Bearing the Word and Finding One’s Authority – by Abigail Henrich

Introductory note: In medieval art, as in this contemporary painting, Mary has been regularly depicted with a book in her hand – underscoring her role as Mother of the Word.  In these reflections on preaching, Anne Weirich, Jerusha Neal and Abigail Henrich take this designation seriously, reinterpreting Mary’s story to refer, not simply to the experience of childbirth and mothering, but also to the very real, word-driven labor of spoken proclamation.  Using Michael O’Brien’s luminous depiction as a common point of reference, they ask: How might Mary’s experience in bearing the Word to the world illuminate the preacher’s act of bearing witness?

I was twenty when I started preaching. I had no congregation, had never studied Greek or Hebrew, and had never heard of the phrase biblical exegesis. I began preaching on the long solitary car rides home from visiting my college boyfriend. He was in law school, I in undergraduate, and I was in love with the limitless possibility of the future. My preaching was impassioned. My sermons were manifestos. I believe, even now looking back sixteen years later, the Holy Spirit was very much present.

I have no idea why I started preaching this way, nor do I remember the first time I “car preached.” Even more amusing: I don’t ever remember thinking it was odd. In fact (I am embarrassed to admit this), I thought about placing a tape recorder in my car so I could preserve my sermons. With a bit of bemusement, I wonder all these years later, “Why did I car preach?”

I know the story that surrounds those car sermons. At twenty, I had discerned that I did not only intend to pursue a Masters in Divinity, but also ordination. Neither my decision to enter the ministry, nor my early desire to preach, were connected to a powerful moment of call. Instead, I had an intimation of the transformative power of preaching.

My boyfriend and I broke up; I found someone much more suited to my idea of life-long partnership. I never, however, stopped preaching. What began during those car rides has become a love affair. Other than three brief maternity leaves and a four month hiatus from ministry as I searched for a new call, I have preached almost every Sunday since I was 25. I think I was born to preach the way my artist mother was born to paint.

My preaching has evolved dramatically since my early impassioned car sermons. As a twenty-two year old seminarian, I was often dismissed by my peers, and even by faculty, as a real candidate for preaching. I should consider associate ministry, youth ministry, or children and family ministry. I was too cute, too young, and of course, I was born with a vagina.

After preaching my first ever sermon to a congregation, one woman commented as she shook my hand in the receiving line, “You are so beautiful I couldn’t pay attention to anything you said.” She meant it as a compliment, but I was bewildered. Perhaps if I quit wearing mascara, I could preach the gospel? The next time I preached, I got more serious. I wore a plain blue suit, tucked my hair back, and preached (and I mean preached) the knock you in the gut Gospel. Ironically the only African-American couple in the congregation found me at the end of service to tell me that they had never heard such powerful preaching in that particular church and commended a preacher in the city they thought I should hear. The next day at the church’s staff meeting I was given just one comment: “Your voice is too high.” I went home and wept.

I worked harder. I followed the rules. I mastered researching the social and historical context of any given text and became an expert at using the computer program BibleWorks. I analyzed the original Greek and Hebrew in my sermons.  I graduated from seminary and received a call as the solo pastor of a church poised to grow. I worked diligently at my sermons, crafting each word. Every Saturday night I went to the church, laid my notes before me on the pulpit, and preached to the empty pews. For an hour I would mark out phrases, add pauses, change words.

I wish I could say with conviction I worked so hard solely for the Gospel. If I am to be authentic, I think I worked so hard so that someone would take me seriously. I worked so hard to gain authority. My preaching was nothing like my first impassioned, genuine proclamations.  They were for others, for the wrong reasons. The Holy Spirit was not palpable.

Mary had no “authority” to bear Jesus. She was a young, poor, uneducated woman who maybe even had a high voice.  She didn’t own a blue suit or computer with Bible Works. Yet she became the Mother of the Word. Her authority rested solely in the Holy Spirit and her willingness to answer the Holy Spirit’s call.

Recently I have become the pastor of Grace Community Boston, an emergent Christian community. I have no experience with start up churches, no special training; my authority rests solely in the community’s call. Similarly, the community has no denominational affiliation. Our collective “authority” as those who call themselves a church rests solely in the Holy Spirit’s calling us on a new pilgrimage.

What has happened to my preaching in these past two years is profound. I no longer look to BibleWorks. I rarely read commentaries. I do not write down my sermons or even approach Sunday with any notes in hand. My robe and my blue suit are collecting dust in my closet. Instead, on Sunday evenings, I stand up before my community, clad in blue jeans, my hair in a pony tail, and in a woman’s voice I unabashedly proclaim the Gospel I received from the Holy Spirit. I have never preached better in my life. At last, my sermons pour from the very core of my being in the same way my early car sermons did.

I am well aware that I am the product of an excellent formal education and have been blessed by years of biblical scholarship. I have not, and will not, ever throw out files upon files of my written sermons. And I am uncertain if in ten years, my preaching style will be the same. Perhaps I will return to notes or even the latest version of BibleWorks. Also, there are inherent dangers to the way I preach: if my prayer life is pushed aside, my preaching can become more about me, than the gospel. I risk incredible vulnerability.

Yet I continue. I am now acutely aware that my authority does not rest in my education, carefully chosen clothes, voice pitch, personal journey, or theological precision. No—my authority rests in the Holy Spirit who inexplicably called a twenty year old girl-woman to preach.

I am no Mary. If the Holy Spirit called me to bear Jesus, I would have turned the angel Gabriel down. But like Mary, I was called to bear the word, and like Mary, my authority rests in the Holy Spirit. Finally, at age 36, I have embraced my call with the same Spirit I did when I was 20.

Rev. Abigail A. Henrich is the pastor of the progressive Christian gathering Grace Community Boston. Together with her community, she is discerning what it means to follow Jesus in the ever changing 21st century. Currently she is enrolled in a graphic art class so she can create new visual “sermons” for the virtual progressive Christian community. Abby is married to a professor and theologian, Jon Paul Sydnor, and she is the mother of three lively children: Josiah, Isaac, and Lydia. She spends most of her time these days wondering just how you can follow Jesus and unload a dishwasher at the same time.

One thought on “Bearing the Word and Finding One’s Authority – by Abigail Henrich

  • November 3, 2017 at 1:01 pm
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    This is beautifully written. Thank you. I am currently reflecting on writing a piece about preaching while pregnant, bearing the Word to the people God as Mary bore the embodied Word for the people of God. Your story inspired me and gave me much to think about as I write.

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