MDiv Archives - 天美视频 of Theology & Psychology Thu, 11 Jul 2024 16:50:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Underrepresented Voices Art Gallery 2024: Liminality /blog/underrepresented-voices-2024/ Sat, 22 Jun 2024 14:30:12 +0000 /?p=18210 In spring 2024, the BIPOC, Access (students with neurodiversity, chronic pain, and/or disability), LGBTQIA+, and QT BIPOC student groups collaborated to create an on-campus art show with the theme of 鈥淟iminality.鈥澨 天美视频 students and alumni who identify as underrepresented within the context of 天美视频 and/or within their profession had the opportunity to […]

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two pieces of art created from fabric

In spring 2024, the BIPOC, Access (students with neurodiversity, chronic pain, and/or disability), LGBTQIA+, and QT BIPOC student groups collaborated to create an on-campus art show with the theme of 鈥淟iminality.鈥澨 天美视频 students and alumni who identify as underrepresented within the context of 天美视频 and/or within their profession had the opportunity to share their artistic and creative work together. The concept of the Underrepresented Voices art gallery began in 2023 when student groups co-sponsored the inaugural show.

Organizers described this year鈥檚 theme: 鈥鈥楲iminality鈥 could be as broad as anything you, as an underrepresented student, would like to express about yourself. Or, it could be as specific as invisibility, minoritized experiences, subjugated knowledge, or beauty in the margins, the sacred mystery in your culture or identity, etc.鈥 In addition to representing the BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, QT BIPOC, and Access student groups, the students who participated were also representative of the three degree programs: Master of Arts in Counseling Psychology (MACP), Master of Arts in Theology & Culture (MATC), and Master of Divinity (MDiv).听

As artist Roy Mong commented, the diversity expressed within the 鈥淟iminality鈥 show extended to the wide variety of media and art forms represented as well.听 Artists displayed works with acrylic paint, oil paint, oil pastels, gold leaf, watercolors, cardboard, wood, and various fabrics. Some of the pieces in the show had been created as final projects for the Winter 2024 course titled 鈥淣arrative, Identity & Asian American Experiences,鈥 taught by Dr. Jermaine Ma.

The 鈥淟iminality鈥 show launched during spring residency, and the artists had the opportunity on Friday afternoon to share their experiences and insights with their classmates, both related to making the pieces as well as sharing them publicly. Students discussed themes such as courage and vulnerability. Artists shared their anxieties about visible imperfections, and wrestling with the felt need to justify or explain their work. They also described how they challenged themselves and learned through the creative process from exploring cultural identities to understanding and practicing new techniques. For example, Sunghee Kim used watercolor painting to display Jo-kak-bo, a traditional Korean patchwork technique, and Ryan Ho shaped bass and walnut wood into Kumiko patterns, a Japanese art style from the 7th century. Roy Mong described how the use of different colors helped him to integrate and appreciate different aspects of himself and his experiences.

Inspiration was another theme. The 2023 gallery had encouraged this year鈥檚 artists: in seeing the work of others they were inspired to share their work as well, to continue inspiration and conversation for future generations of students. The 2024 show also continued the themes of collaboration and engagement: two artists invited interaction and responses through a QR code while other artists invited sensory engagement through touch. Students at the reception expressed their gratitude and wonder to the artists for the depth of expansion and interconnection with the works.

Another theme that emerged was how uniqueness and individuality were expressed within the diversity of the art and media on display in the gallery. 鈥淏y being significantly and uniquely you, you can encourage and uplift others. You are helping further the conversation,鈥 said Roy Mong. As in 2023, belonging emerged as a theme as well. Natalie Ng described feeling 鈥Not Chinese enough. Not white enough鈥ith liminality, I鈥檝e learned to somehow embrace it and be ok in the uncomfortable spots.鈥 Describing liminality, Mong shared, 鈥淭he edge is where you live.鈥 鈥淢aking the unseen seen is the whole point of the gallery,鈥 said Ng.

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Integrative Projects 2022 /blog/ip-2022/ Fri, 10 Jun 2022 20:17:09 +0000 /?p=16000 天美视频 of Theology & Psychology will host the 2022 Integrative Project Symposium on Thursday, June 23, when students from our MDiv and MATC programs will share the projects that serve as a capstone of their time in graduate school. With a compelling blend of research methodology and 天美视频鈥檚 unique lens, the […]

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天美视频 of Theology & Psychology will host the 2022 Integrative Project Symposium on Thursday, June 23, when students from our MDiv and MATC programs will share the projects that serve as a capstone of their time in graduate school. With a compelling blend of research methodology and 天美视频鈥檚 unique lens, the Integrative Projects are part of what makes our curriculum unique鈥攂orn out of years of study, countless conversations with peers and faculty, and each student鈥檚 distinctive embodiment of text, soul, and culture. In this annual symposium, 天美视频鈥檚 alumni, current students, faculty, staff, and the Seattle community at large are invited to witness and celebrate the bold, thoughtful, and creative work of our graduating theology students, work that can be glimpsed in the abstracts below. In the coming months, final drafts of each Integrative Project will be available in 天美视频鈥檚 library after the candidate鈥檚 graduation.

Lori Bailey, MATC 2022

Animating the Healing of the World: Engaging Christian Theories of Atonement, Redemption, and Restoration with an Aesthetic Theology of Japanese Anime

Abstract

This aesthetic theological exploration engages, most fundamentally, with questions at the core of mythologies dating back through history: how do we cope with the reality of chaos? How do we deal with the monsters, within and without? Then鈥攁s individuals and as members of the human community鈥攈ow do our narratives of sin and brokenness impact how we conceptualize divine power and authority, and how do these frameworks influence how we relate to one another and to our world?

Working from the concept of atonement theory in Christian theology, I interrogate the perspectives and assumptions that these frameworks cast on the human condition and upon the redemptive arc of humanity in relationship with the created world and with the divine. I then introduce, as a theological conversation partner, a visual narrative that explores atonement and redemption within the particular frame of Japanese popular culture known as anime. Comparing, questioning, and critiquing across cultural and religious contexts, this project ultimately relies upon aesthetics as the primary lens for metabolizing theologies of atonement and redemption in the pursuit of a creatively- informed theological construction that reflects a way of knowing and relating rooted in the “now” of being present to one’s particularity, as well as the “with” of existing in community.

Interacting with the theological, aesthetic, and ethical challenges in considering theories of atonement and redemption, this project draws upon a selection of characters and story arcs found within the Japanese anime Fullmetal Alchemist, a narrative piece that appropriately and stunningly poses its own questions and responses to the concepts of atonement and the redeeming of the world. Each portion utilizes story and character development to explore how particularity shapes how one internalizes鈥攁nd ultimately lives out鈥攖heological beliefs around guilt and shame, power and agency, and inclusion and exclusion that might otherwise suffer disconnection from personal and communal reality. Through the investigation of how a creative approach to theology challenges and reshapes our assumptions and internalized beliefs, this project celebrates the power of aesthetics and storytelling to hold the chaos and discomfort of open-ended questions, to invite others into a community willing to hold that chaos with and for one another, and to paint a vision of a world redeemed and restored by the strength of compassionate relationship.

Mark Deiter, MATC 2022

A Verbal Fantasia on Byzantine Chant

Abstract

Within the modern day American church, music has become a much debated, perhaps even dissonant, subject though in a broader view it appears as a series of extended variations encompassing a number of centuries. In the current century, Protestants have both contemporary and traditional services featuring distinctly different types of music, Catholics have seen many musical changes as a result of Vatican II, while the Orthodox ponder the differences between Byzantine chant and Kievan four part harmony. Beyond debates around style is a deeper question concerning the role of music in worship, which in turn invites questions about music itself. One of the most abstract of the arts, music weaves together a larger sense of place with the intimacy of personal memories. Within a few short measures, music can change the scenery playing in our imaginations. In studying the effects of music on the human brain, Scientists have found that particular musical elements tend to be processed more by the right or left hemispheres. Yet music seems less suited to a dissection of sorts via an academic lens and invites practice, a serious engagement between the depths of the performer and the depths of music. All of this is brought together to illuminate Byzantine chant, a style of music used widely within the Eastern Orthodox Church. Within the life of the Eastern Orthodox church, music cannot be reduced to particular characteristics or the way in which it interacts with the human brain. Instead, the mystery of music reveals both God and ourselves in greater fullness.

