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Past Events at Hartford Seminary

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SPRING 2009 EVENTS

Stephen L. Carter, nationally known scholar and author presents:

THE MICHAEL R. RION LECTURE
Christianity and the Problem of War

Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2009

From the earliest days of the church, the Christian faith has had to come to terms with the problem of war -- when to fight, when to stand aside, what methods to use. As citizens of the nation with the world's most powerful military, we must be able to present in a reasoned, thoughtful way the teachings of the tradition on the justice and injustice of war.

Stephen L. Carter is the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Yale University, where he has taught since 1982. He has helped shape the national debate on issues ranging from the role of religion in our politics and culture to the role of integrity and civility in our daily lives. The New York Times has referred to Professor Carter as one of the nation's leading public intellectuals, and, in 1994, he was selected by Time magazine as one of fifty leaders for the new millennium. Professor Carter's writings have won praise from across the political spectrum.

Among his courses are law and religion, the ethics of war, contracts, intellectual property, and professional responsibility. Among his nonfiction books are God's Name in Vain: The Wrongs and Rights of Religion in Politics; Civility: Manners, Morals, and the Etiquette of Democracy; and The Dissent of the Governed: A Meditation on Law, Religion, and Loyalty. He is currently writing a treatise on the ethics of war, and a monograph on what democracy requires. Professor Carter also writes fiction. His first novel, The Emperor of Ocean Park, spent eleven weeks on the New York TImes best-seller list. His novel Jericho's Fall will be published in 2009. Professor Carter was formerly a law clerk for Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, as well as for Judge Spottswood W. Robinson, III, of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.  He is a graduate of Stanford University and Yale Law School and has received eight honorary degrees.

Professor Carter is delivering the biennial Rion Lecture. The lecture, named in honor of Michael Rion, a former Seminary president, honors an individual who embodies a dedication to ministry in daily life and is committed to service to others.

God’s Word in Greek: Reading the Gospel of Matthew
With the Rev. Edward F. Duffy

Once a month on Tuesdays from January to June

“God's Word in Greek” is an annual continuing education workshop. This workshop will conduct monthly translation sessions of selected texts from the New Testament, this term continuing the reading of “The Gospel of Matthew.” Participants will be encouraged to fine tune their New Testament Greek reading skills as well as explore the readings in light of their faith understanding. Reading the Greek text together with other colleagues will enhance understanding of New Testament issues. Participants should have basic proficiency in New Testament Greek; at least a one-year course in basic Greek should suffice.

The Rev. Edward F. Duffy is adjunct professor of New Testament Greek at Hartford Seminary. He is minister of the First Presbyterian Church of Fairfield, CT. From 1994 to 2004, he was minister of the First Congregational Church in Litchfield. He received his B.A. from Princeton, an M.A. in musicology from Columbia, and the Master of Divinity degree from Princeton Theological Seminary. He completed his Ph.D. in 2000 from the Graduate Theological Foundation. His dissertation was a translation and commentary on Didymus the Blind's Job commentary.

A Drumming Circle
With Jan Gregory

Twice a month on Mondays from March to April

Those who are interested in participating in African hand drumming should enroll in this facilitated drumming circle.

African djembe drums, along with other African hand percussion, will be used. When you register, please indicate whether you will bring your own drum or will need to borrow one.

Drummers will build upon basic skills and learn more complex rhythm sets including rhythms from Belize. Each rhythm set will have easy and more difficult parts to fit all levels of skill.

The instructor/facilitator will be Jan Gregory, owner of the Renaissance Center: A Conservatory of Music in Southbury, and Director of Music Ministry, Congregational Church of Easton, UCC.

Learning from the Megachurch Phenomenon
with Scott Thumma

Monday - Tuesday, June 8 and 9, 2009

Imagine a congregation where 10,000 people gather each week for worship, where church budgets are 15 million dollars a year and where thousands of people volunteer for programs weekly. Welcome to the world of megachurches. Scott Thumma, co-author of "Beyond Megachurch Myths: What We Can Learn from America's Largest Churches," is offering a graduate level course in megachurches from June 8 through June 12, 2009.

Within this five-day course, he will offer a self-contained two-day continuing education program.

