Against what has been advanced in
the preceding pages, many objections will be urged,
and the evils of the practice I recommend be declared
more than sufficient to counterbalance its advantages.
Of these it is necessary that I should now take notice,
and obviate them as well as I may.
It should be first of all remarked,
that the force of the objections commonly made, lies
against the exclusive use of extempore preaching,
and not against its partial and occasional use.
It is of consequence that this should be considered.
There can be no doubt, that he would preach very wretchedly,
who should always be haranguing without the corrective
discipline of writing. The habit of writing is
essential. Many of the objections which are currently
made to this mode of address, fall to the ground when
this statement is made.
Other objections have been founded
on the idea, that by extemporaneous is meant,
unpremeditated. Whereas there is a plain
and important distinction between them, the latter
word being applied to the thoughts, and the former
to the language only. To preach without premeditation,
is altogether unjustifiable; although there is no
doubt that a man of habitual readiness of mind, may
express himself to the greatest advantage on a subject
with which he is familiar, after very little meditation.
Many writers on the art of preaching,
as well as on eloquence in general, have given a decided
judgment unfavorable to extempore speaking. There
can be no fairer way of answering their objections,
than by examining what they have advanced, and opposing
their authority by that of equal names on the other
side.
Gerard, in his Treatise on the Pastoral
Charge, has the following passage on this subject.
“He will run into trite, common-place
topics; his compositions will be loose and unconnected;
his language often coarse and confused; and diffidence,
or care to recollect his subject, will destroy the
management of his voice.” At the same time,
however, he admits that “it is very proper that
a man should be able to preach in this way, when it
is necessary; but no man ought always to
preach in this way.” To which decision
I have certainly nothing to object.
Mason, in his Student and Pastor,
says to the same effect, that “the inaccuracy
of diction, the inelegance, poverty, and lowness of
expression, which is commonly observed in extempore
discourses, will not fail to offend every hearer of
good taste.”
Dinouart, who is an advocate for
recitation from memory, says that “experience
decides against extemporaneous preaching, though there
are exceptions; but these are very few; and we must
not be led astray by the success of a few first rate
orators.”
Hume, in his Essay upon Eloquence,
expresses an opinion that the modern deficiency in
this art is to be attributed to “that extreme
affectation of extempore speaking, which has led to
extreme carelessness of method.”
The writer of an article, on the Greek
Orators, in the Edinburgh Review, observes, that
“among the sources of the corruption of modern
eloquence, may clearly be distinguished as the most
fruitful, the habit of extempore speaking, acquired
rapidly by persons who frequent popular assemblies,
and, beginning at the wrong end, attempt to speak before
they have studied the art of oratory, or even duly
stored their minds with the treasures of thought and
language, which can only be drawn from assiduous intercourse
with the ancient and modern classics.”
These are the prominent objections
which have been made to the practice in question.
Without denying that they have weight, I think it may
be made to appear that they have not the unquestionable
preponderance, which is assumed for them. They
will be found, on examination, to be the objections
of a cultivated taste, and to be drawn from the examples
of undisciplined men, who ought to be left entirely
out of the question.
1. The objection most urged is
that which relates to style. It is said, the
expression will be poor, inelegant, inaccurate, and
offensive to hearers of taste.
To those who urge this it may be replied,
that the reason why style is an important consideration
in the pulpit, is, not that the taste of the hearers
may be gratified, for but a small part of any congregation
is capable of taking cognizance of this matter; but
solely for the purpose of presenting the speaker’s
thoughts, reasonings, and expostulations distinctly
and forcibly to the minds of his hearers. If this
be effected, it is all which can reasonably be demanded.
And I ask if it be not notorious, that an earnest
and appropriate elocution will give this effect to
a poor style, and that poor speaking will take it away
from the most exact and emphatic style? Is it
not also notorious that the peculiar earnestness of
spontaneous speech, is, above all others, suited to
arrest the attention, and engage the feelings of an
audience? and that the mere reading of a piece of
fine composition, under the notion that careful thought
and finished diction are the only things needful,
leaves the majority uninterested in the discourse,
and free to think of any thing they please? “It
is a poor compliment,” says Blair, “that
one is an accurate reasoner, if he be not a persuasive
speaker also.” It is a small matter that
the style is poor, so long as it answers the great
purpose of instructing and affecting men. So that,
as I have more fully shown in a former place, the
objection lies on an erroneous foundation.
Besides, if it were not so, it will
be found quite as strong against the writing
of sermons. For how large a proportion of sermon
writers have these very same faults of style! what
a great want of force, neatness, compactness, is there
in the composition of most preachers! what weakness,
inelegance, and inconclusiveness; and how small improvement
do they make, even after the practice of years!
