Watch & Listen

The Fourth Sunday of Easter

April 21, 2024

The Cathedral’s Sunday 10:30 am Holy Eucharist service is offered in person and over livestream for all to take part, from home or here in our sacred space. This service will begin on April 21 at 10:30am.

Channels

  • The American Poets Corner: Induction of Audre Lorde

    The American Poets Corner: Induction of Audre Lorde

    April 12, 2021
    Audre Lorde is the 2020 inductee to the American Poets Corner at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine. In Poets Corner tradition, a memorial stone carved with Lorde’s dates and a quotation from her poem “A Litany for Survival” has been laid in the Cathedral, placing Lorde amongst her fellow American literary giants. The Cathedral celebrated the life and works of Audre Lorde, poet, essayist, feminist, educator and activist, with a virtual induction ceremony on Thursday, February 18. Readers and participants include members of Lorde’s family and fellow poets including Dante Micheaux, Rachel Eliza Griffiths, Martha Collins, Cathedral Poet in Residence Marie Howe, United States Poet Laureate Joy Harjo, and more. Lorde’s writings are both deeply personal and committed to a liberatory political vision. Her poems and essays openly discuss her lesbianism, Blackness, motherhood, cancer diagnoses, and many other facets of her life, exploding notions of both white male dominance and cultural homogeny within progressive social movements. These many layers of selfhood, expressed through lyrical writings both prose and poetic, celebrate difference, inviting readers to draw upon their own personal journeys to add to the shared fight for justice and community.
  • The Inferno of Dante Alighieri: A Digital Reading 2020

    The Inferno of Dante Alighieri: A Digital Reading 2020

    April 10, 2020
    The American Poets Corner at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine presents the annual Maundy Thursday reading of Dante's Inferno! Download the leaflet: http://stjohndivine.org/uploads/pages... Dante Alighieri wrote at a time of great political upheaval and widespread plague, and throughout the Inferno, the first section of the Divine Comedy, he strives to come closer to God by journeying through the depths of human pain and adversity, descending to the world of the dead on Maundy Thursday and finally achieving union with the Divine on Easter Sunday. The Cathedral’s newly appointed Poet in Residence, Marie Howe, will lead the reading, joined by poets and memoirists Eileen Myles and Nick Flynn; noted translator Michael Palma; new literary voices Zakiya Harris and Daniel Barnum; and many more. Dante scholar Anthony Viscusi will conclude the reading with the final canto of the Inferno, read in the original Italian.