Communion is one of the few universal practices in every Christian church, yet even communion can be divisive as followers of Christ wrestle with how to properly obey the Lord's command: "This do in remembrance of me." The Abiding Presence: Communion Meditations is an invitation to all believers to come together around the central meaning of communion on which all Christians can agree.
The Abiding Presence will challenge the way your church thinks about communion, and will ask the heart of every member of your congregation to open in expectation for the Holy Spirit to arrive not merely in memory, but in the here and now.
"William Tuck, who has long proven himself a pastor to pastors in our era, now gives us this extremely thoughtful and informative little book about communion, the ageless center of all Christian worship. His brief but poignant meditations on the Sacred Table will doubtless find their way into many preachers' sermons, thus touching the lives of countless thousands of grateful worshipers." - John Killinger, former professor of Vanderbilt Divinity School, pastor and author
"The grace of Holy Communion has been taken for granted too long. Bill Tuck's book, The Abiding Presence: Communion Meditations, is a welcome word to those of us who view Communion as much more than merely "eating" and "drinking" together. Reading and reflecting on this volume provides one with the stuff for understanding that Communion is much more than going to church and eating my little cracker. It is an Abiding Presence that shouldn't be taken for granted." - Jimmy Gentry, Senior Pastor, Garden Lakes Baptist Church, Rome, GA
Meditations Include:
William Powell Tuck, a native of Virginia, has served as a pastor in Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, and Louisiana, and as a seminary professor, adjunct college professor, and as an intentional interim pastor. He is the author of over 30 books, including Star Thrower: A Pastor's Handbook, The Forgotten Beatitude: Worshipping through Stewardship, 200 articles, and he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from the University of Richmond. In 1997 he received the "Pastor of the Year" award from the Academy of Parish Clergy. He received the 2016 Wayne Oates Award from the Oates Institute in Louisville, Kentucky. He and his wife, Emily Campbell, are the parents of 2 children and 5 grandchildren and live in Midlothian, Virginia.
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