The first day provides an overview of the megachurch phenomenon: The number and location of megachurches across the United States, common characteristics, and how they function.
The second day will focus on his latest research on who attends these congregations and the quality and depth of their spiritual lives.
Both days will include extensive small group reflection and discussion on the application of practical strategies derived from these successful churches.

This program will be valuable to religious and lay leaders as they envision new ideas to enhance the vitality of their own faith communities no matter what the size.

Scott Thumma is Professor of Sociology of Religion at Hartford Seminary's Hartford Institute for Religion Research and Director of Distance Education. He specializes in research on Megachurches and will have copies of his book available for purchase.

 

Paul, the one whom Christians call "apostle"
With Dr. Yahya Michot, Dr. Mahmoud Ayoub, Dr. Davide Tacchini and Dr. Kelton Cobb - moderated by Dean Efrain Agosto

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

For years there has been debate regarding Paul's influence within and upon Christianity.

What role did Paul play in the development of Christianity as we know it?

Hartford Seminary will host a dialogue among Seminary faculty - between Dr. Yahya Michot and Dr. Mahmoud Ayoub on one side and Dr. Davide Tacchini and Dr. Kelton Cobb on the other. The evening will examine Paul’s Christology and provide an Islamic perspective on Paul.

Dean Efrain Agosto will moderate the event.

The event is free of charge and open to students and the public.

Dr. Michot is Professor of Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations. Dr. Ayoub is Faculty Associate in Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations. Dr. Tacchini is Visiting Professor in Islamic Studies. Dr. Cobb is Professor of Theology and Ethics.

The New Atheism: Denying God and History
With The Rev. Dr. Borden Painter

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Three recent best sellers make the case for atheism: Sam Harris, The End of Faith, Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason; Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion; and Christopher Hitchens, God is not Great, How Religion Poisons Everything. Each book uses historical evidence to support the conclusion that the only rational and moral choice for us is atheism. The lecture will focus on these historical arguments and make the case that in their zeal for atheism the authors have distorted or ignored the historical record.

The Rev. Dr. Borden Painter is Professor of History, Emeritus, at Trinity College where he taught European history (1964-2004), served as Dean of the Faculty (1984-87) and twice was Interim President (1994-95, 2003-04). He earned his B. A. at Trinity, his M. Div. from General Theological Seminary, and his Ph. D. at Yale University. He is a priest in the Episcopal Church.

The Mystery of Paul
With Wayne A. Meeks, Ph.D.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

In this jubilee year celebrating the contribution of the Apostle Paul to Christianity, it is well to be reminded that for many Christians through the ages, even in Paul’s own time, that contribution has been puzzling and even, for some, both Christians and non-Christians, offensive. In an essay written some thirty years ago, Wayne Meeks called Paul “the Christian Proteus,” evoking Homer’s description of the strange demigod who defied capture by changing at will into any shape at all: lion, serpent, leopard, water, tree. Inspired in part by that metaphor, the Israeli-French filmmaker Abraham Ségal has produced an extraordinary account of “The Mystery of Paul,” inviting us to confront the multiple forms that Paul’s interpreters have imagined and still debate, and the consequences, both grand and horrible, that those interpretations have had in the history of western culture. Ségal pays special attention to the key role played by interpretations of Paul in the long history of conflict between Christians and Jews. He comments, “As the purpose of my previous Film ‘The Abraham File’ was to permit a dialogue between the children of Abraham with a perspective of peace and reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians, the purpose of ‘The Mystery of Paul’ is to facilitate dialog on essential issues between Jews and Christians.” In this program, we will show the film, followed by a commentary by Dr. Meeks.

Wayne A. Meeks is Woolsey Professor of Biblical Studies Emeritus in the Department of Religious Studies, Yale University, where he taught from 1969 until 1999. He was Chairman of the Department 1972-75 and Director of the Division of the Humanities of the University 1988-91. Earlier, he taught at Indiana University and Dartmouth College. He has served as president of the two leading professional societies in his field, the Society of Biblical Literature (1985) and Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas (2004–5). He holds an honorary doctorate from the University of Uppsala and is a fellow of the British Academy and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is best known for his publications on the writings of the apostle Paul and on the Fourth Gospel, for his investigation of the social history of earliest Christianity, and for work on the formation of early Christian morality.

