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Covering the Cover: The Welcome Table
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Restoring a Creek
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What I Stand For Is What I Stand On
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Feasting in Kurdistan
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The Birthday Party at the End of the World
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From Farm to Feast
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Readers Respond: Issue 20
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Family and Friends: Issue 20
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Streams in the Desert
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The Boy and the Bull
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This Is My Body
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The Greatest Thing Since Sliced Bread
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The Ground of Hospitality
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Beating the Big Dry
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Cows and Elephants
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At the Welcome Table I
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At the Welcome Table II
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Love Is Work
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How Shall We Farm?
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Why Yemen Starves
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Digging Deeper: Issue 20
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Cloth and Cup
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Level
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Editors’ Picks Issue 20
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The Necessity of Reverence
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A Book to End All Walls
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Edna Lewis
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The Dead Breed Beauty
Sieger köder (1925–2015) was a German soldier in World War II who was captured while fighting on the front lines in France. Upon his release, he first trained as a silversmith, then enrolled in Stuttgart’s State Academy of Art and Design.
Köder painted and taught art for twelve years before beginning a new course of study in Tübingen: Catholic theology. Ordained as a priest in 1971, he pastored until his retirement in 1995, but he never stopped painting.
Drawing from both vocations, Köder’s art flourished during his years of ministry. His altarpieces, paintings, frescoes, and stained glass windows can be found throughout Germany and beyond. His interpretations of the crucifixion, of innocent suffering, have a clarity born of his own history of war and captivity. Some have called him a “preacher with pictures.”
But as his work gained worldwide recognition, he refused to take credit himself. In one interview, he said, “People come to Ellwangen asking to see the painter. If they’re that interested in the painter, then they haven’t understood the paintings.”
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Kathy Jo West
I so love this print by Sieger Koder!! "The Meal". Do you know where I could purchase a print? I want to look at it each day. Thank you so much.