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Sermons from the National Cathedral
Soundings for the Journey
Sermons from the National Cathedral
Soundings for the Journey
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Description
Washington National Cathedral stands in an unparalleled position at the intersection of religious faith and public life in America, and has been called the “spiritual home for the nation.” Dean Samuel T. Lloyd III occupied its massive Canterbury pulpit as dean during an often- turbulent period in the nation and rapid changes in American religious life.
In Sermons from the National Cathedral, Dean Lloyd provides a compelling vision of an intellectually alive, publicly engaged Christian faith, a vision of the Christian life rooted in ancient teaching. Readers will find the sermons engaging and appreciate that Dean Lloyd takes seriously the experiences of doubt and searching that are so much a part of the modern religious experience of our time. He successfully demonstrates the positive role faith can play in public life and addresses the questions and challenges faith must face in the twenty-first century.
These soundings, as Lloyd calls them, illumine the full spectrum of Christian belief while also addressing such issues as the difficulty of faith, the relationship between science and faith, the mystery of suffering, the necessity of forgiveness, the meaning of the cross, the urgency of reconciliation, and the call to care for the earth. These reflections will appeal to traditional Christians seeking spiritual enrichment and are accessible to those seeking answers to how their faith fits into our modern world.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Book One – Reflections on Faith
God We Can Trust
Follow Me
The Calling of Holiness
Costly Discipleship
Will You Dance?
Commanded to Love
When God Throws a Brick
Following an Elusive Lord
Haggling Prayer
Does God Care?
The Silence of God
God, Science, and the Life of Faith
The Night Visitor
The Miracle of Forgiveness
Holy Laughter
Trusting Against the Evidence
Grace
Book Two -Events and Issues
Cathedral Life
A Voice, A Place, A People
An Unfinished Cathedral
Presidential Inauguration
A New Community
Anniversary of 9/11
Doubts and Loves
Place of Reconciliation
The Far Side of Revenge
Religious Diversity
The Spirit of Understanding
A Big Enough House
Race and Poverty
In Thanksgiving for Dorothy Height
An Extremist for Love
Black and White on the Road to Emmaus
Mind the Gap
Earth Day
To Save This Fragile Earth
Independence day
A Humble Patriotism
Thanksgiving
A Thankful Heart
Giving Thanks in All Things
Book Three - Church Year
Advent
Waiting
Making Room for God
Mary Said Yes
Christmas
God Comes In
The Birth of the Messiah
The Plunge
Epiphany
The Magi and Us
Beloved
Lent
The Truth of Ash Wednesday
The Joy of Ash Wednesday
Going for Broke
Palm Sunday
Love So Amazing
Strange Fruit
Good Friday
What A Way to Run A Universe
Staring Into the Dark
Easter
Death Be Not Proud
Nevertheless
Ascension
Christ Has Gone Up
Pentecost
The Spirit of Life
Ordinary Time
The Trinity and the Nearness of God
Who Do You Say That I Am?
All Saints
The Real Thing
The Communion of Saints
Product details
Published | Apr 04 2013 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 382 |
ISBN | 9781442222854 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Lloyd was a highly effective rector at Boston’s historic Trinity Church before being elevated to the post of dean at Washington’s National Cathedral in 2005. Then, to the surprise of all concerned, he returned to Trinity as priest-in-charge in September 2011: rising in the church means more administration and less preaching, it seems. And Lloyd relished preaching. These sermons, from the cathedral’s Canterbury pulpit to an ever-shifting congregation of visitors, tourists, and dignitaries, exhibit the finest homiletics of a denomination not generally praised for great preaching. In an era that Lloyd recognized as one in which we are approaching religion in an “increasingly individualistic, more private and eclectic” manner, he sought to demonstrate “a new work of the Spirit,” responsive to our times. The sermons here are arranged thematically into three “Books”: “Reflections on Faith,” “Events and Issues” (including his sermon for President Obama’s first inauguration), and “Church Year.”A mirror of important times in the history of the Episcopal Church and the nation, these sermons will be of interest to most Episcopalians and most seminaries. With a foreword by Jon Meacham.
Library Journal
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As someone who is both a full time pastor and preacher as well as writer I know full well how hard it is, seemingly impossible at times, to offer a word of hope, encouragement, and inspiration on a weekly basis. There are times when I feel high and dry yet I need to muster up a word about The Word to my congregation. Reading these sermons was an act of lectio divina for me, or slow divine or meditative reading. . . .If you are a pastor and in need of some inspiration or a serious Christian who likes to read and reflect upon Scripture then look no further than Sermons From the National Cathedral. You won't be disappointed.
Walking with God
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Lloyd's style is marked by clarity of exposition, tight writing, only enough quotations to suddenly arouse interest, and topicality without the subjects becoming quickly out of date. These are well-crafted works that deserve repeated reading in whole or in part, as can serve a mediations for daily prayer. ... In rereading the sermons it is possible to savor Lloyd's considerable skills as an expository writer.
Anglican and Episcopal History
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This collection of Samuel T. Lloyd III’s sermons from the National Cathedral provide a clear voice of a “generous-spirited Christianity” (immediate and accessible) which is deeply needed in this new century. He sees the heart of the gospel as the gift and call to be fully human and he preaches not only with grace, but with a canny sense of the struggles of the age. His is a stealth radicalism of compassion, which comes in under the radar, often catching the reader unawares with its clarity and challenge, with its bite and risk.
These sermons are the product of a literary and generous imagination combining intellectual rigor with simple charity in assuring his readers of the abiding goodness at the heart of things. It’s as if he’s saying over and over again, “Don’t lose heart!” Good news in a time when the heart seems to have been knocked out of things. And what is at the heart of these sermons? A sense of the sacred, and affirmation of the holy, an affirmation of hope in a time when many fear, with the poet Philip Larkin, that, in the end, there is “no sight, no sound,?/No touch or taste or smell, /nothing to think with,?/Nothing to love or link with.” Lloyd preaches Good news.Alan W. Jones, Dean Emeritus, Grace Cathedral, San Francisco; author of Soul Making
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Even though they were delivered from the lofty pulpit at the National Cathedral, these sermons land squarely at our feet precisely where the "rubber meets the road." They are biblically based, intellectually exciting and spiritually alive and send us on our way with new vision and hope.
Tim Johnson, M.D., Senior Medical Contributor, ABC News; author of Finding God in the Questions
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In this compelling and delightful book, Samuel T. Lloyd III has given the world an extraordinary gift. Lloyd is probably the finest preacher in the Episcopal Church; and in this book, we are provided with a faithful, generous, thoughtful account of the Christian drama. Be prepared to cry, think, and laugh. Lloyd is not simply a careful reader of Scripture, but he connects Scripture with a wider canon of literature and art. You don't simply read this book, you study it and allow it to make a real difference to way you look at the world.
The Very Rev. Dr. Ian Markham, dean and president of Virginia Theological Seminary