Mary Pauline Diaz-Frasene, MATC 2022

KALOOB: Articulations on Grief, Diaspora and Eucharist as Spaces for Power in Precarity

Abstract


Where do we find grounding in shifting sands? My three years at 天美视频 have coincided with pandemic, war and corruption, as well as a civil rights uprising, mutual aid organizing and other experiments in solidarity. Communities worldwide are reconciling our understandings of our worlds alongside individual and collective grief, not only built on generations of compounding trauma but also carried by generations of wisdom and resistance. In this essay project, I insist that grief, mourning and memorial do not inherently detract from thriving, in spite of the ways they’ve been exploited and avoided. Rather, they can be the very things that sustain our humanity and connection in a culture of fracture, commodification and precarity.

Drawing on cultural theory, Catholic theology, as well as personal narrative, I engage three seemingly disparate themes through three Tagalog phrases: kapwa (fellow) and politicization of grief; bayanihan (communal action) and identity formation in diaspora; and utang na loob (debt of gratitude) and the Sacrament of Eucharist. Stitching back and forth between English and Tagalog, intimate and collective narratives, mortality and Trinity, memory and hope, my project moves in paradox to explore how our spaces of loss can be reclaimed as openings for sacred collective power.

Tara Hubbard, MATC 2022

Restored Connection: Lessons in Belonging Course

Abstract


All persons long for and are made for connection. This desire and need for attachment is a process that begins at birth, and is reflected in the symbiotic nature of our Trinitarian theology. But far too often these needs go mismanaged or unmet and this leads to shame and protective self-defenses, that further hinder our ability to connect with other human beings and stifle our god-ordained need for attachment, intimacy, and community. This workshop addresses this prevalence of interpersonal disconnection in our culture. We are a people who find it hard to form deep and lasting connections. The epidemic of loneliness is big indicator of such. The decrease in people measuring securely attached is also evidence of less connection. Psychology tells us we don鈥檛 form a self without mirroring another. Neuroscience shows that our brain is made for interpersonal relationship. We suffer when we are not in connecting relationships and we carry these wounds in our body until healed, right through adulthood if it takes that long.

This project takes psychological observation, the theological model, and embodied learning and develops an approachable and accessible workshop, that allows human beings to build the practices that lead to connection with the other. It is designed to span a day and will ideally have 8-10 participants. Ultimately it names five essential elements critical to connection and, through the context of an interpersonal encounter, provides experiences of these elements. Relationship can only be felt, not learned from a book, and therefore it is important that these elements are 鈥榢nown鈥 to the body and the felt brain. There will be some discussion of each of the elements, followed by examples, activities and more discussion of the practice. We will also incorporate what we have learned into each subsequent element in order to provide continuous awareness and experience of connection. This is the main thrust of the workshop and will also include what not being connected to looks like in our current lives, and our guiding principles.

The hope is that participants will go away with the beginning and/or strengthening of brain pathways of felt connection. The goal is that the participants have felt connected to and that they are welcome, enjoyed and belong to a group. More than having knowledge, the hope is that they have felt enough connection to being to seek it out and/or pass it on by attuning, experiencing resonance, co-regulation, joy and vulnerability. We can only create and share connection when we know it ourselves.

Brian Schroeder, MATC 2022

Birthed from the Skull of a God, or, The Things We All Carry Around: An Exploration of the Reciprocal Ontology of the Powers to Humanity

Abstract


This integrative project proposes that humanity is the direct creative force that begets entities referred to in Christian tradition as 鈥減owers and principalities.鈥 Building on the foundation of Walter Wink鈥檚 seminal Powers trilogy, this paper will explore a reciprocal ontology that explains how humanity creates and sustains the Powers while these creatures support, define, and oppress humans. Wink鈥檚 framework for the Powers will be examined alongside the problematic history of Christianity鈥檚 interaction with the theology of these invisible forces. The psychological development of the self through relationships will be explored through object-relations and family systems theory. The Christian concept of humanity reflecting God鈥檚 nature in the imago Dei will also be put in conversation with Martin Buber鈥檚 philosophy of genuine meeting. Together, these insights will form the basis for this alternative ontology. Examples from popular culture reflecting these concepts will also be presented.

Christina Bergevin, MDiv 2022

Toward a Practicing Church: The Evolution of Sunday Morning

Abstract


This Integrative Project is an exploration of what it means to gather as a Practicing Church. Working with the leadership and congregation of Pathways Church, a local Independent Christian Church in Mill Creek WA, the project will experiment with alternative ways of framing and organizing its Sunday gatherings. The goal is to reimagine and redefine the intention, purpose, and structure of the Church鈥檚 in-person assembly towards new possibilities for spiritual formation inherent in the act of practicing together as a community of faith. Towards this end鈥揳nd aided by research in community building, human growth, and spiritual development鈥搕his project explores reconfiguring gathering spaces, implementing new language, decentralizing the sermon, and prioritizing interactive participation as a means of promoting human agency and relatedness. I claim that greater transformation is invited when church gatherings are centered on practicing together towards new possibilities which better equip people to follow the Way of Jesus in their everyday lives. Through this paper I will demonstrate that the Practicing Church offers new ways of being together which move beyond a commitment to church attendance and knowledge acquisition and towards the intent of participation and integration. The focus of practicing together resources congregants towards greater curiosity, belonging, resilience, hospitality, and growth.

Jonathan Washburn, MATC 2022

Spotlights and Shadows: Narcissism, Megachurch, and Me

Abstract

This project explores narcissism in relation to my experience in the American evangelical megachurch community. I argue that narcissism is inherently traumatic by causing disconnection from one鈥檚 authentic self and remains largely misunderstood and unaddressed by its contemporary community. In Mark 8:34 (NRSV), Jesus provides a new image of authenticity to embrace instead of the Imperial image of his time鈥 the cross. The cross, here, represents the consequence of rejecting one鈥檚 imperial identity and embracing one鈥檚 authentic self. Jesus subversively invites those who wish to follow him to do the same. I have attempted to follow Jesus in this way by embracing my desire and identity as an artist.


 

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Introducing Low-Residency Programs at 天美视频 /blog/low-residency-programs-the-seattle-school/ Wed, 09 Jun 2021 16:52:17 +0000 /?p=15316 We are pleased to announce that beginning in Fall 2021, 天美视频 of Theology & Psychology will offer each degree program in a low-residency model. The Master of Divinity and the Master of Arts in Theology & Culture programs will be taught only in a low-residency model. In addition to the low-residency model for […]

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We are pleased to announce that beginning in Fall 2021, 天美视频 of Theology & Psychology will offer each degree program in a low-residency model. The Master of Divinity and the Master of Arts in Theology & Culture programs will be taught only in a low-residency model. In addition to the low-residency model for the Master of Arts in Counseling Psychology, we will also continue to offer that program in our traditional on-campus model. Current students will transition to these programs this fall after a year of online learning due to the pandemic. New and incoming students are encouraged to connect with our Admissions team for more details about applying for Fall 2021.

Our mission and values have guided us as we have listened to the needs of our learning community and sought to discern the future of our graduate degree programs. We train people to be competent in the study of text, soul, and culture in order to serve God and neighbor through transforming relationships. While the pandemic has brought immeasurable changes, loss, and disruption, it has also taught us much about the needs of graduate students and the opportunities for new modalities that allow for contextual distance and residential learning that are more integrated with the lives and communities where our students live.

鈥淭he changes that we are making are not merely driven by crisis; instead, they are significant transitions that will change much of what we are familiar with, while inviting us to explore and co-create new ways of training people in an ever deepening understanding of what is needed to serve God and neighbor through the fields of theology and psychology,鈥 said Dr. J. Derek McNeil, President of 天美视频. 鈥淲e have always been a community composed of learners from a variety of contexts, cultures, and places. As we lean into what鈥檚 next, we seek to deepen and widen our understanding of who we are and learn to carry out our mission in partnership with learners as they are embedded in their own contexts.鈥

Low-residency programs are a model of higher education that involve periodic in-person intensive gatherings with online coursework in between those gatherings. Students can remain in their home location and travel to our Seattle-based residencies for on-campus gatherings a few times per year. Students in low-residency programs will continue to have access to our campus in Seattle to meet for study groups, use the library and study spaces, and meet with faculty for office hours and may choose to participate in student life online and on-campus.

鈥淚n the last 15 months, we learned much about how to deliver high-quality relational and contextual education to students online. We’re pleased to welcome a wider range of students into our learning communities, and we know how important it is to be together as a learning community in the same physical space to learn together in an embodied way. The low-residency model allows for the best of both,鈥 said Dr. Misty Anne Winzenried, Associate Dean of Teaching and Learning.

