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This book contains 51 sermons on High Days and Holy Days in the Christian calendar. Though arising from the author's own religious experience, many of the themes are universal and speak to people of all religious faiths and none and to all cultures. It is hoped they will appeal to the many people who are housebound and unable to attend their place of worship. It is hoped too that it will be welcomed by the tens of thousands of people who faithfully and doggedly sit, often on hard pews, listening to sermons every week. They are to be counted among the blessed. Students, ordinands and some Faith Leaders may also enjoy this collection.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book contains 51 sermons on High Days and Holy Days in the Christian calendar. Though arising from the author's own religious experience, many of the themes are universal and speak to people of all religious faiths and none and to all cultures. It is hoped they will appeal to the many people who are housebound and unable to attend their place of worship. It is hoped too that it will be welcomed by the tens of thousands of people who faithfully and doggedly sit, often on hard pews, listening to sermons every week. They are to be counted among the blessed. Students, ordinands and some Faith Leaders may also enjoy this collection.
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Autorenporträt
Arthur Hawes is an Archdeacon Emeritus of Lincoln and a Canon Emeritus of Lincoln Cathedral. He was educated at the City of Oxford High School for Boys, Chichester Theological College, the University of Birmingham, and the University of East Anglia. Mental health has always featured in his ministry and it began in 1971 when he was founder chairman of the North Worcestershire Association for Mental Health, following postgraduate work at Birmingham University. From 2003 onwards he has been a member of the National Spirituality and Mental Health Forum. He was appointed a visiting Fellow of Staffordshire University 2009-2013 and was one of the two vice chairs of the British Association for the Study of Spirituality. He has published many occasional papers and contributed to a number of publications on Theology, Spirituality and Mental Health. In 2016, he was awarded the Langton Award for Service to the Community by the Archbishop of Canterbury.