POPULARITY
Pope Pius IX instituted today's Feast of Christ the King, or the Reign of Christ, in a 1925 encyclical, a papal letter sent to the bishops of the Roman Church. The feast and its timing was incorporated broadly in Christian churches -- including ours -- through ecumenical and liturgical movements a few decades later. Even if we dismiss the notion of king as an outmoded overlord, we have taken that identity in Christ in baptism, and by virtue of that, must wrestle with that identity and the sacred principles that gave rise to today. In today's gospel, on the one hand, Pilate is trying Jesus: what have you done? And on the other hand, Jesus is recapitulating the trying question of the gospels: who do you say that I am? The Rev. Canon Anna E. Rossi, Canon Precentor and Director of Interfaith Engagement The Reign of Christ, Year B: 2 Samuel 23:1-7 Psalm 132:1-13, (14-19) Revelation 1:4b-8 John 18:33-37
The Bell by Iris Murdoch is the choice for this month's Church Times Book Club. On the podcast this week, the Revd Jeremy Davies, retired Canon Precentor of Salisbury Cathedral, who has a long and abiding interest in the works of Iris Murdoch, discusses the book with Francis Martin, who has written about the book in this week's Church Times. Published in 1958, The Bell is hailed as a great work of philosophical and psychological fiction. The story centres on a group of characters, all with complex problems, who seek refuge in a lay religious community in rural Gloucestershire. Their community sits alongside a medieval abbey inhabited by Benedictine nuns. As the two neighbouring communities await the arrival of a new replacement bell for the medieval bell tower, the story takes an unexpected turn when the missing bell is found and retrieved from the lake near by. The Bell is published by Vintage Classics at £10.99 (Church Times Bookshop £9.89); 978-0-09-947048-9. https://chbookshop.hymnsam.co.uk/books/9780099470489/bell?vc=CT804 The Church Times Book Club is run in association with the Festival of Faith and Literature. https://faithandliterature.hymnsam.co.uk Sign up to receive the free Book Club email once a month. Featuring discussion questions, podcasts and discounts on each book: churchtimes.co.uk/newsletter-signup Discuss this month's book at facebook.com/groups/churchtimesbookclub Try 10 issues of the Church Times for £10 or get two months access to our website and apps, also for £10. Go to www.churchtimes.co.uk/new-reader
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Mary Grahame Hunter is joined by Jeremy David Tarrant, Canon Precentor and Organist at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul - Detroit, for episode two of Sing Joyfully. Our discussion closes with a recording of the Cathedral Choirs singing Psalm 68.
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Mary Grahame Hunter is joined by Jeremy David Tarrant, Canon Precentor and Organist at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul - Detroit, for episode three of Sing Joyfully, continuing the series of psalms and psalm singing. The episode closes with a recording of the Cathedral Choir singing Psalm 32 in plainchant.
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Sing Joyfully Mary Grahame Hunter is joined by Jeremy David Tarrant, Canon Precentor and Organist at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul - Detroit, for a discussion on the Psalms and sacred music in the church. Our discussion closes with a recording of the Cathedral Choirs singing Psalm 23.
TRINITY CATHEDRALEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Low Sunday service with Canon Precentor of Wakefield Cathedral and family. Join us on Sunday at 9am for our national virtual service, led by a family from Wakefield, West Yorks, from their living room. The Rev Canon Leah Vasey-Saunders, the Canon Precentor of Wakefield Cathedral, West Yorkshire, will be assisted by her husband the Rev Dr Mark Vasey-Saunders, Academic Tutor at St Hild College, and their children Miriam, 9, Elias, 12, Jude, 14 and Reuben, 16.
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
February 26, 2020 Trinity Cathedral
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZhttp://www.lectionarypage.net/YearABC_RCL/HolyDays/Present_RCL.html
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZFirst Sunday after ChristmasIsaiah 61:10-62:3Galatians 3:23-25; 4:4-7John 1:1-18Psalm 147 or 147:13-21
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Sermons and podcasts from the Wellington Cathedral of St Paul
Eucharist - Sunday 29 September 2019 (installation of Katie Lawrence as Canon Precentor) by Wellington Cathedral of St Paul
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
The Revd Canon Chris Burke looks back on his time in Sheffield in his final sermon as Canon Precentor at Sheffield Cathedral.
