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Lectionary and Liturgy

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n/aBaptism’s True Claim: In Memory of Jeanie Wylie Kellermann$0.00$0.00
n/aTransfiguration and Disfiguration: Remembering August 6-9 and Ladon Sheats$0.00$0.00
n/aEaster Faith and Empire: Recovering the Prophetic Tradition on the Emmaus Road$0.00$0.00
n/aThe All Saints Triduum: Remembering as a Household Practice$0.99$0.99
n/aTo the Other Side: Biblical Sea Stories and Baptism.$0.99$0.99
n/aLas Posadas: Hospitality to Those Displaced by the Push and Pull of Empire$1.50$1.50
n/aFreedom Bound: A Tale of Two Meals (Passover and Eucharist)$1.50$1.50
n/aAdvent and Christmas: Reflections on the Sunday Readings, Year B$1.50$1.50
n/aPentecost, Part I: Cultural Insurgency and Gospel Liberation: Reflections on Jazz, Pentecostal Faith, and the Church$2.50$2.50
n/aSame-Sex Marriage: Two Reflections$2.50$2.50
n/aLed by the Spirit into the Wilderness: Reflections on Lent, Jesus’ Temptations & Indigeneity$2.50$2.50
n/aChristmas and Consumerism: Four Biblical Reflections and Practical Responses$2.50$2.50

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Radical is a term as unfashionable today as it was trendy in the 1960s, but its etymology (for the Latin radix, "root") is the best reason not to concede it to nostalgia. As Gore Vidal said in 1992, "If you want to get to the root of anything you must be radical. It is no accident that the word has been totally demonized by our masters, and no one in politics dares even to use the word favorably, much less track any problem to its root." I am concerned both with exposing the roots of our socio-political and historical pathologies in the First World and recovering the roots of our discipleship tradition...

--from Who Will Roll Away the Stone?, 1994

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