Book Signing and Reception
Threefold Blessings

With Janet Bristow and Victoria Cole-Galo

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Co-Sponsor: The Women’s Leadership Institute at Hartford Seminary

Hartford Seminary will honor Janet Bristow and Victoria Cole-Galo with its Distinguished Alumna Award at an evening reception. Janet and Vicky are authors of the recently published Prayer Shawl Companion.

The Prayer Shawl Companion is a collection of stories, patterns, and prayers by shawl makers from across the country and around the world. Although there are 38 beautiful shawls for all occasions, it is more than a pattern book and can be enjoyed by knitters and non-knitters alike. As the prayer shawl ministry grew out of Janet & Vicky's time at the first Women's Leadership Institute, it is fitting that this book honors the ministry's origins.

The evening will include remarks by Janet and Vicky, and several shawls will be on display. Copies of their book may be purchased at the Seminary bookstore in advance (860-509-9527) or the evening of the celebration. You also may order the book through the Seminary online bookstore, www.hartfordseminarybookstore.org. Janet and Vicky will sign copies during the evening.

Janet Bristow and Victoria Cole-Galo, graduates of the first class of the Women's Leadership Institute at the Seminary, are co-founders of the Prayer Shawl Ministry and the accompanying website, www.shawlministry.com. Janet, a Special Education Tutor, lives in Farmington. She attends St. Patrick & St. Anthony Church in Hartford, is a member of the Women of Hope Committee, and coordinates the Prayer Shawl Ministry there. Vicky lives in Berlin with her husband and two sons. She works as an Administrative Assistant and is the webmistress for the Prayer Shawl Ministry website.

A Day of Respect: Welcoming People with Disabilities
With William C. Gaventa

Monday, March 16, 2009

Co-Sponsor: The Connecticut Council on Developmental Disabilities

Supporting Sponsors: the Office of Protection and Advocacy and the University Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities at the University of Connecticut Health Center

Faith communities can change the way people with disabilities, and their families, are perceived and received in society. This workshop will reawaken faith communities to welcoming and including people with disabilities and their families. In a society where people with disabilities and their families, the elderly, and other devalued populations are more and more being treated and spoken badly of and where this mistreatment is growing and becoming more tolerated the sense of belonging is crucial. Faith communities that offer the gift of belonging can play a major role in safeguarding the lives of devalued people in a materialistic society. This conference is for faith communities who want to learn more about including persons with disabilities in faith communities. The conference will include opportunities for faith communities to share stories about their experiences with including people with disabilities, explore resources for adapting curriculum; and addressing theological issues in pastoral roles and as religious educators.

William Gaventa serves as Director of Community and Congregational Supports at the Elizabeth M. Boggs Center on Developmental Disabilities, and Associate Professor, Pediatrics, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. The Boggs Center is located in New Brunswick, New Jersey and is part of the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.

As writer and author, he is Editor of the Journal of Religion Disability, and Health, editor of the newsletter for the Religion and Spirituality Division of AAIDD, Adviser for the Spiritual and Religious Supports Series-Exceptional Parent Magazine, and columnist for Insight, the national newsletter of the ArcUSA. His writings include journal articles, book chapters, monographs, resource collections, booklets, and four edited books.

Justice and the Shari’a in Contemporary Society: Conflict or Co-existence?
With Yahya Michot

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Many, in the West, would consider applying Islamic Law (Shari’a) in today’s world as a regression to medieval times. But what is in fact the Shari’a? A legal code based exclusively on ancient scriptural sources? A way of life, societal as well as personal, through which Muslim communities still pursue their ideal of justice? Such questions deserve to be revisited and help one to understand how, for example, a Turkish scholar could, in the 17th century, seek to curb the Ottoman sultan’s despotism by a strict implementation of Shari’a Law. Many more recent initiatives of similar nature also could be mentioned.

