commend, murder mysteries with a regular touch of redemption in their plots.
Most Sundays, I preach to a roomful of people, generally looking to the texts of the day in the discipline of the lectionary (like most of my disciplines, I follow it mostly, but not always), and the circumstances of the people where I’m asked to speak. I trust God’s word can speak through my foibles and failings, and over time in a particular place I am building up a body of work, in the ear and the mind more than on the page.
Then there are these columns; they aren’t sermons, not quite. Whether as many or more, or less, are reading than did so when I started over two decades ago is something only the circulation manager knows for sure, but now we measure more by clicks than copies sold. What I’m regularly reminded of, though, is that there’s a wide audience of you all out there.
Helen Vendler said back in 1980 (almost half a century ago!) to a convention of English professors: “Our students come to us… having read no works of literature in foreign languages and scarcely any works of literature in their own language. The very years, between twelve and eighteen, when they might be reading rapidly, uncritically, rangingly, happily, thoughtlessly, are somehow dissipated… It is no wonder that they do not love what we love; we as a culture have not taught them to… Nothing is more lonely than to go through life uncompanioned by a sense that others have also gone through it, and have left a record of their experience.”
I think of this when people worry about the internet, and now AI, as obliviating the place of reading and literature in people’s lives. This is not a new concern, as this quote indicates. If we are “people of the Book” as many Christians would claim, what are we to do with the place of reading, let alone reflection, in our lives?
Perhaps part of the answer for preachers is in Professor Vendler’s claim: “It is no wonder that they do not love what we love; we as a culture have not taught them to.” We as a church have not, either. It’s not enough to say the people will not learn: we need to teach them, which includes finding a way past the obstacles our times place in the way.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and preacher in central Ohio; he’s not done with this train of thought, as you can probably tell. Tell him what you’re reading at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow @Knapsack on X.
Jeff Gill
Authors, readers, and a culture of religious literacy
___
How do we share the message of resurrection with others?
Some like George Whitefield and John Wesley two hundred years ago preach on street corners and out in the open; we had a good example of that on Courthouse Square last weekend, and that approach can reach new audiences.
Others are more focused on institution building, planting congregations and seeing them properly developed and led and housed, which is where figures like my own tradition’s Alexander Campbell, or Joseph Smith, Jr., or even one-time local resident Archbishop Lamy came in, building churches and temples and cathedrals. There’s a place for that kind of well-ordered religion.
And then with the rise of mass media there came a new model for extending good news to those who needed to hear it: Aimee Semple McPherson, before her Dwight Moody and after Billy Graham, all examples of ministries which used modern technology to reach new audiences.
I will confess to being a lower-key preacher in most ways, including a personal interest in how literature and history can be used to open people up to horizons beyond their own immediate circumstances. For instance, Jan Karon may have reached more people seeking the hope of the Gospel with her Mitford series of books than many on television, or even those preaching in arenas. Susan Howatch some years ago and Anthony Trollope further back have been authors who created a space where the claims of faith can be quietly considered; C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien famously have done so with their writings. Ellis Peters had a series with a medieval monk, Brother Cadfael, whose chronicles I love to commend, murder mysteries with a regular touch of redemption in their plots.
Most Sundays, I preach to a roomful of people, generally looking to the texts of the day in the discipline of the lectionary (like most of my disciplines, I follow it mostly, but not always), and the circumstances of the people where I’m asked to speak. I trust God’s word can speak through my foibles and failings, and over time in a particular place I am building up a body of work, in the ear and the mind more than on the page.
Then there are these columns; they aren’t sermons, not quite. Whether as many or more, or less, are reading than did so when I started over two decades ago is something only the circulation manager knows for sure, but now we measure more by clicks than copies sold. What I’m regularly reminded of, though, is that there’s a wide audience of you all out there.
Helen Vendler said back in 1980 (almost half a century ago!) to a convention of English professors: “Our students come to us… having read no works of literature in foreign languages and scarcely any works of literature in their own language. The very years, between twelve and eighteen, when they might be reading rapidly, uncritically, rangingly, happily, thoughtlessly, are somehow dissipated… It is no wonder that they do not love what we love; we as a culture have not taught them to… Nothing is more lonely than to go through life uncompanioned by a sense that others have also gone through it, and have left a record of their experience.”
I think of this when people worry about the internet, and now AI, as obliviating the place of reading and literature in people’s lives. This is not a new concern, as this quote indicates. If we are “people of the Book” as many Christians would claim, what are we to do with the place of reading, let alone reflection, in our lives?
Perhaps part of the answer for preachers is in Professor Vendler’s claim: “It is no wonder that they do not love what we love; we as a culture have not taught them to.” We as a church have not, either. It’s not enough to say the people will not learn: we need to teach them, which includes finding a way past the obstacles our times place in the way.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and preacher in central Ohio; he’s not done with this train of thought, as you can probably tell. Tell him what you’re reading at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow @Knapsack on X.