How happens this? It is because they do not make
this an object of attention and study; and some might
be unable to attain it if they did. But that watchfulness
and care which secure a correct and neat style in
writing, would also secure it in speaking. It
does not naturally belong to the one, more than to
the other, and may be as certainly attained in each
by the proper pains. Indeed so far as my observation
has extended, I am not certain that there is not as
large a proportion of extempore speakers, whose diction
is exact and unexceptionable, as of writers always
taking into view their education, which equally affects
the one and the other. And it is a consideration
of great weight, that the faults in question are far
less offensive in speakers than in writers.
It is apparent that objectors of this
sort are guilty of a double mistake; first, in laying
too great stress upon mere defects of style, and then
in taking for granted, that these are unavoidable.
They might as well insist that defects of written
style are unavoidable. Whereas they are the consequence
of the negligent mode in which the art has been studied,
and its having been given up, for the most part, to
ignorant and fanatical pretenders. Let it be
diligently cultivated by educated men, and we shall
find no more cause to expel it from the pulpit than
from the forum or the parliament. “Poverty,
inelegance, and poorness of diction,” will be
no longer so “generally observed,” and
even hearers of taste will cease to be offended.
2. A want of order, a rambling,
unconnected, desultory manner, is commonly objected;
as Hume styles it, “extreme carelessness of method;”
and this is so often observed, as to be justly an object
of dread. But this is occasioned by that indolence
and want of discipline to which we have just alluded.
It is not a necessary evil. If a man have never
studied the art of speaking, nor passed through a course
of preparatory discipline; if he have so rash and
unjustifiable a confidence in himself, that he will
undertake to speak, without having considered what
he shall say, what object he shall aim at, or by what
steps he shall attain it; the inevitable consequence
will be confusion, inconclusiveness, and wandering.
Who recommends such a course? But he who has
first trained himself to the work, and whenever he
would speak, has surveyed his ground, and become familiar
with the points to be dwelt upon, and the course of
reasoning and track of thought to be followed; will
go on from one step to another, in an easy and natural
order, and give no occasion to the complaint of confusion
or disarrangement.
“Some preachers,” says
Dinouart, “have the folly to think that they
can make sermons impromptu. And what a piece
of work they make! They bolt out every thing
which comes into their head. They take for granted,
what ought to be proved, or perhaps they state half
the argument, and forget the rest. Their appearance
corresponds to the state of their mind, which is occupied
in hunting after some way of finishing the sentence
they have begun. They repeat themselves; they
wander off in digression. They stand stiff without
moving; or if they are of a lively temperament, they
are full of the most turbulent action; their eyes and
hands are flying about in every direction, and their
words choke in their throats. They are like men
swimming, who have got frightened, and throw about
their hands and feet at random, to save themselves
from drowning.”
There is doubtless great truth in
this humorous description. But what is the legitimate
inference? that extemporaneous speaking is altogether
ridiculous and mischievous? or only that it is an art
which requires study and diligence, and which no man
should presume to practice, until he has fitted himself
for it?
3. In the same way I should dispose
of the objection, that this habit leads to barrenness
in preaching, and the everlasting repetition of the
same sentiments and topics. If a man make his
facility of speech an excuse for the neglect of all
study, then doubtless this will be the result.
He who cannot resist his indolent propensities, had
best avoid this occasion of temptation. He must
be able to command himself to think, and industriously
prepare himself by meditation, if he would be safe
in this hazardous experiment. He who does this,
and continues to learn and reflect while he preaches,
will be no more empty and monotonous than if he carefully
wrote every word.
4. But this temptation to indolence
in the preparation for the desk, is urged as in itself
a decisive objection. A man finds, that after
a little practice, it is an exceedingly easy thing
to fill up his half-hour with declamation which shall
pass off very well, and hence he grows negligent in
previous meditation; and insensibly degenerates into
an empty exhorter, without choice of language, or variety
of ideas. This is undoubtedly the great and alarming
danger of this practice. This must be triumphed
over, or it is ruinous. We see examples of it
wherever we look among those whose preaching is exclusively
extempore. In these cases, the evil rises to
its magnitude in consequence of their total neglect
of the pen. The habit of writing a certain proportion
of the time would, in some measure, counteract this
dangerous tendency.
But it is still insisted, that man’s
natural love of ease is not to be trusted; that he
will not long continue the drudgery of writing in part;
that when he has once gained confidence to speak without
study, he will find it so flattering to his indolence,
that he will involuntarily give himself up to it,
and relinquish the pen altogether; that consequently
there is no security, except in never beginning.