[UPDATE July 19, 2021] ATS (Association of Theological Schools), one of our accrediting agencies, has approved our petition to provide comprehensive distance education. Students should check the school’s COVID-19 response for updates on campus safety measures beginning with the fall term.

Current students are encouraged to connect with the Academics team for specific information and program requirements.

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Videos: Integrative Projects 2021 /blog/integrative-projects-2021/ Tue, 08 Jun 2021 17:51:43 +0000 /?p=15312 天美视频 community gathers annually along with friends and families of the graduating MDiv and MATC students for the Integrative Project Symposium. This year, in the midst of ongoing restrictions to public gatherings, students pre-recorded their presentations and will be participating in a virtual Integrative Project Symposium Q&A on June 11. The Integrative Project […]

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天美视频 community gathers annually along with friends and families of the graduating MDiv and MATC students for the Integrative Project Symposium. This year, in the midst of ongoing restrictions to public gatherings, students pre-recorded their presentations and will be participating in a virtual Integrative Project Symposium Q&A on June 11.

The Integrative Project serves as a capstone for students in our MDiv and MATC degree programs as they both look back on their training and discern what it will look like for them to serve God and neighbor in their post-graduate contexts. Students work with a faculty advisor to form a project that integrates the student鈥檚 passions and calling, drawing from the fullness of their experience at 天美视频 and a robust research methodology to create a major project or paper.

The 12 presentations below synthesize each project鈥檚 thesis along with the student鈥檚 experience in creating it, and are organized into three framing categories. In the coming months, final drafts of each Integrative Project will be available in 天美视频鈥檚 library after the candidate鈥檚 graduation.

Integrative Project Symposium Q&A


Crossing Boundaries, Coming Home

Hawaii Pupu Sampler: A Historical Account and Cookbook of Hawaii Local Dishes

Keone Villaplaza, MATC

Abstract

Food is more than nourishment to the body. Comfort foods are less about caloric and dietary intake but instead remind us of a home, a person, and a smell. Local Hawaii food represents the history of Hawaii and the culture of its people. My presentation of “Local” foods in Hawaii is an amalgamation of the three major immigrant groups in Hawaii: the Native Hawaiians, the American/Western, and the immigrants who came to work the plantations with local recipes in between.

As Chef Sheldon states, 鈥淗awaii food, or what we call local food, tells a story of where we came from.鈥 Food serves as the physical metaphor of our relationship to the land, religion, and different cultures. As the 50th state, Hawaii carries America鈥檚 influences but retains a culture that draws from the Native Hawaiians and Asian cultures. It is essential today as the 鈥渕ainland鈥 America seems to have amnesia toward the history of immigrants, slaves, and Native people today. Ronald Takaki and Jeff Chang’s local childhood experiences led to questions about Hawaii’s unique stance toward race and ethnicity. By including recipes, I give space for the voices of the Native Hawaiians, the working class, and (mostly) Asian immigrants in Hawaii鈥檚 food culture.

The historical section uses several books that involve Native Hawaiian鈥檚 religion and their self-sustaining food system, American capitalism and plantations, and immigrant鈥檚 nostalgia for foods of their homeland. The recipes come from three local cookbooks that also give a sample of influences while creating a distinct cuisine and culture. The final recipe of Hawaii鈥檚 local favorite, Spam Musubi, serves as a conversation of multiculturalism and my hope for mainland America.

Father, Son, and The Aloha Spirit: An Anticolonial Engagement with Decolonial Theologies

Millicent Haase, MDiv

Abstract

Eurocentric churches have attempted programs of racial reconciliation to varying degrees of success, most of which are left wanting. Our task as white Christians seeking appropriate antiracist and anticolonial ally-ship is to listen and to be changed by story. Rather than fit indigenous narratives into our own, for example, how can we be changed 鈥 seriously theologically and systemically changed? This project is an anticolonial project 鈥 one from within the dominating majority seeking to undermine power 鈥 that seeks to unsettle Eurocentric theologies. Decolonial theologians 鈥 theologians from the margins 鈥 are illuminating biblical motifs and theologies in nuanced ways, and these are the voices we need to guide us into a more complete and unfolding ethics of Jesus if we are to advance the broader postcolonial project of dismantling systems of white supremacy. By looking to Rev. Dr. Kaleo Patterson as one example of an indigenous decolonial theologian nuancing Eurocentric theologies, practitioners are invited to consider the ways the Hawaiian demigod Kukailimoku illuminates: 1. God鈥檚 desire to simply be with us; 2. The invitation to re-image the Cross; 3. The shortcomings of atonement theories and the invitation to something new. Drawing upon social anthropology, theology, biblical studies, and history, I excavate Patterson鈥檚 sermons, take us to the biblical motifs Patterson himself highlights, and then explore what indigenously nuanced theologies look like and what this means for anticolonial allies. While I am drawing heavily on the work of Rev. Dr. Patterson as one example of a decolonial indigenous theologian, I am not merely reporting his words and ideas. Rather, I am accepting Patterson鈥檚 invitation 鈥 among other decolonial theologians 鈥 to poke holes in Eurocentric theologies, and modeling ways by which our theological imaginations can play to expand in liberating ways.

Elders and Adolescents: Adolescence Reimagined

Michael Alfstad, MATC

Abstract

This project addresses the question, how can adolescence be reimagined today in the light of the recent, ground-breaking research done in the disciplines of psychology, theology, neuroscience, and biology? At the outset, the project focuses upon the commonly held and highly deleterious myth, in western society, about adolescence today. The myth is deconstructed as context and insights are brought to bear about the young and their behaviors while they are navigating their way through the years within adolescence.

Research will be cited that brings to light much that is new about these years, a crucial time when there is a new intellectual birth within the individual. This is a time of significant biological, psycho-social, neurological change; exploring how new constructive appreciations of this life phase can come from important new research-based knowledge and insights. An anecdote from my awkward teen years is shared. The story presents an experience where my grandfather and I had a moment of deep, life altering connection. In the light of all of the discussions, the story is tied to the current need for absent relationships in the life of the adolescent.

Moving past the myth, capturing the knowledge and understandings recently brought to light, a discussion will conclude the project where the opportunity to introduce beneficial social change might be made possible. Elders, prepared and intentional, can step forward to mentor and bring new experiences and new relationships into the lives of the adolescents.

Art, Fragmentation, and Transformation

Transfiguration of the Maternal Bond: Re-forming Divine Image through Embodied Visual Memoir

Ellie Bosworth, MATC

Abstract

New mothers must navigate idyllic images that distort an honest experience of mothering. Rather than a single story and static image, I hope to bring complexity to the ineffable shift that occurs through the birth of both mother and child. Mothers intrinsically hold stories within their bodies which have spiritual import. A mother cannot escape the reality of having a body. Her identity and body is literally torn asunder and transfigured. This deeply bodied shift informs a divine in-breaking, however fragmented, to a very human moment. Through the embodied mother-child bond, I hope to reveal its intimate relationship to the divine.

Using the experience of the embodied mother as a lens to re-form divine image, I insist that within the birthing body, the holy tension of distress and delight is held together. My experience with carrying, birthing, and feeding from my body tells me it has knowledge to give and connection to offer. At the very same time it has turned me inward, fragmenting the world I inhabit. Using visual memoir, I will use my own narrative of shifting within my body and identity 鈥 and simultaneously my daughter鈥檚 鈥 of a particular moment in our first year postpartum. I invited her to participate in co-creating in remembering and meaning making. Just as my body and hers are inseparable and yet individual, we explore together in mutual exchange; art becomes the expression of this unnamable experience through the touchable medium of paint and charcoal. By reframing divine image and sacralizing personal memoir I hope to provide a deeply intimate exploration of the relationship between corporeality and divinity through the body of a mother and her child.

Stitch by Stitch: Art from the Ashes

Emma Groppe, MATC

Unfortunately, due to family circumstances, Emma is unable to attend the Integrative Project Q&A. To share reflections or questions with Emma in response to her project, please submit this .

