Sarah’s talk is a celebration of the glory in the mundane. That is the theme of the two wondrous Gwen Harwood poems that Sarah takes us through. But this leads naturally onto a view of the incarnation—the ultimate revealing of glory in the mundane. And Gwen Harwood pursued this glory in the mundane as a woman and mother—which leads her (and Sarah) to advocate a distinctly feminine view of incarnation and Christ. A view that Sarah brilliantly touches on in Luke’s gospel where the gentle domestic view of the women—and the mothers—seems a deliberate counterpoint to the chest-beating imperialism of the male disciples. This gorgeous talk is a work of art and will reward repeated listening.
This is the first talk in our Great Poets on the Mystery of Faith series.
The Gospel according to Exodus
BwJ 25 -What is glory?
What is Creation? with Iain Provan
Was Dawkins right about the angry God? with Ian Provan
Ezekiel's wider vision of the temple - Breakfast with Jesus
How Moses disrupted the Ancient Near Eastern World - with Iain Provan
Paul and the introspective conscience
The Glory bookends of Ezekiel
Cross and Creation 8 - Is penal substitution trying to answer the wrong question?
Cross and Creation 7 - Which model fits best?
Breakfast with Jesus - #21 - Circle of Glory
GC Conference - Session 5 - An Incarnational Cosmos
GC Conference - Session 4 - A Divine Anthropology
GC Conference - Session 3 - A Cosmic Anthropology
GC Conference - Session 2 - The Religious View of Sinners
GC Conference - Session 1 - Is the Mind a Machine?
PLC - Pamela Nutt Address - David Bentley Hart
The Cross and Creation - Part 6 - Metaphors
Indigenous spirituality and the gospel; surprising connections. With David Bentley Hart.
David Bentley Hart on Suffering
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Hello Heaven Podcast
Devoted To Prayer
Cast The Word
Let Me Be Frank | Bishop Frank Caggiano’s Podcast | Diocese of Bridgeport, CT
The Exorcist Files
The Ancient Tradition