Fleming Rutledge is an Episcopal priest, a best-selling author, and a widely recognized preacher whose published sermon collections have received acclaim across denominational lines. Her other books include Help My Unbelief, Three Hours: Sermons for Good Friday, Advent: The Once and Future Coming of Jesus Christ, and The Crucifixion: Understanding the Death of Jesus Christ, which won Christianity Today's 2017 Book of the Year Award.
Will D. Campbell
"How quaint! A preacher so revolutionary as to be heard by many as
reactionary. But those who have ears to hear . . . " Annie
Dillard
"This is beautiful, powerful, literary writing. Fleming Rutledge
writes as a person who knows she is dying, speaking to other dying
people, determined not to enrage by triviality." The Bible
Today
"Noted evangelical preacher Fleming Rutledge collects here a number
of her sermons that have a thoughtful and strong spirit. She takes
seriously the biblical message and delves deeply into the text, all
the while relating the biblical message to contemporary experience.
Preachers may find here some good inspiration for their own work,
while most readers will appreciate these sermons as solid spiritual
reading." The Christian Century
"When sermons are lifted from the pulpit . . . and put into a book,
they can easily lose their impact. Fleming Rutledge's sermons do
not. They carry into print the fervor and reverence that inform her
spoken words. Read thoughtfully, they possess what Eugene Peterson
calls a 'subversive' quality: they get into one's heart and mind
and change one from within. What is most distinctive about these
sermons is their preoccupation with the holiness of God. . . With
disarming matter-of-factness, Rutledge preaches as if nothing could
be more crucial than our coming to grips with the reality that 'God
is holy, and we are not.' The sermons are also distinguished by
their bright clarity. . . Well phrased and carefully written, they
make for engaging reading. With a wonderful combination of humility
and irony, Rutledge presents the sermon as a meeting place for the
holiness of Almighty God and the varied hopes and fears of
humanity. . . Preaching as eloquent, incisive and passionate as
hers cultivates and builds hope that, in the words of Handel's
Messiah, 'the kingdoms of this world have become the kingdom of
God, and of his Christ." The Covenant Companion
"Carefully crafted, theologically sound, and literate. . . The
sermons read very well as, in effect, a collection of essays. They
show that preaching is alive and well in the Episcopal Church."
Episcopal Life
"Well-written, easy to read and wise."
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