48 min

Ep40. The Stations of the Cross, Katherine Sonderegger and Margaret Adams Parker Love Rinse Repeat

    • Christianity

“The Stations speak to us in the political, social, and economic conflicts and dilemmas that descend on us all. And to a culture, to individuals, and, sadly, even to a church that scrupulously turn away from the reality of death, the Stations speak an important word about that final frontier.” I sat down with Mary Adams Parker and Katherine Sonderegger to talk about their book, Praying the Stations of the Cross: Finding Hope in a Weary Land (Eerdmans, 2019). We talk about their own approaches to the Stations as visual artist and preacher respectively, what we learn about the contact of the body of Jesus with the body of others across the Stations, what the Stations reveal about Mary, the power of the Stations in times such as these, finding ways to hold the together the suffering and glory of Christ, preparing art for ecclesial settings, why preaching should be invitation rather than exhortation, and why we should attend to beauty, to the sublime, when writing theology or creating artworks to the glory of God and guidance of a Christian community. Margaret Adams Parker is a professional artist and theological educator, deeply committed to the visual arts as a means of biblical interpretation and an aid to prayer. Her works can be found in her earlier collaboration with Ellen Davis, Who Are You, My Daughter? Reading Ruth Through Image and Text and on her website: http://www.margaretadamsparker.com/ Katherine Sonderegger is the William Meade Professor of Theology at Virginia Theological Seminary, the first volume of her Systematic Theology, The Doctrine of God was released in 2015, and volume 2 The Doctrine of the Holy Trinity: Processions and Persons will be released in 2020. Buy the book: https://www.eerdmans.com/Products/7664/praying-the-stations-of-the-cross.aspx Music by FyzexFollow the Show: @RinseRepeatPod Follow Me: @liammiller87 Find more: loverinserepeat.com/podcast

“The Stations speak to us in the political, social, and economic conflicts and dilemmas that descend on us all. And to a culture, to individuals, and, sadly, even to a church that scrupulously turn away from the reality of death, the Stations speak an important word about that final frontier.” I sat down with Mary Adams Parker and Katherine Sonderegger to talk about their book, Praying the Stations of the Cross: Finding Hope in a Weary Land (Eerdmans, 2019). We talk about their own approaches to the Stations as visual artist and preacher respectively, what we learn about the contact of the body of Jesus with the body of others across the Stations, what the Stations reveal about Mary, the power of the Stations in times such as these, finding ways to hold the together the suffering and glory of Christ, preparing art for ecclesial settings, why preaching should be invitation rather than exhortation, and why we should attend to beauty, to the sublime, when writing theology or creating artworks to the glory of God and guidance of a Christian community. Margaret Adams Parker is a professional artist and theological educator, deeply committed to the visual arts as a means of biblical interpretation and an aid to prayer. Her works can be found in her earlier collaboration with Ellen Davis, Who Are You, My Daughter? Reading Ruth Through Image and Text and on her website: http://www.margaretadamsparker.com/ Katherine Sonderegger is the William Meade Professor of Theology at Virginia Theological Seminary, the first volume of her Systematic Theology, The Doctrine of God was released in 2015, and volume 2 The Doctrine of the Holy Trinity: Processions and Persons will be released in 2020. Buy the book: https://www.eerdmans.com/Products/7664/praying-the-stations-of-the-cross.aspx Music by FyzexFollow the Show: @RinseRepeatPod Follow Me: @liammiller87 Find more: loverinserepeat.com/podcast

48 min