Abstract

Traumatic experience, fractured cultural memory, loss of language in the wake of grief: these wounds are rooted in the depths of humanity鈥檚 laments, both personal and communal. Attending to such fragmentation is particular, laborious, and vulnerable work. Against a type of attention, a type of 鈥榬estoration鈥 which aims to cover over, or even to find wholeness in a return to that which came before the rupture, my focus within this project is on a type of repair that offers witness to these spaces of deepest woundedness, therein discovering radical healing. Through the expressive medium of hand embroidery, I explore this landscape of fragmentation, engaging in quilt repair largely inspired by the aesthetics of Kintsugi, the Japanese craft of mended ceramics. By attending to the fragments, to the open wounds on the body of the quilt through the artistic act of revealing, I ask after the relationship between fragmentation and healing, finding mending and making to be the same movement of the needle. And, more so, I listen for the theological implications of this work, and am met by an enriched understanding of God鈥檚 hopeful and creative attention to and redemption of our most intimate brokenness.

Recovery, Escape, and Consolation: Fantasy鈥檚 Generous Gifts

Lisa LaMarche, MATC

Abstract

J.R.R Tolkien鈥檚 secondary world of Middle Earth awakens the heart to wonder and imagination, providing a fantasy landscape for exploration of the expansive human experience. In his famous essay, 鈥淥n Fairy Stories,” Tolkien lays out his understanding of the nature of fantasy literature and its uses in the modern age. It has become a primary source for all who read about and build secondary worlds. In his essay, Tolkien claims that fantasy provides recovery of enchantment, worthy escapism, and the consolation of a happy ending. Tolkien鈥檚 fantastical world also enlivens our imagination for a hope which holds the complexity of suffering and the scars that remain with the promise of new beginnings.

Embodied Story and Re-Formation

Blood and Soil: Tending Ancestral Wounds of White Christianity

Kathryn Fontana, MDiv

Abstract

Although denouncement was the dominant Christian response, across denominations, to the January 6th white supremacist siege of the US capital building, this paper makes the case that a more appropriate and effective Christian stance toward white supremacists is one of kinship. Drawing on church history, indigenous research methods, and the emerging field of cultural somatics, I offer cross-historical and cultural attachment analysis of the siege of the capital study with the 9th century Frank invasion and forced conversation of the Saxons. I offer this as one example of a cultural trauma in the Christian lineage that severed a key form of land-based / animist Christianity. Such a loss of ancestral tools of resource and resilience by animist Christians at the hand of imperial Christians, I argue, severed cultural, ancestral, and ecological kinship ties, and quickened the rise of insecure cultural attachment patterns in the European Christian 鈥渟oma.鈥 Just one example of many, these insecure cultural attachment patterns of Christianity have profoundly shaped the trajectory of the Western world, including the rise of white supremacy in the United States and its ubiquitous attachment behaviors that show up relationally and bodily across ideological lines. This project is an exploration of the process of restoring healthy ancestral / cultural attachment bonds as a critical process for white Christians to engage responsibly and sustainably in allyship efforts today. Given the dissociative nature of logocentrism in white Christian ancestral memory, I offer somatic trance 鈥 gentle, titrated awareness of bodily sensation and accompanying ecological and spiritual associations 鈥 which I learned through the work of Tada Hozumi and Dare Sohei 鈥 as one form of a non-dominant 鈥榬esearch method鈥 that can connect white Christians with anthropological data lost to Christianity鈥檚 written memory. Such data, I suggest, would support the restoration of secure cultural attachment bonds, restoring healthy culture to the Christian body as a whole, and equipping white Christians to be more sustainable and effective in addressing and healing white supremacy in our churches, communities and in the world at large.

The Idolatry of Consciousness: Materiality and Spirituality in Christian Formation

Samuel Koekkoek, MDiv

Abstract

For most of the history of Western theology and philosophy, there has more often than not been a stark dualistic hierarchy of the spiritual over the material, mind over body. Rather than simply reordering this hierarchy, this paper examines the relationship between spirituality and materiality, and the human need for dialogical mutuality between these complementary forces. Not only has the Western cultural mind traditionally placed spirituality at the top of this hierarchy, it has also allowed and incentivized particular categories of materiality to project their own qualities into the role of the universal, spiritual, and transcendent, as exemplified by white supremacy, patriarchy, wealth inequality, anthropocentrism, etc. The projection of any particularity onto universality is the beginning of idolatry, which inevitably leads to systemic violence and oppression. This paper invites its readers to consider a theological frame wherein the transcendence and unknowability of God informs a potential solution to theodicy, a method for understanding systems of violence and oppression as well as strategy for resistance against such powers, and the being and formation of Christians, all by way of an apophatic deconstruction of the projection of human consciousness onto God. This is the starting point for a constructive theology that emphasizes materialism and Christian mysticism in equal measure, going so far as to suggest they are mutually interdependent facets of Christian formation.

In the Realm of Jungian Psychoanalysis: Examining Popular Culture Fandom as a Catalyst for Individuation

Rachel Zeller, MACP

Abstract

In the last decade, there is a growing body of research exploring popular culture fandom communities and what fans gain from participating. Current published research includes examining the difference between fandoms and local community (Chadborn et al., 2018); qualities of fan experience (Chen, 2007; Yamato, 2016; Zsubori & Das, 2018); eudaimonic and hedonic motivations among fans (Taylor, 2019; Vinney & Dill-Shackleford, 2018, Vinny et al., 2019); and the impact of fandom on mental well-being such as creation of self (Hills, 2017), self-empowerment (Nylund, 2007), belonging (Tague et al., 2020), and meaning-making (Vinney et al., 2019). Although researchers are steadily exploring the psychology of fans and fandoms, current research only skims the surface of understanding how the complex structure of fans’ positive valuation and identification with fandoms can be effectively incorporated into individual psychotherapy. This paper is the final product for meeting completion of 天美视频 of Theology and Psychology Integrative Project. Furthermore, as a literature review in preparation for beginning doctoral dissertation research, this paper explores popular culture fandom experience within the intersectionality of the Jungian psychoanalytic framework. This study claims, from a Jungian psychoanalytic perspective, that exploring clients鈥 fandoms in psychotherapy is an effective tool because fandoms tap into innate, universal collective unconscious structures through archetypal representation in modern mythical stories. As the outcome of this literature review, I will theorize how fandom can be used as an effective tool in individual psychotherapy by bringing universal, collective mythology and relational collectiveness into the therapeutic space.

Imagining for the Beloved Community: Challenging Orthodoxy With Embodied Orthopraxy

Tiny Pieces: Finding 鈥淲holiness鈥 by Shattering the Body Terrorism of the Church and Forming a New Embodied Theology of Imago Trini Dei

Sophie Katrina Fitzpatrick, MDiv

Abstract

Body Terrorism is a hydra, a monster with many heads. While the body positivity movement is working to cut off the heads of media and diet culture and both external and internal body shame, there is one big mother of a head that no amount of books and social media hashtags can tackle: Christian theology. While many secular resources exist that offer healing and solace for those who have been harmed by this world鈥檚 devaluation of bodies, there are very few that bridge the gap between the secular and Christian world. European and American white Christian Churches are not only complicit in body terrorism, but were also partners in the historical establishment of body supremacies and hierarchies. As such, I assert the necessity of reworking of two doctrines, the Trinity and the imago Dei, into an embodied theology of imago Trini Dei, declaring that humanity, created in God鈥檚 image, is also one in three, with the body, mind, and soul all existing and interpenetrating one another in a sacred perichoretic relationship.

An embodied theology of imago Trini Dei connects the doctrine of the Holy Trinity with the doctrine of imago Dei, answering the question that theologians have been asking for centuries: how does humanity bear the image of God? Many theologians have claimed that only the soul reflects the imago Dei, casting the body in opposition as lowly, base, and vile. The egalitarian Trinity of the Eastern Orthodox tradition asserts that each part of the Holy Trinity is equal, dancing together in an infinite, interpenetrating flow that allows them each to permeate one another, endlessly, inextricably entwined as one God. If perichoresis is applied in the same way to the three parts of a human, the body, the soul, and the mind, then each part of the person is entwined inseparably and also equally divine, equally loved, and equally perfect in the eyes of God.

