The Owl the Hawk and the Cuckow – Spiritualizing Run a Fowl
The title of this post comes from an allegorical sermon Spurgeon once heard on the text of Lev 11:16, which reads in the KJV, “and the owl, and the night hawk, and the cuckow, and the hawk after his kind.” The venerable sermonizer related this text to three types of people: (1) night hawks were cheaters/stealers, (2) owls were drunkards, and (3) cuckoos were preachers who always said the same thing whenever they entered the pulpit! These birds were all unclean and thus represented these three groups of unclean sinners. Even Spurgeon, who relates this story in his Lectures to My Students (“On Spiritualizing”) in a somewhat positive manner, had to admit, “Was not this rather too much of a good thing?”
Indeed!
Spurgeon is well known for sometimes spiritualizing the text
but he does offer several warnings about the practice:
- Do not violently strain a text by illegitimate spiritualizing
- Never spiritualize upon indelicate subjects
- Never spiritualize for the sake of showing what an uncommonly clever fellow you are
- Never pervert Scripture to give it a novel and so-called spiritual meaning
- In no case allow your audience to forget that the narratives which you spiritualize are facts
Now to be fair, and I think Spurgeon hints at this in his
defense, the truths that are preached are often biblical truths and presented
in a way that is compelling and memorable.
The very fact that Spurgeon could remember a sermon preached from the Levetical
minutia of clean and unclean animals shows how effective such preaching can
be! Those truths would be better preached from texts that actually teach those truths, however.
If you want to teach your listeners the mind of God and
how he reasons and thinks, then you need to explain the flow the passage and
how each part contributes to the overall idea that God wants us to get from a
particular text. You can’t do that if
you are preaching on things that the text doesn’t say anything about. If you want to make the text big and
important in the mind of your listeners, then you need the text to be big and important
in the preparation and delivery of your sermon. When they have finished
listening to what you have said, their response should NOT be – “Wow, I never
would have seen that myself!” Instead,
it should be, “Wow, how did I ever miss seeing that – it’s so clear!”*
*Modified and expanded from a section in Iain Duguid’s introduction
to his commentary on Ezekiel (which is a book often given over to allegorical interpretation).
Labels: preaching, spiritualizing, Spurgeon
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