Topics tend to include homiletics, pastoral care, sacramental theology, and ethics.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Wester, 62, also teaches homiletics, aka the art of preaching, at Kenrick-Glennon Seminary.
From the nation.time.com
The one who practices or studies homiletics is called a homilist.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Homiletics is the study of the composition and delivery of a sermon or other religious discourse.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Coyne, a former professor of liturgy and homiletics, will be ordained during a special mass on March 2nd.
From the orlandosentinel.com
This work of Augustine was the classic one in homiletics.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Some assert the independent character of homiletics and say that it is independent in origin, matter and purpose.
From the en.wikipedia.org
In fact, I was taught in my homiletics classes in seminary not to give attributions as it seriously interrupts the flow of the sermon.
From the evangelicaloutpost.com
Thinkers such as Karl Barth have resisted this definition, maintaining that homiletics should retain a critical distance from rhetoric.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
The branch of theology that deals with sermons and homilies
The art of preaching
(homiletic) of the nature of a homily or sermon
The branch of rhetoric that treats of the composition and delivery of sermons
The art or study of delivering sermons or homilies. Derived from the Latin and Greek terms for discourse, especially that addressed to an assembled group. Compare commentary. Compare also hermeneutics.
Homiletics is derived from the Greek word o(mi/lhtiko/j(homiletikos) which means "conversation." More specifically, homiletics deals with the art of writing or delivering sermons as a means of communication of God's truth to His church.