Toward an Inclusive, Anticolonial Hermeneutic of the Bible

Jana Grosenbach Peterson, MDiv

Abstract

In the wake of colonialism鈥檚 violence, individuals, communities, and the earth are left battered, beaten, and bruised. Although we are all impacted in different ways, nobody has escaped the harm of colonialism鈥檚 powerful grasp. At times, we have been complicit with colonialism by perpetuating its power and control. This is especially true of white settler-colonists who have seized control of North America, known to indigenous peoples as Turtle Island. The Bible has historically been used by eurocentric theologians as a tool in the hands of colonialism to justify unimaginable harm (both egregious macroaggressions as well as insidious microaggressions) to those who do not comply with its demands. Drawing on multiple disciplines, including Biblical Scholarship and Postcolonial Studies, this paper offers a new hermeneutical tool to white American Christians who long for a way to live out their faith authentically while also actively working to subvert the empire. It exposes the harm of colonialism, particularly as it relates to the way the Bible has been read and applied; it also proposes a new hermeneutic as a step toward reading the Bible in a way that results in the flourishing of all of life and creates the possibility of a different kind of faith community. While eurocentric, kyriarchal readings of the Bible provide the underpinnings and justification for excluding, colonizing, and fragmenting relationships, an inclusive, anticolonial hermeneutic provides the underpinnings and imagination for receiving others, creation, and even ourselves as a Divine gift.

Deconstruction: Toward the Prophetic Art of Language Construction

Mikaela Serafin, MDiv and MACP

Abstract

In between text and meaning lies deconstruction 鈥 a methodology arising from Jaques Derrida’s scholarship that argues language is irreducibly complex and indeterminate. When it comes to Church history, the relationship between text and meaning has evolved drastically over time. Throughout history, the language of the Church has been plenty and often wrought with control and power. In an effort to reorient the Christian faith to a well-suited language that is ethical and faithful to the Biblical text and present era, deconstruction, as a current theological movement, seeks to critique Christian institutions and free faith from its problematic language, theology, doctrines, and practices. While utilizing the lenses of theology, psychology, philosophy, and trauma studies, this project discusses language acquisition and usage as it pertains to the Church acting as a deconstruction practice. As a result of this process, this project articulates the inarticulate and unethical language often found in today’s pulpits and churches and its many consequences, such as oppression and manipulation. I claim that a faithful Christian reading, expression, and application requires critical evaluation of text, meaning, and language so as to create ethical, faithful, and legitimate discourse and practice in and out of the pulpit.

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Videos: Integrative Projects 2020 /blog/integrative-projects-2020/ Fri, 05 Jun 2020 15:42:59 +0000 http://theseattleschool.edu/?p=14451 天美视频 community gathers annually along with friends and families of the graduating MDiv and MATC students for the Integrative Project Symposium. This year, in the midst of ongoing restrictions to public gatherings, students pre-recorded their presentations and participated in our first virtual Integrative Project Symposium on June 17. The Integrative Project serves as […]

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天美视频 community gathers annually along with friends and families of the graduating MDiv and MATC students for the Integrative Project Symposium. This year, in the midst of ongoing restrictions to public gatherings, students pre-recorded their presentations and participated in our first virtual Integrative Project Symposium on June 17.

The Integrative Project serves as a capstone for students in our MDiv and MATC degree programs as they both look back on their training and discern what it will look like for them to serve God and neighbor in their post-graduate contexts. Students work with a faculty advisor to form a project that integrates the student鈥檚 passions and calling, drawing from the fullness of their experience at 天美视频 and a robust research methodology to create a major project or paper.

The 11 presentations below synthesize each project鈥檚 thesis along with the student鈥檚 experience in creating it and are organized into three framing categories. Although we鈥檙e unable to celebrate all together in the Red Brick Building, we hope you鈥檒l enjoy the ways in which these presenters have taken full advantage of the creative opportunities made possible by working virtually. In the coming months, final drafts of each Integrative Project will be available in 天美视频鈥檚 library after the candidate鈥檚 graduation.

Virtual Integrative Project Q&A

Seeking Justice; Challenging Empire

Interrogating U.S. Public Monument: A Study of National Memorialized Identity in a 鈥楻acially Two-Faced鈥 Society

Mercedes C. Robinson, MATC

Abstract

America declared success as a 鈥減ost-racial鈥 society following the election of the nation鈥檚 first Black President just 11 short years ago. Since then, America has witnessed a rise in active racial hate and apathy which is perceived as a violent backlash to our alleged racial progress. The simple truth is this: America鈥檚 race problem persists simply because we, as a collective society, are unable to tell the truth about our racially violent past and continually oppressive present. Our rush to declare success as a post-racial society negates the very persistent, systemic, and violent terror inflicted upon African Americans since the founding of this nation. From the reign of slavery, the era of Jim Crow, and now the continued fight for civil rights in the age of mass incarceration and #BlackLivesMatter, America鈥檚 foundational DNA is clear: white supremacy is the vehement backbone of this supposed Christian nation and thus remains the ruling order of our sociopolitical infrastructure.听

The American sociopolitical landscape of the last century suggest that we are indeed a 鈥渞acially two-faced鈥 society 鈥 craving one utopian racial fantasy all the while refuting the established hyper-racialized reality that we are in. Ultimately, our allegiance to a white supremist ruling order has led to the moral descent of our collective integrity, existence, and legacy as a democratically industrialized nation pioneered upon the ideals of equality, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Through an analysis of U.S. history through the lens of racial protest, cultural trauma studies, womanist ethics, and Black liberation theology, this project will demonstrate one solution toward the necessary collective awakening, acknowledgement, and renewal of this racially two-faced societal stalemate that we find ourselves in: a revisioning of U.S. public monuments, wherein corporate lament provides the opportunity for the advancement of racial healing, restorative justice, and collective hope.听

Power Poured Out: Letting Go of Control and Entering into Relationship

Jon Dankworth, MATC

Abstract

Throughout much of Church history Christian theologies of omnipotence and sovereignty have been discussed and understood primarily in terms of power and control. Simply put, God is all-powerful and in control of all things.听 This understanding, however, poses significant challenges when considered along with the reality of evil, sin, suffering, and death in the world.听 Thus, the question of theodicy: how could this be so in light of an all-powerful and all-loving God?听 This paper seeks to explore the connection between imperial ideology and the aforementioned understanding of God鈥檚 omnipotence and sovereignty, primarily in the context of fear and uncertainty.听 These theologies will then be revisited in consideration with the Exodus narrative, the prophetic tradition, and ultimately the example of Jesus Christ.听 In the Christ Hymn found in Philippians 2:5-11, Paul articulates a radically different understanding of omnipotence and sovereignty, in which Jesus reveals that true power is actualized when poured out in dynamic, liberative, creative, and restorative action.听 Furthermore, looking to the example of God鈥檚 relationality demonstrated throughout the biblical text, we find that God鈥檚 sovereignty is primarily revealed through faithfulness and restoration, rather than dominance and control; for while faithfulness fosters relationship, predicated on trust, freedom, call and response, control negates it by denying the agency and personhood of the other.听 Finally, this paper will argue that humanity is called to imitate this example by pouring out power for the sake of another and letting go of control in pursuit of relationship.

The White Supremacy Consciousness

Danielle S. Rueb-Castillejo, MACP

Abstract

There is a sort of malaise settled into the bones of Latinxs, beaten in through dominant manifest destiny ideology until it was integrated into thought, emotion, and spirituality. Mainstream thought and media reinforced and still reinforce the need to become white. This underlying requirement to become white, is exemplified by the ideal of manifest destiny. This message of compliance, silence, and erasure was repeated through the differing interpretations in the news media of the racist terror act in El Paso, Texas, on August 3rd, 2019. In the aftermath of this terror, interpretations of Latinx culture were written by white reporters. The news was quickly dominated by other current events and a massacre of Latinxs was quickly erased.听

The Latinx culture expressed in textbooks and creative arts is often a cheap caricature of the rich culture and ethnic identity of Latinx people. These mythologies allow racist ideologies and oppressive systems to thrive and become concretized within the American social imagination. The act of terror in El Paso, Texas, on August 3rd, 2019 is an explicit concretization of this implicit form of racist dehumanization. White American norms impose compliance upon outsiders to enter as 鈥済uests,鈥 and to remain silent in order to survive. In dominant media, violence within the Latinx community is exaggerated while violence against Latinxs is normalized. Latinxs are looking for justice and voice, but at the heart of the United States is a complex entanglement of Christian faith, racism, and government, which condones this compliance, silence, and erasure.听

Engaging Culture: Identity, Location, Connection

Embracing Our Humanity: Human Flourishing in the Wake of Collective Narcissism in the United States of America

