Showing posts with label sharon watkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sharon watkins. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Obamas Attend Prayer Service at National Cathedral Video

Read about the program at the National Cathedral here. It was the first time a woman, Sharon Watkins, was chosen to lead the service.

AP raw video:

I'll post more video when it's available.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

National Prayer Service Washington Cathedral Jan. 21

Photo by Kwaku Alston part of the display and Manifest Hope DC art show

The National Prayer Service will focus on themes of tolerance, unity and understanding. It's intended to be an inclusive worship for all Americans. From PIC:
The National Prayer Service will include a traditional prayer for civil leaders, a prayer for the nation, a selection by the Washington, D.C.-based Children of the Gospel Children’s Choir, and, for the first time, feature a sermon delivered by a woman.

Reverend Samuel T. Lloyd III, Dean of the Washington National Cathedral, will welcome attendees to the event, followed by the invocation of Reverend John Bryon Chane, Episcopal Bishop of Washington.

Reverend Otis Moss Jr., Senior Pastor Emeritus, Olivet Institutional Baptist Church in Cleveland, Ohio will provide the opening prayer, followed by a prayer for civil leaders delivered by Reverend Andy Stanley, Senior Pastor, North Point Community Church, Alpharetta, Georgia.

Scripture readings will be provided by Dr. Cynthia Hale, Senior Pastor, Ray of Hope Christian Church, Atlanta, Georgia as well as Archbishop Demetrios, Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in America, New York City, and the Most Reverend Francisco Gonzalez, S.F., Auxiliary Bishop of Washington. Rabbi David Saperstein, Executive Director, Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, Washington, D.C., has been asked to deliver a psalm.

Responsive prayers given by six leaders will symbolize America’s traditions of religious tolerance and freedom:

—Dr. Ingrid Mattson, President, Islamic Society of North America, Hartford, CT
—Rev. Suzan Johnson-Cook, Senior Pastor, Bronx Christian Fellowship, New York City
—Rabbi Jerome Epstein, Director, United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, New York City
—Rev. Carol Wade of the Washington National Cathedral
—Dr. Uma Mysorekar, President, Hindu Temple Society of North America, New York City
—Rev. Jim Wallis, President, Sojourners, Washington, D.C.
—Rabbi Haskal Lookstein, Congregation Kehilath Jeshurunm, New York City
—Pastor Kirbyjon Caldwell, Senior Pastor, Windsor Village United Methodist Church, Houston, TX

The service will conclude with a prayer for the nation delivered by Donald W. Wuerl, Archbishop of Washington, D.C., followed by a closing prayer provided by Bishop Katherine Jefferts-Schori, Presiding Bishop, Episcopal Church USA and a benediction by the Reverend Wesley Granberg-Michaelson, General Secretary of the Reformed Church in America

The Presidential Inaugural Committee previously announced that Sharon E. Watkins, General Minister and President, Disciples of Christ (Christian Church) will deliver the sermon. PIC

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Obama Team Picks First Woman to Deliver National Prayer Service Sermon

The sermon will be 10 to 15 minutes and won't be picked over by the Obama team, according to the story. The sermon will happen Jan. 21 at the Washington National Cathedral.
Denver Post: President-elect Barack Obama has selected the Rev. Sharon E. Watkins to deliver the sermon at the national prayer service that is held the day after the inauguration.
Watkins, the first woman ever selected to lead the service, is the president and general minister of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), a small, liberal-leaning Protestant denomination with 3,754 congregations and about 690,000 members in the United States and Canada. When Watkins was elected to the post in 2005, she was the first woman ever chosen to lead a mainline Protestant denomination.
But Watkins is not well known nationally. She came to the attention of Obama at a meeting he held during the campaign last summer to introduce himself to a politically and theologically diverse group of ministers. At that closed-door meeting, some of the conservative ministers bluntly questioned Obama on certain issues, while others were more in tune with his views. Watkins was asked to give the closing prayer.
Watkins wasn't chosen to neutralize Rick Warren:
Linda Douglass, the chief spokeswoman for the inaugural committee, said the choice of Watkins was not an attempt to mollify critics of Obama's decision to have the Rev. Rick Warren give the invocation at the inauguration. The choice of Warren, a prominent evangelical pastor from California who opposes same-sex marriage, caused an uproar among some of Obama's supporters.
"She was chosen before the inaugural program was even announced," Douglass said of Watkins. "Her appeal is that she delivers a message of unity and inclusivity and tolerance and hope — and those are all central themes we've heard from the president-elect." Watkins has spoken out against torture and the war in Iraq, but as church president she has not taken a position on same-sex marriage. Like many mainline Protestant churches, the Disciples are not unified on the issue. As a congregational church, each church in the denomination is free to set its own policies.
Also happening at the Cathedral:
On January 19, Washington National Cathedral and young people throughout the area will honor the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. while considering the future of the country under the leadership of President-elect Barack Obama.
Local poet, performer and educator Bomani Armah will lead the multi-sensory, musical and energized celebration along with young people as they create their own messages to the new president.
The young and talented violinist Daniel Davis will perform. His performances at Obama presidential rallies are favorites on YouTube.
All youth in attendance can create their own letters to President-elect Obama.
In this, the forty-first anniversary of Dr. King’s untimely death, the public is welcome to join the festivities at the site of King’s last Sunday sermon.
The 2-4 pm event is free and open to the public.
Here is Daniel Davis performing at an Obama rally:

For more inauguration events and information, visit here.