To this it may be replied, that they
who have not principle and self-government enough
to keep them industrious, will not be kept so by being
compelled to write sermons. I think we have abundant
proof, that a man may write with as little pains and
thinking, as he can speak. It by no means follows,
that because it is on paper, it is therefore the result
of study. And if it be not, it will be greatly
inferior, in point of effect, to an unpremeditated
declamation; for in the latter case, there will probably
be at least a temporary excitement of feeling, and
consequent vivacity of manner, while in the former
the indolence of the writer will be made doubly intolerable
by his heaviness in reading.
It cannot be doubted, however, that
if any one find his facility of extemporaneous invention,
likely to prove destructive to his habits of diligent
and careful application; it were advisable that he
refrain from the practice. It could not be worth
while for him to lose his habits of study and thinking
for the sake of an ability to speak, which would avail
him but little, after his ability to think has been
weakened or destroyed.
As for those whose indolence habitually
prevails over principle, and who make no preparation
for duty excepting the mechanical one of covering
over a certain number of pages, they have
no concern in the ministry, and should be driven to
seek some other employment, where their mechanical
labor may provide them a livelihood, without injuring
their own souls, or those of other men.
If the objection in question be applied
to conscientious men, whose hearts are in their profession,
and who have a sincere desire to do good, it certainly
has very little weight. The minds of such men
are kept active with reflection, and stored with knowledge,
and warm with religious feeling. They are therefore
always ready to speak to the purpose, as well as write
to the purpose; and their habitual sense of the importance
of their office, and their anxiety to fulfil it in
the best manner, will forbid that indolence which
is so disastrous. The objection implies, that
the consequence pointed out is one which cannot be
avoided. Experience teaches us the contrary.
It is the tendency but a tendency which
may be, for it has been, counteracted. Many have
preached in this mode for years, and yet have never
relaxed their diligence in study, nor declined in
the variety, vigor, and interest of their discourses; sometimes
dull, undoubtedly; but this may be said with equal
truth of the most faithful and laborious writers.
5. Many suppose that there is
a certain natural talent, essential to success in
extempore speaking, no less than in poetry; and that
it is absurd to recommend the art to those who have
not this peculiar talent, and vain for them to attempt
its practice.
In regard to that ready flow of words,
which seems to be the natural gift of some men, it
is of little consequence whether it be really such,
or be owing to the education and habits of early life,
and vain self-confidence. It is certain that
the want of habit, and diffidence are great hindrances
to fluency of speech; and it is equally certain, that
this natural fluency is a very questionable advantage
to him who would be an impressive speaker. It
is quite observable that those who at first talk easiest,
do not always talk best. Their very facility is
a snare to them. It serves to keep them content;
they make no effort to improve, and are likely to
fall into slovenly habits of elocution. So that
this unacquired fluency is so far from essential, that
it is not even a benefit, and it may be an injury.
It keeps from final eminence by the very greatness
of its early promise. On the other hand, he who
possesses originally no remarkable command of language,
and whom an unfortunate bashfulness prevents from
well using what he has; is obliged to subject himself
to severe discipline, to submit to rules and tasks,
to go through a tedious process of training, to acquire
by much labor the needful sway over his thoughts and
words, so that they shall come at his bidding, and
not be driven away by his own diffidence, or the presence
of other men. To do all this, is a long and disheartening
labor. He is exposed to frequent mortifications,
and must endure many grievous failures, before he
attain that confidence which is indispensable to success.
But then in this discipline, his powers, mental and
moral, are strained up to the highest intenseness of
action; after persevering practice, they become habitually
subject to his control, and work with a precision,
exactness, and energy, which can never be the possession
of him, who has depended on his native, undisciplined
gift. Of the truth of this, examples are by no
means wanting, and I could name, if it were proper,
more than one striking instance within my own observation.
It was probably this to which Newton referred, when
he said, that he never spoke well till he felt that
he could not speak at all. Let no one therefore
think it an obstacle in his way that he has no readiness
of words. If he have good sense and no deficiency
of talent, and is willing to labor for this as all
great acquisitions must be labored for, he needs not
fear but that in time he will attain it.
We must be careful, however, not to
mistake the object to be attained. It is not
a high rank in oratory, consummate eloquence.
