Seven Last Words: Cross and Creation

Seven Last Words: Cross and Creation

Seven Last Words: Cross and Creation

Seven Last Words: Cross and Creation

eBook

$15.49  $20.00 Save 23% Current price is $15.49, Original price is $20. You Save 23%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

The cross is regarded as Jesus Christ's great work of salvation. But is it also a work of creation? Excitingly plumbing Scripture and Christian tradition, Andrew McGowan shows that it is. "Each of Jesus's seven words from the cross can be understood as a creative act, as a new divine work," he writes. From the cross, Jesus works forgiveness, bestows Paradise, enacts human relationship, identifies completely with humanity, fulfills Scripture, and reenacts Sabbath. From early days, Christians--for good reason--linked the original seven days of creation with creation and re-creation at the apex of salvation. Seven Last Words recovers this linkage in all its power and perennial freshness. But that is not all. In addition to surveying the seven last words Jesus spoke, McGowan insists that at the cross "the eternal Word not only speaks, but listens." And so he turns to the "conversations" spoken not only from but to the cross. Here he opens new vistas on the words of Judas, Dismas (the criminal crucified beside Jesus), Mary, God the Father, Longinus (the centurion), and Nicodemus, and ruminates fascinatingly on the accompanying silence of the angels. Profound and endlessly edifying, Seven Last Words will richly repay reading and rereading.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781725298279
Publisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers
Publication date: 03/25/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 94
Sales rank: 282,491
File size: 11 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Andrew McGowan is McFaddin Professor of Anglican Studies and Dean of the Berkeley Divinity School at Yale. His widely acclaimed books include Ascetic Eucharists and Ancient Christian Worship. He also serves as editor of the Journal of Anglican Studies.



Philadelphia artist and spiritual director Bettina Clowney (1946-2020) graduated from Temple University’s Tyler School of Art and studied with iconographer Vladislav Andreyev, and at the Shalem Institute for Spiritual Direction. Her work illustrating this book includes the iconic cross at the Church of the Holy Spirit in Harleysville, Pennsylvania.
Andrew McGowan was Warden and Joan Munro Professor of Theology at Trinity College, Melbourne, during the time these essays were written, serving also on the Doctrine Commission of the Anglican Church of Australia and as a Canon of St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne. Since 2014, he has been Dean of the Berkeley Divinity School at Yale and McFaddin Professor of Anglican Studies at Yale Divinity School. He is the author of books including Ascetic Eucharists (1999) and Ancient Christian Worship (2014); and is the editor of the Journal of Anglican Studies.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"In this inspiring book, Andrew McGowan not only offers reflections both powerful and poignant on the traditional seven last words of Jesus on the cross, but in a creative twist also considers the comments (or in one case, the silence) of seven other witnesses to this most dramatic of moments."
—Michael B. Curry, Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church and author of Love Is the Way: Holding on to Hope in Troubling Times

"In these reflections, Andrew McGowan draws on Scripture and tradition to explore the deep connections between the cross and creation. With characteristic creativity and insight, McGowan helps us to see that the seven last words of Christ find their most lucid expression in the promise of the new creation. We hear these words again—as though for the first time."
—William Lamb, vicar of University Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Oxford, England

"The late, great community theologian Kenneth Leech once said, 'The cross is not a problem to be understood but a mystery into which we enter,' and this is exactly what Andrew did when he preached on Good Friday in 2016. His linking of the creation story with the salvific work of Jesus as he died on the cross was truly memorable; it allowed us to enter into those seven words in a new and remarkable way."
—Carl F. Turner, rector, Saint Thomas Church Fifth Avenue, New York

"Helpless on the cross, Christ acts through his speech. Andrew McGowan takes the traditional structure of Good Friday meditations on Jesus' 'Seven Last Words,' and invests them with new and challenging insights. I first heard these words in the context of a pre-pandemic Good Friday liturgy; encountering them again as companions for a lockdown Holy Week has provided real nourishment in lean times."
—Judith Maltby, Corpus Christi College, Oxford

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews