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Engaging the Congregation : The Place of Metadiscourse in Contemporary Preaching

Author

  • Hans Malmström

Summary, in English

Most forms of contemporary preaching elevate the role of the listeners, who are seen as co-constructors of the sermon. This article investigates how preachers may respond to a call from homiletics to 'turn-to-the-listener' through their deployment of metadiscourse, operationalized as a framework for understanding preaching not primarily as gospel proclamation, but as a form of social and communicative engagement. A quantitative analysis of 150 sermons from three well-established English Christian denominations finds that metadiscourse is a prolific feature in preaching, with almost one word in 10 performing a metadiscursive function, most prominently by recourse to interactional metadiscursive resources. A qualitative analysis shows that, across the three denominations, preachers adopt metadiscursive practices that may serve to address expectations in the turn-to-the-listener preaching paradigm. The findings will inform further applied analysis of religious discourse, and will add constructively to discussions within homiletics, not least by suggesting how empirical and applied approaches to language can be of service to homiletics and the teaching of preaching.

Publishing year

2016-08-01

Language

English

Pages

561-582

Publication/Series

Applied Linguistics

Volume

37

Issue

4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Topic

  • Languages and Literature

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0142-6001