William H. Willimon - "A Great Distance between Us" (September 27, 1998)
-
Download
- Rights
- Files (2)
- MP3 Part 1
- MP3 Part 2
- Please be patient with media downloads. They are often large files.
-
Share
Embed CodePermalink
- Skip to Item Info
Loading the media player...
Item Info
- Title:
- William H. Willimon - "A Great Distance between Us" (September 27, 1998)
- Description:
-
Sermon start time: (Part 1) 0:15. Sermon end time: (Part 1) 20:10.
The preacher addresses the great economic inequality existing in the society. He exhorts his audience that just like the distance between the rich and the poor is great in the human economic world, the gap between them after they die is huge, too, but in a reversed order. The preacher offers a Christian perspective on wealth. (Abstract created by Duke Divinity School staff.)
- Permalink:
- https://idn.duke.edu/ark:/87924/r4057d660
- Date:
- September 27, 1998
- Speaker:
- Willimon, William H.
- Liturgical Calendar:
- Ordinary Time
- Biblical Book:
- Luke
- Chapter and Verse:
- Luke 16:19-31
- Subject:
- Contributor:
- Duke University. Chapel
- Identifier:
-
- UA.17.01.0003 CS-0925
- ref9999_xit
- uachapelsermaud
- duke:320746
- dcrau001569
- ark:/87924/r4057d660
- 36647a5c-08fb-48b5-9e31-6422d0726ae4
- Digital Collection:
- Duke Chapel Recordings
- Source Collection:
- Duke University Chapel recordings, 1954-2005
- Related Resources:
- See below
- Language:
- English
- Location:
-
- United States
- North Carolina
- Durham (N.C.)
- Format:
- Provenance:
- The Duke University Chapel Recordings were transferred to the Duke University Archives beginning in 1970.
- Rights:
- Limited Re-UseCC BY-NC 4.0
- Rights Note:
- This recording may contain 3rd party materials, such as music or readings that are therefore not covered by the Creative Commons license indicated here. For more information see https://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/research/citations-and-permissions.
- Sponsor:
- Sponsor this Digital Collection
The preservation of the Duke University Libraries Digital Collections and the Duke Digital Repository programs are supported in part by the Lowell and Eileen Aptman Digital Preservation Fund