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The Great Crowd is a social history of All Saints Episcopal Church of Omaha, Nebraska. Founded in 1885, precisely at the moment when Omaha was experiencing a spurt of rapid grown, the parish has continued to succeed as a religious community deeply enmeshed in the life of the city. It was from the beginning a distinctly urban parish and, as change came for the city, underwent its changes, including a major relocation of its facility. It also found itself navigating the changes in national culture and in the character of the larger Episcopal Church. Curiously, very different rectorseight in all,…mehr
The Great Crowd is a social history of All Saints Episcopal Church of Omaha, Nebraska. Founded in 1885, precisely at the moment when Omaha was experiencing a spurt of rapid grown, the parish has continued to succeed as a religious community deeply enmeshed in the life of the city. It was from the beginning a distinctly urban parish and, as change came for the city, underwent its changes, including a major relocation of its facility. It also found itself navigating the changes in national culture and in the character of the larger Episcopal Church. Curiously, very different rectorseight in all, with different configurations of lay leadership drawn from across the cityresponded to these successive waves of change, and yet, they held on the conviction that they had maintained the unique identity of the parish that they had inherited from those who had gone before them. They did so in no small part by telling their story. Drawing from the parish archives, including its vestry minutes, correspondence, and publications the author, himself one of the eight rectors, has taken up a critical retelling the story bring up to 9/11, 2001. These pages contain a strange tapestry of names and faces, from Omahas cowboy mayor to its storied lawyers and devout bus drivers who melded themselves in that strange unity called a parish. In the authors telling, the story becomes a critical tool for understanding how a Christian community works and for providing a basis for a critical assessment of the purpose and meaning of religious community in American life.
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Autorenporträt
Michael J. Tan Creti was born in 1940 and was raised in western Iowa. He is a graduate of Dartmouth College, '62, and of Berkeley Divinity School at Yale, '67. He was ordained in the Episcopal Diocese of Iowa. He served five years in small congregations at Clear Lake and Grinnell; after which, he returned to graduate studies at Aquinas Institute, St. Louis. Completing his course work at the Institute in 1977, he took on the position of assistant to the Rector of All Saints. He continued as assistant until he was called as Rector of All Saints in 1993. He retired in 2006, and in time, was asked by the parish to write its history. He has previously published a book of poetry: "To Make Myself a Word," 2010, and looks forward to returning to writing poetry. He presently is living in Omaha with his wife of forty-three years, Jane. Jane is a professional iconographer, working within the traditions of the Prosopon School of Iconology and has been a constant support to his ministry.
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