Roundup: Movies That Change How We See the World
With awards season underway, we鈥檙e looking back at the past year in film and reflecting on the ways that movies affect how we view ourselves and the world around us.
With awards season underway, we鈥檙e looking back at the past year in film and reflecting on the ways that movies affect how we view ourselves and the world around us.
Watch a panel discussion about resilience and justice following Nikkita Oliver鈥檚 vital talk at Humanity Through Community.
Watch Nikkita Oliver’s vibrant and powerful call for us to re-consider how we talk about resilience and justice.
天美视频 is committed to raising up truth-tellers and agents of change in a world that so desperately needs both.
天美视频 of Theology & Psychology has received a grant of $1 million from Lilly Endowment Inc. to help establish the new Resilience for Sustainable Leadership program.
天美视频 of Theology & Psychology welcomes Dr. Craig Detweiler as its new president, effective January 1. Dr. Detweiler is 天美视频鈥檚 third president and succeeds Dr. Keith Anderson, who served for 12 years before retiring in October.
The Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities will conduct a site visit on the campus of 天美视频 of Theology & Psychology, April 16-18, 2018.
In this interview with Judith Butler, her work is considered in light of the recent events at Standing Rock and the 2016 presidential election. Housed within 天美视频 of Theology & Psychology, The Other Journal is a bi-annual print and digital journal that aims to create space for Christian interdisciplinary reflection, exploration, and expression at the intersection of theology and culture. This article was originally published on The Other Journal.
How is lamenting alongside people with different cultural backgrounds than our own transformative? What are the consequences of avoiding lament in our culture and in our churches? How might communal lament draw us toward a truer understanding of the kingdom of God? In episode 11 of text.soul.culture, Dr. Soong-Chan Rah joins Dr. J. Derek McNeil to discuss these questions and more. Dr. Rah is the Milton B. Engebretson Professor of Church Growth and Evangelism at North Park Theological Seminary and the author of several books. His life work has revolved around theology, lament, and racial reconciliation.
In this issue of The Other Journal, we will explore the valences of identity, both individual and communal, personal and public. We will take up the theme of identity in multiple ways, examining its interconnections with sexuality, pluralism and authenticity, the dissolution and reconstitution of borders, racial divisions, and, yes, even the 2016 presidential campaign.
On November 6, we hosted our 5th annual Stanley Grenz Lecture Series. This year, we were grateful to have as our featured speaker, Reverend Dr. Soong-Chan Rah, a professor, pastor and dynamic author whose life work has revolved around theology, lament, and racial reconciliation. Here, we share the video of the lecture.
Here, several contributors to The Other Journal continue their conversation from Part 1 around the ways in which theology can help us better understand and shape our environmental responsibilities and concerns. This conversation was hosted and curated by Tom Ryan, Master of Divinity ’07 and Executive Editor at The Other Journal.