Reading and proclaiming the advent call of John the Baptist : an empirical enquiry employing the SIFT method

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Authors

Francis, Leslie John
Smith, Greg

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Abstract

Drawing on Jungian psychological type theory, the SIFT method of biblical hermeneutics and liturgical preaching suggests that the reading and proclaiming of scripture reflects the psychological type preferences of the reader and preacher. This thesis is examined among a sample of clergy (training incumbents and curates) serving in the one Diocese of the Church of England (N = 22). After completing the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, the clergy worked in groups (designed to cluster individuals who shared similar psychological type characteristics) to reflect on and to discuss the Advent call of John the Baptist. The Marcan account was chosen for the exercise exploring the perceiving functions (sensing and intuition) in light of its rich narrative. The Lucan account was chosen for the exercise exploring the judging functions (thinking and feeling) in light of the challenges offered by the passage. In accordance with the theory, the data confirmed characteristic differences between the approaches of sensing types and intuitive types, and between the approaches of thinking types and feeling types.

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Advent call, SIFT method, John the Baptist., Psychological type theory, Preaching, Biblical hermeneutics, Sensing, intuition, feeling and thinking (SIFT), Interpreting scripture, Proclaiming scripture

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Francis, L.J. & Smith, G., 2014, 'Reading and proclaiming the Advent call of John the Baptist: An empirical enquiry employing the SIFT method', HTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies 70(1), Art. #2718, 9 pages. http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/hts.v70i1.2718