If it were, then indeed a young man might pause till
he had ascertained whether he possessed all those
extraordinary endowments of intellect, imagination,
sensibility, countenance, voice, and person, which
belong to few men in a century, and without which
the great orator does not exist. He is one of
those splendid formations of nature, which she exhibits
but rarely; and it is not necessary to the object
of his pursuit that the minister be such. The
aim and purpose of his office are less ambitious, to
impart instruction and do good; and it is by no means
certain that the greatest eloquence is best adapted
to these purposes in the pulpit. But any man,
with powers which fit him for the ministry at all, unless
there be a few extraordinary exceptions is
capable of learning to express himself clearly, correctly,
and with method; and this is precisely what is wanted,
and no more than this. I do not say eloquently;
for as it is not thought indispensable that every
writer of sermons should be eloquent, it cannot be
thought essential that every speaker should be so.
But the same powers which have enabled him to write,
will, with sufficient discipline, enable him to speak;
with every probability that when he comes to speak
with the same ease and collectedness, he will do it
with a nearer approach to eloquence. Without
such discipline he has no right to hope for success;
let him not say that success is impossible, until
he has submitted to it.
I apprehend that these remarks will
be found not only correct in theory, but agreeable
to experience. With the exceeding little systematic
cultivation of the art which there is amongst us, and
no actual instruction, we find that a great majority
of the lawyers in our courts, and not a small portion
of the members of our legislatures, are able to argue
and debate. In some of the most popular and quite
numerous religious sects, we find preachers enough,
who are able to communicate their thoughts and harangue
their congregations, and exert very powerful and permanent
influence over large bodies of the people. Some
of these are men of as small natural talents and as
limited education, as any that enter the sacred office.
It should seem therefore that no one needs to despair.
In the ancient republics of Greece
and Rome, this accomplishment was a necessary branch
of a finished education. A much smaller proportion
of the citizens were educated than amongst us; but
of these a much larger number became orators.
No man could hope for distinction or influence, and
yet slight this art. The commanders of their armies
were orators as well as soldiers, and ruled as well
by their rhetorical as by their military skill.
There was no trusting with them as with us, to a natural
facility, or the acquisition of an accidental fluency
by actual practice. But they served an apprenticeship
to the art. They passed through a regular course
of instruction in schools. They submitted to
long and laborious discipline. They exercised
themselves frequently, both before equals and in the
presence of teachers, who criticised, reproved, rebuked,
excited emulation, and left nothing undone which art
and perseverance could accomplish. The greatest
orators of antiquity, so far from being favored by
natural tendencies, except indeed in their high intellectual
endowments, had to struggle against natural obstacles;
and instead of growing up spontaneously to their unrivalled
eminence, they forced themselves forward by the most
discouraging artificial process. Demosthenes
combated an impediment in speech and ungainliness
of gesture, which at first drove him from the forum
in disgrace. Cicero failed at first through weakness
of lungs, and an excessive vehemence of manner, which
wearied the hearers and defeated his own purpose.
These defects were conquered by study and discipline.
Cicero exiled himself from home, and during his absence
in various lands passed not a day without a rhetorical
exercise; seeking the masters who were most severe
in criticism, as the surest means of leading him to
the perfection at which he aimed. Such too was
the education of their other great men. They
were all, according to their ability and station, orators;
orators, not by nature or accident, but by education;
formed in a strict process of rhetorical training;
admired and followed even while Demosthenes and Cicero
were living, and unknown now, only because it is not
possible that any but the first should survive the
ordeal of ages.
The inference to be drawn from these
observations, is, that if so many of those who received
an accomplished education became accomplished orators,
because to become so was one purpose of their study;
then it is in the power of a much larger proportion
amongst us, to form themselves into creditable and
accurate speakers. The inference should not be
denied until proved false by experiment. Let this
art be made an object of attention, and young men
train themselves to it faithfully and long; and if
any of competent talents and tolerable science be found
at last incapable of expressing themselves in continued
and connected discourse, so as to answer the ends
of the christian ministry; then, and not till then,
let it be said that a peculiar talent or natural aptitude
is requisite, the want of which must render effort
vain; then, and not till then, let us acquiesce in
this indolent and timorous notion, which contradicts
the whole testimony of antiquity, and all the experience
of the world. Doubtless, after the most that
can be done, there will be found the greatest variety
of attainment; “men will differ,” as Burnet
remarks, “quite as much as in their written compositions;”
and some will do but poorly what others will do excellently.
But this is likewise true of every other art in which
men engage, and not least so of writing sermons; concerning
which no one will say, that as poor are not written,
as it would be possible for any one to speak.
In truth, men of small talents and great sluggishness,
of a feeble sense of duty and no zeal, will of course
make poor sermons, by whatever process they may do
it, let them write or let them speak. It is doubtful
concerning some whether they would even steal good
ones.