Yahya Michot is Professor of Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations at Hartford Seminary. He is editor of the Muslim World journal and director of the Seminary’s International Ph.D. program. Previously, Michot was Islamic Centre Lecturer in the Faculty of Theology at Oxford University in Great Britain and a fellow of the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies. He joined Oxford after serving as director of research and lecturer at the Institut Supérieur de Philosophie at Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium. Since 2000, Michot has participated in more than 40 international conferences. Recently he spoke on “Islam and modernity” at a course on strategic issues for senior Defense officers of the United Kingdom and participated in the 5th Doha Conference on Interreligious Dialogue in Doha, Qatar.

Preaching and Teaching About Homosexuality in the Christian Churches Today
A workshop with The Rev. Dr. Frank Kirkpatrick

Thursday, February 26, 2009

This workshop will explore how the issue of homosexuality can be handled creatively, faithfully and with sensitivity to differing views by congregational leaders and pastors. We will look at the Biblical arguments for and against homosexuality and what modern Biblical scholarship is saying. We will also explore how the historic teachings of the Christian churches are being used today within the polities of various church traditions; how moral theology or religious ethics treats the issue, and how findings from modern science are being used to illuminate the debate. The understanding of the various authorities for belief and practice in the Christian community will be examined as they apply to this topic The particular case of the Episcopal Church in the United States and its relationship to the Anglican Communion will be used as a case study for our exploration and discussion based on the book The Episcopal Church in Crisis: How Sex, the Bible, and Authority Are Dividing the Faithful.

Frank Kirkpatrick is Ellsworth Morton Tracy Lecturer and Professor of Religion at Trinity College in Hartford. A graduate of the college (majoring in Religion), Kirkpatrick has a Master’s Degree in Comparative Religion from Columbia University and Union Theological Seminary and a Ph.D. in Religious Studies from Brown University. He specializes in three areas: the philosophy of religion, Christian social ethics, and the history of Christian thought in the West. Kirkpatrick is the author of the recently published “The Episcopal Church in Crisis: How Sex, the Bible, and Authority Are Dividing the Faithful.”

Book Signing and Reception
Fundamentalism, Feminism and the American Girl

With Susan Campbell

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Co-Sponsor: The Women’s Leadership Institute at Hartford Seminary

By the age of twelve, Hartford Courant columnist Susan Campbell had been flirting with Jesus for some time, and in her mind, Jesus had been flirting back. So, one Sunday morning, she walked to the front of her fundamentalist Christian church to profess her love for Jesus and to be baptized. But from the moment her robe floated to the surface of the baptistery water, she began to question her fundamentalist Christian faith. In a new memoir, "Dating Jesus: A Story of Fundamentalism, Feminism and the American Girl," Campbell examines the place of women, both in her faith tradition and in society today. In this program, Campbell, a graduate of Hartford Seminary with a Master's in Ministry in Daily Life, will reflect on her journey from fundamentalism to feminism.

Susan Campbell is an award-winning columnist at the Hartford Courant. Her work has been recognized by the National Women's Political Caucus, New England Associated Press News Executives, the Society for Professional Journalists, the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors, the National Society of Newspaper Columnists, and the Sunday Magazine Editors Association. Her column about the shootings at Connecticut lottery headquarters in March 1998 was part of The Courant's Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage. The mother of two adult sons, she has a bachelor’s degree from the University of Maryland, and a master’s degree from Hartford Seminary.

 

Reflections, Book Signing, and Reception
Paradoxology: Spirituality in a Quantum Universe

With Miriam Therese Winter

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Co-Sponsor: The Women’s Leadership Institute at Hartford Seminary

When Miriam Therese Winter came to the final chapter of her latest manuscript, she realized she had been wrestling with far more than a book. Here was the trajectory of her heart's journey. The world of the Spirit in which she had been so deeply rooted had morphed into a chaotic and unpredictable quantum reality, and she was immersed in it. Yet she was strangely comforted, for the quantum spirit of the living God remained the thread of continuity in this world of flux. Miriam Therese will share some of her insights regarding that quantum Spirit and a new paradigm, which she calls paradoxology.

Miriam Therese Winter, a Medical Mission Sister, is professor of liturgy, worship, and spirituality and director of the Women’s Leadership Institute at Hartford Seminary. She has published a number of books and recorded more than 200 of her original songs.

 

 

 

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