Hannah Seppanen, MATC,听 MACP 鈥19

Abstract

The founders of the United States of America came to these lands in pursuit of opportunity, freedom, and happiness, many of them fleeing hardship and persecution. In the process of establishing a new nation they sought to protect their rights and liberties and seemed to believe that in doing so they served the common good. But in our short history the vision these white, land-owning men established for our nation has excluded and oppressed many. To cope with their participation in an oppressive system and society, members of the dominant culture utilize the dissociative strategies of collective narcissism to avoid pain and mask their privilege generated through our nation鈥檚 dehumanizing practices. This collective narcissism contributes to the traumatization, fragmentation, and fracturing of our society where the oppressed, the oppressors, and the bystanders are unable to flourish in their full humanity with dignity and worth. This project will expose and critique the collective narcissism evidenced in the dominant American culture through the lens of psychologies of liberation and Christian ethics generated from the margins of society, in order to imagine a more inclusive, just, and psychologically integrated America.听

Home is Where the Heart Is: An Examination of Home Through Theological, Philosophical, and Psychological Lenses

Joshua O鈥橠owd,听 MATC

Abstract

An inherent aspect of being human is the desire for a place to call one鈥檚 home. For as long as humanity has existed, there have been stories and myths of quests for home. From a Biblical perspective, the first man and woman were cast out of the Garden of Eden, their original home, and all of humanity has ever sought to restore the essence of being at 鈥渉ome鈥. This project seeks to explore what it means to be at home, through philosophical, theological, and psychological lenses, and examines how an understanding of place has been shaped throughout history. Following a thorough analysis of place, an alternative understanding of home is put forth by queering place and flipping traditional understandings, providing an opportunity for a reclamation of home by those typically marginalized. Finally, the question of how one finds home is answered, with the proposal that home is created through commitment, community, and choice. Framing the examination of space and subsequent proposals is a personal dimension that provides a vulnerable example of what it means to 鈥渃ome home.鈥 The ultimate goal will be a new understanding of what makes a space into a place, and how a place becomes a home, with the enduring hope and desire for a restoration and sustainability of the world, cities, and each one鈥檚 home.听

Welcoming the 鈥極ther鈥: A Celtic Perspective on Disgust Psychology and Xenophobia in the United States

Jonathan Gabriel Huerta, MACP

Abstract

Xenophobia is the fear, hatred, and disgust of those who are culturally different (Amodio & Frith 2006; Gutierrez & Giner-Sorolla, 2007; Miller, 2006; Rozin et al., 1999; Tummala-Narra, 2019). Those who are different are defined as 鈥淥ther鈥 (Gaztambide, 2018). This research looks critically at the consequences of xenophobia through the lens of disgust and neurology alongside certain spiritualities/religions (S/R) in the United States that promote disconnection. A particular focus will look at the ethics around the mental health field, clinician鈥檚 world views that affect patients, and history of psychology in the United States. Critical engagement with the United States鈥 historical memory and current events find that there are certain values adhered in the dominant culture. Such values inform socio-moral disgust and occur deeply within social contexts that negatively impact interpersonal and intrapersonal connection. Celtic spirituality offers a contrasting spiritual perspective on connection and recognizing the divinity and goodness in all people and nature, and brings to light ways to promote reconciliation and reverence to difference in a xenophobic culture. Studies found connection to others offers healing to the self, increased imagination, and a sense of genuine belonging. Love is a form of recognizing the humanness of the other and the self, which requires engaging one鈥檚 own implicit disgust to increase tolerance of inner wounds and social reconciliation.

Going Counter-Cultural Through the Power of Relationships

Christie Kushmerick,听 MATC

Abstract

Western culture contains many socio-political constructs built for the sole purpose of maintaining oppressive social systems that are intended to funnel power to the privileged, extract free or cheap labor from the masses, and erect barriers to protect the pure from contamination by the profane. Organized religions, as such a construct, tend to exacerbate areas of perceived inferiority and to enlarge prejudiced blind spots by rewarding normative behaviors and demonizing the marginalized. My research has focused on usurping these socio-political constructs by refocusing our cultural perception on the relationality of the Trinity. In the words of Professor Ron Ruthruff, our shared cultural history 鈥渉as impacted identity formation and our intrapsychic knowing of ourselves, our ability to relate to each other and make meaning.鈥 Therefore, it is my conclusion that we truly must die to our initially formed sense of identity in order to live life to the fullest with complete surrender, dependence upon the grace of God, and mutual reciprocity.听

Interpretation, Meaning, and Healing

Complementarianism and Abuse: How Biblical Interpretations Can Lead to Violence Against Women

Megan Doner,听 MDiv

Abstract

This project explores the correlation between abuse and complementarian marriages by looking first at the Biblical narrative in Genesis 3, then by examining the relationship structures of Complementarian marriages, and finally by unpacking the dehumanization process of women which allows for violence. The understood mandate for masculine authority places women in vulnerable situations as they are subjected to a lower status and unable to have full autonomy over their own bodies and lives. This act by conservative evangelical churches and the theology they prescribe- unconsciously or not- creates an atmosphere where violence becomes more likely. The goal of this project is to identify potential places where harm is happening, for churches to be able to identify their potential roles in perpetuating unsafe environments, and to ultimately find ways for the Christian community to build safer environments for everyone.听

Burden or Blessing, Pressure or Promise: Toward an Ontology of Name听

Emmanuel Kuphal, MATC

Abstract

Names are not inconsequential. The names we carry impact us and our being in the world. Why is this? How much impact does the name we carry have on our lives and the lives of those around us? By way of navigating my own narrative around the name I was given at birth, I will look at 鈥渨hat鈥檚 in a name鈥 through a progression of lenses: quantum physics, developmental psychology, the name of God, and Derridean Deconstructionism all in pursuit of building an Ontology of Name.

Boy, Sheep, Demon: Reimagining Theological Hope Through a Trauma Study of Shame

Lucas McGee, MATC

Abstract

For a survivor of trauma, the hope of the Gospel message of Jesus can get complicated. Ruptured security from developmental stages can posture one鈥檚 psyche within psychological shame. If harm is unaddressed, a felt sense of unworthiness is carried into adulthood and permeates a relation to self, others, and God. When the Gospel message is situated within a shamed identity, this fragmentation of self affects a person’s interpretation of wholeness. By gathering psychological research and theological discourse around the topic of shame, I offer that re-imagining Jesus鈥檚 call to become like little children can expand our understanding of theological hope for those marked with shame. When trauma is revisited, the hope of Jesus is reconciled with a full story and a whole person. Congruently, I鈥檒l mirror a personal wandering through the implications of desire within a body that actively carries harm.听 In addition to an academic conversation, I鈥檝e facilitated an imagination towards hope and protest through my own songwriting and storytelling. My goal is to expand the theological category of hope within a deeper understanding of shame and discover a Gospel invitation towards wholeness that lies dormant beneath the suffering of formative years.

Many Voices: The Imago Dei Reflected in the Biblical Texts

Alex Bodman, MDiv

Abstract

The Bible is seen by many as being the authoritative word of God, divinely inspired and inerrant. Those beliefs often go hand in hand with the understanding that the Bible is a cohesive book written for the modern reader. The problem with such readings is that they often miss the fact that the texts are historically and culturally located. Not only that, but the original intent of the texts is often skipped over because it does not apply to us today. This essay highlights the variety of voices within the Biblical texts and argues that their differences should be embraced. The differences between the Biblical texts are often swept aside because they undermine claims of inerrancy and divine inspiration, however, this paper argues that it is through the humanity of the texts that we encounter the divine. That is based upon the understanding that the imago dei shows up in relationship.听

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Entering Our 22nd Year /blog/entering-year-22/ Wed, 18 Sep 2019 21:48:23 +0000 http://theseattleschool.edu/?p=13716 鈥淥h sing to the Lord a new song; sing to the Lord, all the earth! Sing to the Lord, bless his name; tell of his salvation from day to day.鈥 Psalm 96:1-2 As we entered into our 22nd year as a school Dr. Derek McNeil, Acting President posed the question: What does it look like […]

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鈥淥h sing to the Lord a new song;
sing to the Lord, all the earth!
Sing to the Lord, bless his name;
tell of his salvation from day to day.鈥

Psalm 96:1-2

As we entered into our 22nd year as a school Dr. Derek McNeil, Acting President posed the question: What does it look like to sing a new song together? What does it look like to sing songs of redemption in even the darkest or most fragmented places? A new academic year is a new beginning but we always begin with a pause, at Sacred Assembly, (Re)Orientation, and Convocation, to root in our mission of serving God and neighbor through transforming relationships.

