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Using a genre-sensitive homiletic to increase listeners' affective, imaginative, aesthetic response to sermons on the Psalms

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MLA citation style (9th ed.)

Kenneth John Langley. Using a Genre-sensitive Homiletic to Increase Listeners' Affective, Imaginative, Aesthetic Response to Sermons On the Psalms. Denver Seminary. rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/4586e6ec-6ef6-4b25-a752-ab4a1da60c44.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

K. J. Langley. Using a genre-sensitive homiletic to increase listeners' affective, imaginative, aesthetic response to sermons on the Psalms. https://rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/4586e6ec-6ef6-4b25-a752-ab4a1da60c44

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

Kenneth John Langley. Using a Genre-Sensitive Homiletic to Increase Listeners' Affective, Imaginative, Aesthetic Response to Sermons On the Psalms. Denver Seminary. https://rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/4586e6ec-6ef6-4b25-a752-ab4a1da60c44.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.

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Abstract
  • This project examines whether genre-sensitive sermons on the Psalms should elicit stronger affective, imaginative, aesthetic responses than propositional sermons on the Psalms, proposing that since Psalms are poetry they work differently in sermons than do prose texts, which may be more amenable to propositional preaching. Based on research in Psalms scholarship, poetics, speech, homiletics, and theology, the project devises preaching strategies appropriate to the genre in order to prepare, present, and evaluate response to five propositional and five genre-sensitive sermons. A survey of listeners to these sermons does not confirm the project's hypothesis, and the project presents possible explanations for this result.
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Last modified
  • 02/17/2024

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