Wounded I Sing: From Advent to Christmas with George Herbert
Talk Christmas-
Venue
Library
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Time
6:30 PM
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Price
£5.00 plus booking fee
- Book Tickets
The Very Reverend Dr Mark Oakley and Bishop RIchard Harries discuss the poems and George Herbert's significance for us today
Celebrating the publication of his new book that introduces some of George Herbert's poems, Bishop Richard Harries and the Dean, Mark Oakley, discuss the poems and Herbert's significance for us today.
Copies of Wounded I Sing will be available to purchase on the evening.
This event will take place in the Cathedral library and is in-person only and won't be streamed or recorded and doors to the library will open at 6.15pm.
Richard Harries is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and an Honorary Professor of Theology at King's College, London. On his retirement as Bishop of Oxford (1987-2006) he was made a life peer (Lord Harries of Pentregarth). He is the author of many critically acclaimed books, including Hearing God in Poetry (SPCK, 2021), Seeing God in Art (SPCK, 2022) and his moving autobiography The Shaping of a Soul: a life taken by surprise (John Hunt 2023). Art and the Beauty of God (Continuum, 1993) was selected as book of the year by Anthony Burgess in The Observer. A much loved voice on BBC's Today programme, he has contributed to 'Thought for the Day' for more than 50 years.
The Very Reverend Dr Mark Oakley was ordained at St Paul’s Cathedral in 1993 and served his curacy at St John’s Wood Church. He was later appointed Chaplain to the Bishop of London and after four years was made Rector of the Actors’ church in Covent Garden. He has subsequently served as an archdeacon in the Diocese in Europe, Chancellor of St Paul’s Cathedral and Dean of St John’s College, Cambridge. Mark holds a PhD in English Literature and is an admired author of several books on poetry and spirituality. He is well known as a speaker and preacher and has been awarded both the Michael Ramsey Prize for theological writing and the Lanfranc award, by the Archbishop of Canterbury, for education and scholarship. Mark has a strong commitment to human rights and has served on the board of Liberty and the Civil Liberties Trust, as well as being awarded one of the first ‘Upstander’ awards for his work with hate crime victims. King’s College London awarded him a Fellowship in recognition of his work and ministry., and the University of Chester conferred him with an honorary doctorate of Education. Mark was installed as the Dean of Southwark in early December 2023.