We were honored to welcome a new cohort of 90 graduate students to our community last week. We welcome them with the knowledge that the needs around us are great and the culture is even more fragmented. President McNeil named the challenges of our times and what he often refers to as 鈥榳icked problems鈥 and called the students to learn beyond the traditional graduate school frame of learning and training and into a posture of service. It is a privilege to commit to another year of learning and service together. In a world so in need of restoration we are grateful for the opportunity to form and send pastors, counselors, social leaders, and artists to engage with wisdom, courage, and creativity.

As we share these photos to mark the beginning of a new academic year we look forward to singing a new song of redemption together for the sacred work that lies ahead.

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Commencement 2019: The Marks Beneath My Skin /blog/commencement-marks-beneath-my-skin/ Wed, 07 Aug 2019 19:30:58 +0000 http://theseattleschool.edu/?p=13601 Every year at Commencement, the graduating class and faculty select three students鈥攐ne from each degree program鈥攖o offer words of blessing and calling. Here, we鈥檙e sharing the full video and text of the speech by Stephanie Johnson, Master of Divinity, about bearing witness to the painful marks beneath our skin. You can also experience the speeches […]

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Every year at Commencement, the graduating class and faculty select three students鈥攐ne from each degree program鈥攖o offer words of blessing and calling. Here, we鈥檙e sharing the full video and text of the speech by Stephanie Johnson, Master of Divinity, about bearing witness to the painful marks beneath our skin. You can also experience the speeches from Cameron Carter, (MA in Theology & Culture), and Sarah Steinke (MA in Counseling Psychology).


I want to begin today by asking each of you鈥攁s you are willing and able鈥攖o turn your palms toward the ceiling right now and to look at them.

I invite you to consider the lines criss-crossing in unique patterns of creases and arches and loops, remembering these inscriptions in your flesh bear witness to the place where you began: in the holy darkness of another body, before you ever took in air and before the light ever saw you, that you and I come from somewhere and someone, and in some ways鈥攖hough not all鈥攚e are forever marked by where we came from.

These past four years at 天美视频 for me have involved tending to the marks that live below my skin鈥攖he ways my body holds memories, especially those painful memories that one could consider scars, or even wounds.

For me, these parts of myself have felt most unbearable to look at, let alone touch, let alone be seen or touched by anybody, even the most compassionate witnesses.

And yet for the past four years I have been invited to do that honoring and excruciating work with you, which to me often felt more like fumbling than any sort of transformation. Actually it often felt worse than fumbling. More like flailing, or failing, or falling.

But as I considered these marks over and over and over again, I started to feel that the very places I most feared or hated or denied within myself could not only survive being witnessed by myself and others, but could even begin to heal thanks to that holy witness, or to borrow Hannah Seppanen鈥檚 term, 鈥渨ithness.鈥

天美视频 Graduates of 2019, I think about all of us dressed in black polyester gowns today, a sort of symbol that we shared something in common for a time. But it is just as true for me to say we remained and remain profoundly different in the ways we were and are marked, which means I find myself wanting to bless the worlds鈥攚orlds!鈥攜ou brought into this community. You shared your worlds with me and one another. Thank you.

And now, since we are being sent forth into bigger worlds again, I bless you. I bless those of you who will dance down the streets of Seattle tomorrow wearing rainbows and offering your beloveds a holy kiss. I bless those of you who will faithfully bear the memory of Jesus as womanist theologian Kelly Brown Douglas says, 鈥渂eing in the world as he was…entering into solidarity with the crucified class in any given context.鈥 I bless those of you who will sit in an office with someone who is bringing their world and their wounds into the open for the very first time.

And now, I am left wanting to offer one more blessing. Dr. Parker, this is your last commencement ceremony. We began our time at 天美视频 together, and we are ending our time together. I hope you know that forever, forever, as long as I live as a white American Christian woman I will be marked by your example as a black woman, a womanist New Testament scholar, a pastor, and a most cherished professor. I bless you and Victor on the road to Atlanta tomorrow, to the city where Katie Cannon earned her seminary degree, to a part of the country where your family is waiting for you, to a learning community that is already blessed because you are on your way to them. Thank you for everything here. Thank you.

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Politics, Theology, and Spiritual Darkness with Annie Mesaros /blog/politics-theology-spiritual-darkness-annie-mesaros/ Wed, 17 Jul 2019 17:24:22 +0000 http://theseattleschool.edu/?p=13554 Shauna Gauthier hosts a conversation with Annie Mesaros about Christianity鈥檚 impact on American politics, and about Annie鈥檚 theological podcast God Help Us.

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On this episode of text.soul.culture, Shauna Gauthier, Alumni Outreach Coordinator, talks with Annie Mesaros (Master of Divinity, 鈥18) about her work in what Annie refers to as political theology鈥攃onnecting past and present iterations of American Christianity to current systems and dynamics in U.S. politics.

Annie: 鈥淲hile I鈥檓 concerned about what you would think of as politics鈥攚hat would be in the political section of a newspaper鈥擨鈥檓 also thinking about the politics of being human, the politics of church, the relational dynamics between people and between groups. That鈥檚 kind of what I mean by political in the broader sense.鈥

Annie is the host of , a podcast exploring the long and often problematic story of Christianity in the United States, grounded in the hope that by better understanding where other perspectives are coming from, we can be better conversation partners across difference and contribute to sustainable, collaborative social change.鈥 Her work is primarily concerned with two questions, she says: What do we believe it means to be human? And what do we believe is true about God? On God Help Us, Annie and her guests wrestle with how both of those questions inform our relationship to each other and our response to events in the world around us.

Annie: God Help Us is about information, it鈥檚 about what are our commonly held beliefs in this country, how are they informed by our Christian heritage? […] I鈥檓 hoping, on a more meta level, that it鈥檚 also a way of modeling those conversations, so we can feel defensive and have all the human range of emotions while we鈥檙e disagreeing with each other and still continue to talk to each other.”

Much of Annie鈥檚 work can be connected to the category of spiritual darkness, which was the focus of her Integrative Project at 天美视频, 鈥淢aking a Home in the Dark.鈥 In our 2018 Integrative Project Symposium, Annie offered this insight into what draws her to working with spiritual darkness: 鈥淚 think that in those times when everything has been stripped away, we also lose hold of the lies we have believed about ourselves, about each other, and about God. So I鈥檓 left only with my desire and the question of what to do with it, and the question of what to do with this new reality. And I find that the only option really is to come home to myself. And in those places, I find that God is waiting for me there.鈥

Annie: 鈥淲hen we recognize that we have put our faith in something like patriarchy, it doesn鈥檛 let us go easily. These periods of darkness, of feeling completely lost and at our wits鈥 end, both communally and individually鈥攊t forces us to give up hope in what we鈥檝e put our hope in. And that is this great gift that we can then decide we鈥檙e going to do something different now.鈥

In an era of fragmented relationships鈥攁nd, therefore, fragmented politics鈥攚e are deeply grateful for the insightful, far-reaching conversations Annie is hosting. Here鈥檚 to listening deeply, speaking boldly, and returning again and again to our connections with each other.

Resources to Go Deeper

  • You can learn more about Annie鈥檚 work, including God Help Us, at . And if you have ideas for future topics or guests on the podcast, email godhelp.podcast@gmail.com.
  • As this conversation turned to purity culture, it brought to mind an article by Lauren Sawyer (MA in Theology & Culture, (鈥14). Shauna asked Lauren to record an excerpt for this episode, and here鈥檚 the full article from Feminist Studies in Religion:
  • To be fair, Annie鈥檚 reference to is more tangential than thematic. But it really is a great film!
  • Shauna references an episode from NPR鈥檚 Invisibilia podcast about the relationship between uncertainty and dogmatism, and what we do when we don鈥檛 know what to do.
  • Annie mentions being inspired by this article from Tyrone Beason at the Seattle Times:
  • Just in time for summer, we got a bunch of book recommendations from Annie. Happy reading!
    • by Dr. Tina Schermer Sellers
    • by Frank Schaeffer
    • and by Amber Cantorna
    • by Mary Daly
    • by Miguel A. de la Torre

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Unconventional Pastor: An Interview with Rachael Clinton /blog/unconventional-pastor-rachael-clinton/ Mon, 24 Jun 2019 16:17:27 +0000 http://theseattleschool.edu/?p=13475 We interviewed Rachael Clinton about her journey of living into the calling of pastor, even when it doesn鈥檛 look like what others would expect.

