rsc2a said:
No. We are comparing some sermons to a lecture.
See that word above in your excerpted quote in red? That's an addition you just made. It's your standard method of operation. You modified your original statement because your original statement compared preaching to merely a lecture. Sophistry, it's what you do.
rsc2a said:
We are also pointing out the foolishness that is evident when people claim that the only way to hear the word preached is through a sermon.
Where did I make the claim that the "only way to hear the word preached is through a sermon"? I didn't say that, but you insert convenient arguments into others mouths all the time, hoping they'll not notice your duplicity.
sub said:
Obviously, you don't understand what the word "mostly" means.
I don't have a bit of problem saying that our lives (salt and light) ought to match the verbal proclamation of the gospel, but as is often the case aroung here, people chase rabbits and squirrels incessantly. The topic that is relevant to the recent discussion about music (CCM, remember

) is not whether we ought to worship Christ by our deeds in public ("preaching" loosely defined by y'all), but whether the corporate experience should be overly focused on producing emotions via music. The fact that our discussion was explicitly about corporate/church worship by the body of believers is super-abundantly clear from posts 216,227,232,242-245,248,250-251,260,273,277,279,281-282,286,288,291,and 300-304. Those posts are from maybe a dozen posters, including you and me. So nobody, namely me, was talking about "preaching" the gospel only coming via the pulpit. That is a red herring introduced by rsc2a, JJ, and you.