The survey we have now taken, renders
it evident, that the evils, which are principally
objected against as attending this mode of preaching,
are not necessary evils, but are owing to insufficient
study and preparation before the practice is commenced,
and indolence afterward. This is implied in the
very expressions of the objectors themselves, who
attribute the evil to “beginning at the wrong
end, attempting to speak before studying the art of
oratory, or even storing the mind with treasures of
thought and language.” It is, also, implied
in this language, that study and preparation are capable
of removing the objections. I do not therefore
advocate the art, without insisting on the necessity
of severe discipline and training. No man should
be encouraged or permitted to adopt it, who will not
take the necessary pains, and proceed with the necessary
perseverance.
This should be the more earnestly
insisted upon, because it is from our loose and lazy
notions on the subject, that eloquence in every department
is suffering so much, and that the pulpit especially
has become so powerless, where the most important
things that receive utterance upon earth, are read
like schoolboys’ tasks, without even the poor
pains to lay emphasis on the right words, and to pause
in the right places. And this, because we fancy
that, if nature have not designed us for orators,
it is vain to make effort, and if she have, we shall
be such without effort. True, that the noble
gifts of mind are from nature; but not language, or
knowledge, or accent, or tone, or gesture; these are
to be learned, and it is with these that the speaker
is concerned. These are all matters of acquisition,
and of difficult acquisition; possible to be attained,
and well worth the exertion that must be made.
The history of the world is full of
testimony to prove how much depends upon industry;
not an eminent orator has lived, but is an example
of it. Yet in contradiction to all this, the
almost universal feeling appears to be, that industry
can effect nothing, that eminence is the result of
accident, and that every one must be content to remain
just what he may happen to be. Thus multitudes,
who come forward as teachers and guides, suffer themselves
to be satisfied with the most indifferent attainments,
and a miserable mediocrity, without so much as inquiring
how they might rise higher, much less making any attempt
to rise. For any other art they would have served
an apprenticeship, and would be ashamed to practise
it in public before they had learned it. If any
one would sing, he attends a master, and is drilled
in the very elementary principles; and only after
the most laborious process dares to exercise his voice
in public. This he does, though he has scarce
any thing to learn but the mechanical execution of
what lies in sensible forms before his eye. But
the extempore speaker, who is to invent as well as
to utter, to carry on an operation of the mind as
well as to produce sound, enters upon the work without
preparatory discipline, and then wonders that he fails!
If he were learning to play on the flute for public
exhibition, what hours and days would he spend in
giving facility to his fingers, and attaining the
power of the sweetest and most impressive execution.
If he were devoting himself to the organ, what months
and years would he labor, that he might know its compass,
and be master of its keys, and be able to draw out,
at will, all its various combinations of harmonious
sound, and its full richness and delicacy of expression.
And yet he will fancy that the grandest, the most
various, the most expressive of all instruments, which
the infinite Creator has fashioned by the union of
an intellectual soul with the powers of speech, may
be played upon without study or practice; he comes
to it, a mere uninstructed tyro, and thinks to manage
all its stops, and command the whole compass of its
varied and comprehensive power! He finds himself
a bungler in the attempt, is mortified at his failure,
and settles it in his mind forever that the attempt
is vain.
Success in every art, whatever may
be the natural talent, is always the reward of industry
and pains. But the instances are many of men of
the finest natural genius, whose beginning has promised
much, but who have degenerated wretchedly as they
advanced, because they trusted to their gifts, and
made no effort to improve. That there have never
been other men of equal endowments with Demosthenes
and Cicero, none would venture to suppose; but who
have so devoted themselves to their art, or become
equal in excellence? If those great men had been
content, like others, to continue as they began, and
had never made their persevering efforts for improvement,
what would their countries have benefited from their
genius, or the world have known of their fame?
They would have been lost in the undistinguished crowd,
that sunk to oblivion around them. Of how many
more will the same remark prove true! What encouragement
is thus given to the industrious! With such encouragement,
how inexcusable is the negligence which suffers the
most interesting and important truths, to seem heavy
and dull, and fall ineffectual to the ground, through
mere sluggishness in their delivery! How unworthy
of one who performs the high function of a religious
instructer, upon whom depend, in a great measure,
the religious knowledge and devotional sentiment and
final character of many fellow beings, to
imagine that he can worthily discharge this great
concern by occasionally talking for an hour, he knows
not how, and in a manner which he has taken no pains
to render correct, impressive, or attractive; and
which, simply through want of that command over himself
which study would give, is immethodical, verbose,
inaccurate, feeble, trifling. It has been said
of the good preacher, that “truths divine come
mended from his tongue.” Alas, they come
ruined and worthless from such a man as this.
They lose that holy energy by which they are to convert
the soul and purify man for heaven, and sink, in interest
and efficacy, below the level of those principles
which govern the ordinary affairs of this lower world.