The
Dean's Hour
Sundays, 9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Join Dean Tony Clark, Cathedral Clergy and visiting speakers
in the Great Hall every Sunday for Cathedral information and
adult Christian formation.
Women's Bible Study
Sundays, 9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Cathedral
women of all ages meet every Sunday
at in the Chapter
Room to read and study the
bible together.
Contact Theresa Anstett at
whuttaday@yahoo.com
for
more information.
Parent's Bible Study
Sundays, 9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
On Sunday mornings, a Parent's Bible study is being offered in the EYC room. The format is intended to be relaxed and informal. Conversation concerning the readings is meant to revolve around the different perspectives each person has when he/she reads it, how it ties in with our previous knowledge of the Word, and tying it in to how it impacts our everyday lives. All participants and perspectives are welcomed and valued.
|
Fall and Spring Classes
Wednesdays, 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
During the Fall and Spring, classes are offered presenting various aspects of Christian life, history,
growing stronger in your walk with Christ, and topics which relate to specific seasons of the church year.
Contact Fay Chandler at fchandler@stlukescathedral.org
for
more information regarding future offeriings.
|
An excerpt from:
the Cathedral Speaker Series

The Rev. Dr. Leslie Fairfield
taught at the Dean's Hour
and the morning services |
Anglican Christianity and Modernism:
A Clash of Religions
Excerpt -
Classic Anglican Christianity believes in a God who exists as
a community of three Persons, who are nevertheless one God.
We believe that these Persons exist beyond the universe, "other" than time and space. And we believe that God created the universe out of nothing. We trust that the Triune God loves the universe and intervenes constantly both to preserve it, and
to heal it from the toxic evil that has mysteriously infected it.
For Modernism, the word "god" refers to an impersonal force that is completely within the universe. There is no dimension of this "force" that is "beyond" or other than the cosmos. This "force" neither speaks nor acts. But we know it exists, because we encounter it from time to time in the depths of our psyches.
The 19th century German theologians called these experiences "god-consciousness." Modernists attribute these episodes to
an undefined "spirit," disconnected from any "Father" or "Son."
Click here for the entire text |