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Our service in the world is informed by our unique identity and calling, meaning it will look different for each of us. So we decided to talk with (Master of Divinity, 鈥10), Director of Care and Teaching for The Allender Center. Rachael is known as something of a pastor here at 天美视频, even though it doesn鈥檛 look like the more traditional role of pastoring a local church. We asked her about her journey of living into her calling, even when it looks different than what others might expect.

Find out more about our Master of Divinity program.


Could you give us an overview of what you do?

My title is Director of Organizational Development for The Allender Center at 天美视频鈥攚hich, honestly, is really functioning like an Executive Pastor. I get to do leadership development for our staff at The Allender Center, creating consistent structures of communication, professional development, care, support. I鈥檓 also on faculty with The Allender Center, so I teach and work on the blog and podcast, as well as facilitating groups.

It鈥檚 interesting that all of those things鈥攆rom the relational to the technical to the administrative鈥攐ften fall under the role of pastor, too. Which raises another question: What does it mean to be a pastor?

I often joke that being a good pastor is just like being a good parent, but specifically in the realms of spiritual formation and identity development. When I think about a pastor, I think about someone who tells stories that help people locate themselves in a larger story. Both individually鈥斺淲ho is God, and who are you?鈥 and collectively鈥斺淲here have we come from, where are we now, where are we going?鈥 I think it鈥檚 about providing good care.

I often say that, vocationally and in my calling, I鈥檓 a pastor by orientation. I find that whether I鈥檓 working in a tea shop and serving people crepes and loose leaf tea, or working on an admissions team recruiting students to a graduate program.

I鈥檓 guessing the tea shop鈥檚 not hypothetical.

No, I worked at a loose leaf tea shop the year after I graduated from 天美视频.

Was there a period of finding it hard to identify as a pastor, since you weren鈥檛 in the traditional paid staff position at a church?

Two moments come to mind. First, I did not come to graduate school to become a pastor, even though I came to pursue an MDiv. I came from a tradition where women couldn鈥檛 be pastors, so I didn鈥檛 have much imagination for myself as a pastor. I came to 天美视频 because I thought I would be a professor. I knew I would do ministry, but I would maybe just do ministry through the academy. Then during my third year, Paul Steinke named me as a pastor. There was something about someone actually naming me pastor, inviting me to see that as part of my identity, that was really powerful.

And then, during our formational years at The Allender Center, there were some moments where we were in the midst of a lot of spiritual warfare and a lot of despair. I remember Dan was introducing me before the large group to teach, and he said, 鈥淩achael really is the pastor of The Allender Center.鈥 And as he said that, there was something that felt really true to me about that. It鈥檚 not a way I would necessarily have seen myself, but it was a way I was bringing myself in the midst of our team, calling us to remember who we are and who we鈥檙e called to be. So I felt like the unofficial pastor of The Allender Center, and then there鈥檚 the question of, what does it mean to be the pastor of a nonprofit? Is that sacrilegious?

It seems like there are layers: Something was going on inside you regarding your own identity and calling, but something else happens when others see that and name it. Why do you think that outward affirmation is so meaningful?

I think there鈥檚 something about anointing that is really important. We see that throughout the text, right? It鈥檚 something we鈥檙e meant for and made for: to have others bless aspects of our calling and identity and vocation. I think it鈥檚 why something like an ordination process holds so much meaning in the Church. There鈥檚 a way of anointing, honoring, and consecrating鈥攕etting apart a role. Though I think, at times in our culture, that setting apart means the role is elevated in a way that some people who have the esteem of pastor really abuse that power, and it creates this false dichotomy that people who are pastors or leaders in a ministry are actually doing ministry, not everyone else. That鈥檚 a really weak, thin theology, a really weak, thin missiology, a really weak, thin sense of what the Church actually is and how it functions.

This process of recognizing your pastoral gifting and embracing that and naming it true鈥攈ow has that journey clarified or refined how you understand calling?

I don鈥檛 see calling as being just connected to vocation. It鈥檚 far more expansive than that. It鈥檚 that sense of knowing that, no matter what I鈥檓 doing, it鈥檚 okay to bring these parts of myself.

And there is some mythology that calling is static, when I actually think it鈥檚 something that develops and grows and shifts. I think it does stay pretty consistent in its rootedness, but the fruit it bears can change in different seasons. So we always need to be growing and learning and have a posture of curiosity and a willingness to surrender to formational processes.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 see calling as being just connected to vocation. It鈥檚 far more expansive than that.鈥

What would you say to somebody else who is recognizing aspects of their calling as a pastor, but also recognizing that it might come out in an unconventional context?

The more we know who we are, then we can make better decisions about where we want to give those parts of ourselves. Calling, again, is about more than vocation. Calling is about union, calling is about love鈥攊t鈥檚 always about love. So what are the really unique ways that you are equipped and gifted to love people and communities well? For some people, that will look like very traditional roles that have really clear boundaries, really clear definitions, and there鈥檚 nothing wrong with that. For others, it might mean you meander a bit, because there are certain skills you need to develop that go along with that calling. Some people might look at it and go, 鈥淥h, this is a real deviation from your calling,鈥 and I would say, 鈥淣o, I actually think it was preparing me to be more fully equipped for my calling.鈥

So I would tell people, especially those who will find themselves in more unconventional spaces, we need healers and pastors and artists and therapists working in lots of different contexts. And it may not always look like the textbook. That doesn鈥檛 mean you鈥檙e not being faithful to live out your calling well.

Part of what we鈥檙e exploring is inspired by Barbara Brown Taylor鈥檚 language of your 鈥渁ltar in the world,鈥 and the idea that our work in the world is a form of worship. Do you want to say anything about that?

Oh, I really like that. I was just reading , and I love Paul鈥檚 language of living faithfully to what you鈥檝e been gifted鈥攁nd that鈥檚 going to look different for each person in different seasons, based on different giftings鈥攋ust be faithful to bring those gifts to the world in such a way that it is like a living sacrifice. I think we鈥檙e really scared of that word, sacrifice. And rightfully so鈥攖here鈥檚 been some theological and spiritual abuse that has used a word like sacrifice to maintain oppressive structures of power that are actually anti-Gospel. However, when we give of ourselves in a way that actually leads unto life, I think that鈥檚 that living sacrifice that Paul calls us to.

Learn more about our Master of Divinity program and how you can pursue your unique calling.

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Throwback Thursday: Sam Koekkoek /blog/throwback-thursday-sam-koekkoek/ Thu, 20 Jun 2019 13:00:27 +0000 http://theseattleschool.edu/?p=11991 It was about two years ago that I packed up my whole life and moved five hours up I-5 to matriculate into 天美视频 of Theology & Psychology. I was a bundle of nerves, having only ever lived in my hometown until now to begin this new learning venture in a brand new, big […]

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It was about two years ago that I packed up my whole life and moved five hours up I-5 to matriculate into 天美视频 of Theology & Psychology. I was a bundle of nerves, having only ever lived in my hometown until now to begin this new learning venture in a brand new, big city. I was also filled with excitement and confidence to continue down this road of theological and psychological education, one I鈥檝e grown to love and feel a strong sense of belonging to. Little did I know, this love would go through the fire over the course of my first year, only to come out on the other side broader and deeper.

天美视频 is a unique place. A great deal will be asked of you in the coming months and years, as you are introduced to yourself and your story. It may feel disorienting and frightening at times, but take heart and be brave: The work you are about to enter into is sacred and beautiful. It is a gift for which I expect you will be as grateful as I am.

A few words of advice: If you are moving to Seattle from somewhere far off, find your places of escape. Whether it鈥檚 getting lost in Discovery Park, finding and setting up residence in your new favorite coffee shop, or just the company and community of friends, we all need spaces where we are able to breathe deeply and let go of the stresses of the intense work we do. Also, make play a priority. While our studies here at the 天美视频 are important and filled with meaning, some of us have definitely been known to take ourselves a bit too seriously from time to time. Play means something different to everyone, but I recommend going out dancing, playing board games, or hiking some of the incredible trails surrounding Seattle.

Most importantly, know you are not alone. You may be feeling some anxiety about entering into a new community and finding your people. I suspect everyone feels this way at the beginning, I know I did. What I discovered, though, is that my people found me. The students, staff and faculty here welcomed me with open arms, making me feel as though I truly belong, which I now know I do. And now, we are all very excited to fully welcome you as you matriculate into 天美视频 and collectively transform our community with your unique perspectives and personality. I pray peace and blessings over you as you make this transition, see you in the fall!


Sam Koekkoek is a second-year Master of Divinity student. He enjoys writing music and studying the intersections of pop culture and theology.

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