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VOICING THE VISION: IMAGINATION AND PROPHETIC PREACHING 
 
by Linda Clader (New York: Morehouse Publishing, 2003), Paper, 168 pages, ISBN 
0-8192-1932-0  
Preaching is at the very center of the church’s 
life. It is essential for the life and unity of the Christian community. The 
greatest preachers, past and present, are held in high esteem for their 
eloquence and ability to mover their hearers to faith and action. Many of us can 
remember a preaching that touched us in such a way that we can only describe it 
as having God as its source. In the words we heard, we experienced the presence 
of God alive and speaking to our lives. We hope that our preaching will also be 
open to God’s inspiration and touch people’s lives in ways we know we cannot do 
on our own. For this to happen, we need a creative gift from God—we need 
inspiration. And that is what this book addresses.  
While Linda Clader acknowledges the serious 
nature of her subject, she suggests that a path for the renewal of preaching, 
for both preacher and church, could lie in preachers’ willingness to “play.” 
While VOICING THE VISION is not primarily a workbook, Clader does suggest ways 
to explore inspiration and imagination, which constitute the necessary 
predecessors to prophetic speech. Hence the importance of “playfulness,” a 
discipline that can loosen the tight reins we keep on our spirit and open us to 
God’s creative impulses. Preachers must keep a very specific kind of play in 
mind. This play, rich in creative possibilities, can happen only if we have made 
some “Sabbath time.” Easier said than done since preachers tend to be just as 
stressed-out and over-scheduled as the people who come to hear us preach. Clader 
advises that we need to take the sabbath more seriously and a way to do this is 
to design empty slots into our day, week, month and year. If the Spirit is going 
to use us in the work of inspiring and moving others, then keeping some kind of 
sabbath is essential for our preaching.  
 
And we know, without that inspiration, preaching becomes merely the routine we 
have to do-- week after week. VOICING THE VISION suggests ways to be more 
attentive to God’s Word and the gifts the Spirit has for us and our 
congregations. Clader shows us how to keep a sabbath that will open us to God’s 
inspiration and also renew our own preaching spirits. We preachers have only an 
incomplete control over the effects preaching will have on our hearers’ lives. 
We hope they will respond to what we say and, to increase the possibility of 
that happening, Clader suggests our preaching preparation must be a creative 
process that will open us to the inspiring breath of the Spirit. She stresses 
that it is important to follow wherever the Spirit leads and to be willing to 
risk the unexpected results of the divine impulse.  
While creative insight can happen at any stage in 
our preparation process, the first moments are particularly important and we 
must be attentive to how we spend our time in these early stages.  
Our part is to do what we can to be open to the mystery of the Spirit’s 
activity. We can’t make inspiration happen, it is a gift, but we can 
deliberately design our preaching preparation process in a way that will leave 
us open and ready, should the Spirit choose to act. After all, Clader reminds 
us, we are in “Holy Spirit territory,” practicing our vocation in an “exciting 
and uncertain terrain.”  
The scriptures guide us in our preaching 
vocation. While there are extraordinary stories of prophets and leaders of the 
people, the story of Jesus and the early church reveal that there is another way 
to look at preaching and imagination. The Christian story shows us that through 
Jesus, God has communicated with humans in the most ordinary ways, as part of 
their daily lives. Thus, the Spirit’s creative gifts are available to us and 
what we need to do is expand our ways of receiving what God has to say to 
us---and through us, to the community.  
Preaching is one way God’s Word becomes present 
tense. For this to happen for our hearers, we preachers need to experience that 
eternally new Word ourselves. This is a book that will challenge and feed the 
spirituality of the preacher. It calls us to examine our preaching conscience: 
do we include in our preparation process what we believe about preaching, that 
it is a place inspiration can happen? If preaching is a vehicle for God’s breath 
of new life both for us and those who will hear us, then we must incorporate 
ways to be open to that breath to inspire us.  
Along the way Clader brings us up to date on 
contemporary preaching theory and with homileticians dealing with similar topics 
— creativity, imagination, narrative, prophetic preaching, etc. If you don’t 
already know them, be prepared in this book to also learn from Fred Craddock, 
Richard Lischer, Eugene Lowry, Sallie Mc Fague, and Patricia Kastner-Wilson. In 
addition, Clader credits the strong influence Donald Gelpi, SJ has had on her 
investigations into the Holy Spirit.  
 
Using her own experiences as a preacher Clader shares her quest for inspiration 
in preaching. We hear about her busy life as a homiletics teacher, writer, wife, 
Sunday preacher (she is an Episcopal priest) and a special occasion preacher at 
her seminary and national conferences. Almost all the chapters show how she 
prepared for a particular preaching, what happened in her daily life that 
inspired her and what she did to be open to that moment of insight. The chapters 
end with the resulting homily. These homilies are varied and they concretize the 
theory and suggestions made in the book. I admire preachers who write about 
preaching and then share their homilies with us. It takes courage! 
There is nothing gimmicky about this book or the 
suggestions it makes to help us be inspired and creative preachers. It addresses 
mainline preachers and our need to reflect on our important ministry. After a 
while preaching can seem like just part of our “job description,” something else 
we must do in the course of a busy week. We can get in a rut, repeating 
thoughts, stories and illustrations from long-past preachings. Linda Clader 
challenges us to rethink our vocation, shake off the cobwebs and take a fresh 
look at what we preachers are doing and how we do it. 
What does Clader hope will happen for those of us 
who read this book? 
My hope is simply that the way we preach will cause some who hear us to ask some 
new questions, listen a little more willingly, imagine pictures, smells or 
tastes that may conjure up a memory of another alternative. (Page 160) 
Click here to order this book. 
— Reviewed by Jude Siciliano, OP 
Promoter of Preaching, Southern Dominican Province, USA 
 
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