Trinity CathedralEpiscopal Diocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal CathedralDiocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal CathedralDiocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal CathedralDiocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal CathedralDiocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal CathedralDiocese of ArizonaPhoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal Cathedral Diocese of Arizona Phoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal Cathedral Diocese of Arizona Phoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal Cathedral Diocese of Arizona Phoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal Cathedral Diocese of Arizona Phoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal Cathedral Diocese of Arizona Phoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal Cathedral Diocese of Arizona Phoenix, AZ
Trinity Episcopal Cathedral Diocese of Arizona Phoenix, AZ
Welcome to Secrets of Organ Playing Podcast #54! Secrets of Organ Playing - Helping Reach Your Dreams with Vidas Pinkevicius, DMA: http://www.organduo.lt Today's guest is Jeremy David Tarrant, an internationally acclaimed concert organist and church musician from Detroit, Michigan. In performances that are consistently hailed as elegant, communicative, and powerfully artistic, Mr. Tarrant is increasingly recognized as one of the finest organists of his generation. Since 2000, Jeremy has served as Organist and Choirmaster of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Detroit where, in addition to playing for liturgies and concerts, he conducts the famed Cathedral Choirs. Prior to this appointment he served as the Cathedral's Assistant Organist joining the staff in 1994. In April of 2007, he was seated as Canon Precentor of the Cathedral in thanksgiving and recognition of his role in the liturgical and musical life of the Cathedral community. He is the founding director of the Cathedral Choir School of Metropolitan Detroit. A student of the American organist and pedagogue Robert Glasgow, Jeremy David Tarrant is a graduate of the University of Michigan School of Music where he earned the Bachelor and Master of Music degrees in organ performance and sacred music. His other instructors include Betty R. Pursley, Corliss Arnold, and James Kibbie. He has had additional coaching with Lynne Davis. The recipient of numerous awards and honors, he was awarded First Prize in the Ottumwa National Organ Competition in 1997 and Second Prize in the Arthur Poister National Competition in 1998. Mr. Tarrant has also been a finalist in the American Guild of Organists Regional Competitions. Mr. Tarrant is in frequent demand as a teacher and clinician, and regularly serves on the faculties of the Royal School of Church Music summer courses as well as the American Guild of Organists summer Pipe Organ Encounters. An active concert organist, Jeremy has performed widely in North America in such venues as the Washington National Cathedral; St. Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue; St. James Cathedral, Toronto; St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York; and Chicago's famed Fourth Presbyterian Church. He frequently appears with the Detroit Chamber Winds and Strings and has performed in regional conventions of the American Guild of Organists. In 2008, Mr. Tarrant made his European solo debut with a recital in the Cathedrale de St. Etienne in Meaux, France, and in 2011 he played the closing recital of International Organ Week in Dijon, France. In 2012, he was a featured artist in the Pine Mountain Music Festival, presenting three solo recitals in Michigan's upper peninsula. In July, 2014 Jeremy conducted the Cathedral Choir during their tour of England where they were in residency at Chichester Cathedral. This tour also included concerts and services in Canterbury and Southwark Cathedrals. In this conversation, we talk about his experience with organ registration, adapting to large instruments, working with choirs, the importance of playing the piano and working on ear training for organists. Enjoy and share your comments below. And don't forget to help spread the word about the SOP Podcast by sharing it with your organist friends. Thanks for caring. Related links: Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Detroit, Michigan: http://www.detroitcathedral.org YouTube channel of Jeremy David Tarrant: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVUcu7DroG0fn645FUqSp8Q Detroit Cathedral Music Page on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/detroitcathedralmusic/
Confession is big business. As family relationships are laid bare for daytime TV audiences and mock courtrooms try real cases for entertainment, calls for repentance echo everywhere. Those who hold power; religious, political, legal and cultural; are held to account by a free media and unregulated internet. In these contexts, what can the Church say about the Christian requirement for mercy as a public value? Is the quest for purity as damaging as it is noble? Do our public conversations confuse sincerity with truth? And is there any such thing as innocence? Speaker: The Reverend Lucy Winkett, Rector, St James's Piccadilly Lucy Winkett was ordained in 1995, having worked previously as a professional soprano. With degrees from Cambridge and Birmingham Universities, she served her title in Manor Park, Newham before moving to St Paul's Cathedral where she later became Canon Precentor, the first woman priest to be appointed there. She became Rector of St James's Church Piccadilly in 2010. She is a long-standing contributor to Radio 4's Thought for the Day, was a founding advisor for the public theology think tank "Theos" and is one of the co-founders of "Leading Women", a national development programme for women clergy. Read a transcript (https://www.westminster-abbey.org/eric-symes-abbott-memorial-lectures/30th-eric-symes-abbott-memorial-lecture) of this lecture on Westminster Abbey's website.
Michael Berkeley talks to the Reverend Lucy Winkett, the Rector of St James’s Church, Piccadilly, and formerly Canon Precentor of St Paul’s Cathedral, about her lifelong passion for music. A classically trained soprano, she won a choral scholarship to Cambridge and subsequently studied at the Royal College of Music but gave up a career as a singer for the priesthood. The first woman to sing the Eucharist at St Paul’s Cathedral, she tells Michael about the opposition she faced from traditionalist members of the church, how she faced up to it, and the joy of being in charge of music at the Cathedral. Lucy chooses music she’s sung, music that inspires her, and some - rather surprising - music that helps her prepare for Easter Day. Her choices include Gibbons, Messiaen, Rachmaninov, Bach, and a wonderful piece of early jazz from ‘Sister’ Winona Carr. Producer: Jane Greenwood A Loftus Production for BBC Radio 3
02/04/2014. Sermon by Rev. Gina Campell, Canon Precentor, National Cathedral. Service of word and table. Scripture reading: Matthew 5:13-20.