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Telling the Truth

Hardback

|

01 February 1975

|

Preaching/Sermons

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Chapter One?Telling the Truth?In January 31, 1872, Henry Ward Beecher traveled to Yale to deliver the first of the Beecher Lectures on preaching, which had been established in memory of his father. His biographer writes: ?He had a bad night, not feeling well. Went to his hotel, got his dinner,...

Chapter One?Telling the Truth?In January 31, 1872, Henry Ward Beecher traveled to Yale to deliver the first of the Beecher Lectures on preaching, which had been established in memory of his father. His biographer writes: ?He had a bad night, not feeling well. Went to his hotel, got his dinner, lay down to take a nap. About two o'clock he got up and began to shave without having been able to get at any plan of the lecture to be delivered within the hour. Just as he had his face lathered and was beginning to strop his razor, the whole thing came out of the clouds and dawned on him. He dropped his razor, seized his pencil, and dashed off the memoranda for it and afterwards cut himself badly, he said, thinking it out.?And well the old pulpiteer might have cut himself with his razor because part of the inner world that his lecture came from, among the clouds that it suddenly. dawned on him out of, was the deep trouble that he was in or the deep trouble that was in him. The gossip a

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Chapter One?Telling the Truth?In January 31, 1872, Henry Ward Beecher traveled to Yale to deliver the first of the Beecher Lectures on preaching, which had been established in memory of his father. His biographer writes: ?He had a bad night, not feeling well. Went to his hotel, got his dinner,...

Chapter One?Telling the Truth?In January 31, 1872, Henry Ward Beecher traveled to Yale to deliver the first of the Beecher Lectures on preaching, which had been established in memory of his father. His biographer writes: ?He had a bad night, not feeling well. Went to his hotel, got his dinner, lay down to take a nap. About two o'clock he got up and began to shave without having been able to get at any plan of the lecture to be delivered within the hour. Just as he had his face lathered and was beginning to strop his razor, the whole thing came out of the clouds and dawned on him. He dropped his razor, seized his pencil, and dashed off the memoranda for it and afterwards cut himself badly, he said, thinking it out.?And well the old pulpiteer might have cut himself with his razor because part of the inner world that his lecture came from, among the clouds that it suddenly. dawned on him out of, was the deep trouble that he was in or the deep trouble that was in him. The gossip a
Telling the Truth $30.99
Koorong code 93017
ISBN 9780060611569
Pages 112
Publisher Harperone
Publication date 01 February 1975
Dimensions 13 x 140 x 217mm
Weight 0.246kg
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  • A
    Anonymous
    I recommend this product
    Rated 4 out of 5 stars
    13 years ago
    A wonderful read

    This compelling, yet relatively short book is broken into 4 parts that each beg to be savoured. Buechner brings to life the message of Christ, showing how it relates to tragedy - that in life and in us that is sadly inevitable, to comedy - that which is almost hilariously unforeseeable, and fairy tale - that which is, somehow, too good not to be true. This book by a favourite author of mine uses ongoing word pictures, and references to Shakespeare among others to create a vividly engaging work that I'm sure I'll revisit many time.