1. Fred Warren says:

    Very true, Rachel. In our culture, we often seem hard-wired to the lecture, or the sermon, or the rant.

    One of the things I love about stories is that they can provide such a powerful shorthand for very complex ideas. We can bloviate all day about compassion and mercy overcoming prejudice, or how lies undermine credibility and make it harder to recognize truth–people’s eyes will glaze over after a minute or two. Mention “The Good Samaritan,” or “The Boy Who Cried Wolf,” and people instantly know what you’re talking about, and will probably be more excited about discussing it.

    Fred

  2. Patrick says:

    It seems in our culture there is no trust in the story to convey it’s messages. Maybe there’s an underestimation of the ability to think for ourselves, or of our intelligence in general, but  there seems to be an expectation to be spoon fed “what it really means” instead of applying our own thought process to a story. Many honestly think themselves too ignorant to understand the Bible, and are even taught that they need a priest or preacher to interpret it for them. Our English teachers seem to do the same with literature- telling students what the story is “really” about instead of asking what this story meant to them. There is too much fear that someone will misunderstand to let people figure things out for themselves. Experience is a much more effective teacher than any lecture will ever be.

  3. Keanan Brand says:

    Excellent post, Rachel. 

    As a kid, I read eclectically — still do! — but one thing that annoyed me about Christian fiction was the sermonizing. If there was a church scene with a lengthy sermon in it, I tended to skim or skip it. Of course, there was a limited availability of Christian fiction compared to the wide variety available today, and I’m glad writers are increasingly seeing the value of letting the story do the talking rather than the writers interjecting an obvious (and usually clumsy) moral or object lesson.

    As Patrick mentioned above, there’s this urge to pull out the “real” meaning of something rather than letting it just be.  The readers will “get” it, much as students grasp the meaning of a word, phrase, or sentence given the correct context; they infer definitions or meaning from the surrounding material. We writers need to afford our readers the respect of believing them to be intelligent.
     

What do you think?